
Front Burner Israel steps up assault on Lebanon
4 snips
Mar 17, 2026 Rania Abouzeid, Beirut-based journalist with over two decades covering Middle East conflicts, paints a vivid picture of Lebanon under fire. She recounts life amid airstrikes and displacement. She traces Hezbollah’s rise, its military and social roles. She explores why violence escalated now and what paths — from armed resistance to fraught diplomacy — might lie ahead.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Lebanese Choose Home Over Evacuation
- Residents describe narrowly escaping strikes and choosing to stay home despite danger, saying they'd "rather stay in my house and die with dignity."
- Neighborhoods show stark contrasts: tents of displaced people beside open cafes and schools still running.
Hezbollah Is A Multifaceted State Actor
- Hezbollah formed in 1982 with IRGC support and kept arms post-civil war as part of a "resistance" security formula.
- It is a multiheaded entity: military, political, and social services including hospitals and microloans now targeted in strikes.
Hezbollah Held Fire Until A Political Trigger
- Hezbollah delayed retaliation through 15,000 recorded ceasefire violations, saying it was "being patient" and relying on diplomacy to enforce terms.
- It resumed attacks after Iran's leader was killed and cited diplomacy failure and exhausted patience.
