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Lebanon Israel Border Raid: Orders Army to Confront Israel After Border Raid

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Lebanon’s Leader Orders Army to Confront Israel After Deadly Border Raid

BEIRUT, Oct 30 (Reuters) – Under a quiet sky, a line was crossed. The peace, fragile and new, was shattered by the sound of gunfire in a small Lebanese town. Now, the leader of Lebanon has given an order not heard in years, pushing his nation’s army toward a dangerous new front.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun told the army on Thursday to stand against any Israeli soldier who steps onto Lebanese soil. This command came after Israeli forces, under the cover of night, moved into the southern town of Blida. There, they fired at a local government building, killing a municipal worker.

This act, happening despite a U.S.-brokered ceasefire meant to calm the region, has sent shockwaves through Lebanon. For months, the Lebanese army has watched from the sidelines during clashes between the powerful militant group Hezbollah and Israel. It has not fought Israel itself.

But President Aoun’s words signal a change. He is now directly instructing the army to “confront any Israeli incursion.” This is his first such order since becoming president at the start of the year.

In a move that felt like a direct challenge, Israeli fighter jets flew low over the presidential palace in Beirut just hours after the president’s announcement. A witness said the roar of the planes filled the air, a loud and clear message from Israel.

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A Town in Mourning, A Nation on Edge

The trouble began overnight in Blida, a town that knows the pain of border conflict. The Lebanese army released a strong statement, calling the Israeli operation “a criminal act.” They said Israeli troops crossed the border, entered the town, and opened fire on the municipality building.

The victim was not a fighter. He was a worker, a municipal employee, going about his day. His death has become the spark for this new crisis.

“This is a clear violation of the ceasefire agreement,” the army’s statement read. “It is a serious development.”

The ceasefire was supposed to stop the fighting that flared up after the war in Gaza began last October. Hezbollah, which has a vast arsenal of rockets and a strong presence in southern Lebanon, has been exchanging fire with Israel for over a year. The truce was meant to give people in border towns a chance to breathe.

But since the ceasefire, Israel has continued its airstrikes and small ground operations inside Lebanon. Israel says it must do this to stop Hezbollah from getting stronger and moving its fighters back to the border.

Lebanon, however, sees it differently. The government accuses Israel of breaking the peace deal, one raid at a time.

An Old Enemy Offers Support

In a twist that shows how complicated Lebanese politics can be, the militant group Hezbollah quickly said it supported the president’s call to the army.

Hezbollah and the Lebanese government are not always friends. But when it comes to facing Israel, they sometimes stand together. Hezbollah has its own powerful army, much stronger in some ways than the national one.

Their pledge of support for the army means that if Israeli troops cross the border again, they could face not just Lebanese soldiers, but also Hezbollah’s experienced fighters. This creates a very dangerous situation where a small clash could grow into a much bigger war.

People in Beirut and across Lebanon are watching and waiting. The order has been given. The warning has been sent. The question now hangs in the air, as tense as the silence after a jet’s roar: What happens when the next Israeli soldier steps over the line?

The calm was broken in Blida. The response has been declared in Beirut. And the fear of what comes next grips a nation caught between a truce that is failing and a war it does not want to restart.

Author: Yasir Khan
Date: 30 Oct, 2025

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Sources:Reuters

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