Beirut’s southern suburbs were rocked overnight as an Israeli precision strike killed several senior commanders of Iran’s IRGC “Lebanon Corps,” the elite unit running Tehran’s front line against Israel from Lebanese soil, regional security sources say.

The blast tore through a fortified apartment block in the Dahiyeh district, long known as a joint Hezbollah–IRGC nerve centre. Phone videos show a single, blinding flash, then secondary explosions ripping through parked cars and adjacent buildings as residents flee through smoke‑filled streets. Civil defence teams report dozens of casualties, with bodies believed to include at least one brigadier general and key operations planners.
Israeli officials, speaking off the record, describe the raid as a “decapitation strike” aimed at the command cell that coordinates rocket, drone and cross‑border raids from Lebanon into northern Israel, and links Hezbollah directly to IRGC headquarters in Tehran. Intelligence units had reportedly tracked the commanders converging on the safe house for days before giving the green light.

Hezbollah has vowed revenge, calling the slain officers “martyrs of the axis,” as black‑banner funeral posters appear in Beirut and the Bekaa Valley. Rocket units along the border have already fired symbolic salvos into northern Israel, with both sides bracing for a sharper exchange.
For Israel’s war cabinet, the question is larger than one exploded safe house. Can a relentless “shadow war” of targeted killings and covert strikes truly weaken Iran’s regional grip—or will each successful hit on IRGC leadership simply тιԍнтen Tehran’s resolve to turn Lebanon, and the wider Middle East, into a permanent battlefield?