# [WARNING] Israel Signals Expanded Offensive Against Hezbollah in Southern Lebanon

*Monday, May 25, 2026 at 6:09 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-25T18:09:29.081Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: Israel, Hezbollah, Lebanon, UnitedStates, MiddleEast, Drones, EnergyMarkets, Geopolitics
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/8098.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 17:19 and 18:01 UTC on 25 May, senior Israeli leaders and media signaled plans to significantly expand military operations in southern Lebanon against Hezbollah, following intensified drone attacks and rising IDF casualties. A U.S. official indicated Washington could support broader Israeli action, framing Hezbollah as ignoring repeated ceasefire requests. The trajectory points toward a wider and more intensive Israel–Hezbollah war with regional and market ramifications.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

From 17:19 to 18:01 UTC on 25 May 2026, a cluster of reports indicates that Israel is preparing to significantly expand its military campaign against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon:

- At 17:19 UTC (Report 16), IDF Northern Command chief Maj. Gen. Rafi Milo publicly stated that Hezbollah’s recent launches toward Metula and Shomera meant the group had “crossed a red line,” a rare and escalatory formulation from a front‑line commander.
- At 17:25 UTC (Report 31), the IDF announced the death of Staff Sgt. Noam Hamburger, 23, killed in a Hezbollah drone strike near Israel’s northern border.
- At 17:46 UTC (Report 44) and 17:55 UTC (Report 41), reports in Spanish summarized Israeli media and political discussions that Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant/Katz are inclined to order a “significant expansion” of operations in southern Lebanon, with more strikes on buildings and Hezbollah infrastructure, after a month in which 11 Israeli soldiers were killed, mainly by Hezbollah explosive drones.
- At 17:53 UTC (Report 27), a U.S. official told Al Jazeera that Hezbollah had ignored repeated U.S. requests to cease fire against Israel and warned that Israel would respond to attacks on its forces and civilians; the official framed this as Israel’s decision, not the Biden administration’s.
- At 18:00 UTC (Report 25), Netanyahu stated: “We are at war with Hezbollah,” highlighted the killing of more than 600 Hezbollah fighters, and explicitly ordered forces to “step on the gas even more,” while acknowledging Israel’s current challenge in countering Hezbollah FPV drones.

Separately, at 17:21 UTC (Report 2), Israeli media reported that Israel is discussing plans with the U.S. to expand operations in Lebanon, reinforcing that this is a coordinated and policy‑level trajectory, not just tactical rhetoric.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- Israel: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; Defense Minister (reported as Katz in Spanish posts, likely Yoav Gallant or Israel Katz depending on portfolio); Maj. Gen. Rafi Milo, IDF Northern Command; IDF General Staff and Air Force.
- Hezbollah: Lebanese Shi’a militant group and political party, operating primarily in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, backed by Iran’s IRGC.
- United States: Unnamed U.S. official speaking to Al Jazeera, signaling policy tolerance for an expanded Israeli response.

Decision-making is clearly centered in the Israeli war cabinet and the Northern Command, with political top cover from Netanyahu and apparent diplomatic space provided by Washington.

3) Immediate military/security implications

The language and casualty data point to:
- Imminent intensification of Israeli air and artillery strikes on Hezbollah assets in southern Lebanon, including urban and semi‑urban infrastructure.
- Likely targeting of command-and-control sites, drone launch locations, logistics nodes, and possibly deeper‑strike operations beyond the immediate border belt.
- Hezbollah is unlikely to de‑escalate quickly, given its public framing of resistance and recent demonstrations of drone effectiveness. Expect further UAV, rocket, and possibly anti‑tank guided missile attacks on northern Israel.
- Civilian risk will rise on both sides of the border, increasing pressure on Beirut and Jerusalem/Tel Aviv, and raising the risk of miscalculation drawing in Iran more directly.

This does not yet constitute a new interstate war, but it is a clear shift from largely contained cross‑border exchanges toward a more sustained campaign that could threaten Lebanese infrastructure and internal stability.

4) Market and economic impact

Energy:
- While the fighting is currently localized to the Israel–Lebanon frontier, markets will price rising tail risk of spillover affecting East Mediterranean gas assets (Israeli offshore fields, Egyptian LNG flows) or, in a more extreme scenario, prompting Iranian signaling in the Gulf.
- Expect a modest risk‑on move in crude benchmarks (Brent, WTI) and regional gas spreads as traders hedge against further escalation.

Safe havens and FX:
- Gold typically benefits from Middle East escalation; any Israeli strikes deeper into Lebanon or high‑casualty incidents could support a bid in gold and high‑grade sovereigns (U.S. Treasuries, Bunds).
- The U.S. dollar and Swiss franc may see safe‑haven inflows; EM currencies with high external financing needs could come under marginal pressure if risk sentiment deteriorates.

Equities and credit:
- Israeli equities and credit spreads face downside/weakness on higher war‑risk premium, particularly in tourism, airlines, and domestically exposed sectors; defense and cybersecurity names may outperform.
- Regional banks and sovereign credit (Lebanon already distressed) could see additional pressure if infrastructure damage or displacement increases.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Operational: Expect visible uptick in IDF air sorties and artillery fire into southern Lebanon, accompanied by targeted strikes on suspected Hezbollah drone infrastructure.
- Political: Formal Israeli announcement of an ‘expanded phase’ in the northern campaign is possible, potentially after further consultations with Washington.
- Hezbollah response: Continued or intensified drone and rocket fire on northern Israel, possibly targeting new locations to demonstrate reach.
- Diplomatic: U.S., France, and UN channels will likely attempt to contain escalation; however, the U.S. signaling in Report 27 suggests Washington will not immediately restrain limited expansion framed as defensive.

Overall, the probability of a broader, sustained Israel–Hezbollah confrontation has increased meaningfully over the past hour, warranting close monitoring for any sign of strikes beyond the current border zone or Iranian moves that would raise systemic regional risk.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Heightened risk of broader Israel–Hezbollah conflict supports upside in oil and refined products on Levant/East Med disruption risk, and safe-haven flows into gold and USD. Israeli and regional equities face headline risk and potential volatility spikes; defense sector may see relative support.
