Raylan Givens Profile picture
Open-Source Intel, Analysis & Breaking News. Orthodox Jewish Zionist. Ex-IDF & Shadow Warrior. Proud American & Patriot Since 1990. #2A Supporter. 🇺🇸🇮🇱

Apr 5, 13 tweets

🧵REVEALED - THE IDF'S PLAN FOR LEBANON: Earlier today, IDF Radio revealed the detailed plan that the IDF has come up with for a new security zone in Southern Lebanon. This will likely shape the region for the coming years so let's dive in.

The core of this plan is the COMPLETE destruction of the first line of villages along the Lebanon-Israel border and the creation of a *depopulated* “security zone” where Lebanese residents would not be allowed to return.

The IDF says that Hezbollah has spent the past year trying to rebuild terror infrastructure near the border and the entire belt roughly 3–4 km from the border must become a cleared security area with a new forward line of Israeli positions.

The reported security zone runs from Kfar Kila opposite Metula all the way to An-Naqoura opposite Shlomi and Rosh Hanikra. This was not described as limited strikes.
It is described as total destruction.

This will include the demolition of all infrastructure in the targeted villages, physical devastation of the built-up areas, and a ban on the permanent return of Lebanese residents to those frontline communities.

The IDF says the plan will soon go to both the General Staff and the political echelon for approval.

According to the briefing, the proposal has already been developed alongside legal review and cleared through what the military views as the necessary legal framework.

The legal rationale is that the villages have functioned as Hezbollah terror infrastructure, enabling the group’s operations.

Therefore, the civilian fabric itself has been “criminalized,” because leaving the villages standing would allow Hezbollah to rebuild there again.

The model being discussed is reportedly similar to the “Yellow Line” concept used in Gaza:

A belt of terrain 2–4 km deep, depending on topography, kept fully clear, controlled by the IDF, and reinforced with a continuous line of military positions.

De facto, this would mean pushing Israel’s effective security line deeper into Lebanese territory.

Not necessarily through formal annexation — but through a military reality in which the old border remains on paper while a new controlled buffer zone exists beyond it.

One notable exception in the plan is that the IDF reportedly intends to exclude a small number of Christian villages inside the proposed zone.

Those villages would not be destroyed, and their residents would be permitted to return, even though they would effectively remain inside an area under Israeli security control.

A senior IDF officer, according to the briefing, described this as fundamentally different from Israel’s old security zone in Lebanon during the 1980s and 1990s.

The main difference, he said, is that this time the population would not be allowed to live in most of the area.

The same officer reportedly argued this would not mean holding deep Lebanese territory like in the past.

Instead, the idea is a shallow but hardened forward defense belt in the first few kilometers across the border — clear, fixed, and easier for Israel to defend.

The broader message from the IDF seems to be that the old border-adjacent village structure is no longer viewed as something Israel can tolerate.

From the military’s perspective, the villages themselves have become part of Hezbollah’s battle space.

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