Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 28
Dahiya Revives After 3-Month Israel-Hezbollah Fighting, as US-Brokered Deal Takes Hold
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 28

Dahiya Revives After 3-Month Israel-Hezbollah Fighting, as US-Brokered Deal Takes Hold

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 28

Summary

  • Traffic jams, reopened bakeries and late-night World Cup crowds have returned to Dahiya, signaling a rapid revival in Beirut’s Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs after months of war disruption.
  • More than 3 months of Israel-Hezbollah fighting had emptied the densely populated area through airstrikes, evacuation warnings and the flight of tens of thousands of residents.
  • A U.S.-brokered preliminary deal between Israel and Lebanon, together with a series of stop-and-start cease-fires, has allowed residents and businesses to come back even as rubble still lines damaged streets.
  • Dahiya was hit by the first Israeli strikes on Beirut in early March after Hezbollah fired at Israel in response to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, underscoring how quickly a frontline district is trying to resume normal life.

Insights

Will Israel's new maritime buffer zone become a permanent seizure of Lebanon's offshore gas reserves?
With Hezbollah rejecting the U.S. deal, is a return to full-scale war in Lebanon inevitable?
How can the U.S. enforce peace with contradictory diplomatic deals for Israel-Lebanon and Iran?