Israel pounds south Lebanon as IDF readies large tunnel demolition near the border
Israeli jets struck Nabatieh al-Fawqa and Mayfadoun in southern Lebanon on Sunday evening, while the IDF told northern Israeli residents to expect seismic-warning alerts tied to an imminent tunnel demolition.

Israeli warplanes struck the towns of Nabatieh al-Fawqa and Mayfadoun in southern Lebanon in a rolling barrage beginning around 19:26 UTC on 28 June 2026, with secondary detonations on the outskirts of the larger Nabatieh city reported minutes later. The Cradle Media flagged the opening salvo in real time; the Beirut-based correspondent channel wfwitness posted three separate updates between 19:26 and 19:40 UTC, including imagery it said was from the strikes on Maifadoun and Nabatieh al-Fawqa, and a fourth noting Israeli jets still transiting south Lebanese airspace.
The kinetic push came alongside a separate, less conventional announcement. The IDF, according to a Telegram channel run by Israeli analyst Abraham Abu Eli, told residents of northern Israel to expect a possible earthquake-warning alert in the coming hours, tied to what the channel described as a "significant detonation of a tunnel system in southern Lebanon." Read together, the two streams describe a single operational evening: an air campaign against surface targets in the Nabatieh district, paired with the demolition — likely by controlled explosive charge rather than air-delivered munition — of an underground network that crosses, or approaches, the border.
For Israel, the logic is familiar. Tunnels running under the frontier have been a declared strategic concern since the 2018 Operation Northern Shield, when IDF engineering corps exposed and destroyed several Hezbollah attack shafts inside Israeli territory. The 2023–2024 war expanded the threat picture, with the IDF documenting longer cross-border tunnels, some equipped with ventilation, electrical systems and pre-staged fighting positions. The current operation appears to follow the same template of detection followed by demolition, with the alert advisory suggesting engineers judged the blast powerful enough to register on civilian seismic sensors.
The Lebanese framing, as carried by wfwitness and amplified by outlets like The Cradle, treats the strikes as a continuation of near-daily bombardment that has tracked Israeli operations across the Litani and south of it since the November 2024 ceasefire. Nabatieh governorate, the historic heartland of south Lebanese Shi'a political life, has absorbed an outsized share of post-ceasefire strikes; the al-Fawqa and Mayfadoun strikes sit roughly fifteen kilometres north of the border. There is no public Israeli readout in the source material specifying what was struck or why, and wfwitness's posts are battlefield-circulation rather than confirmed ground reports. The casualty picture is, accordingly, unsettled: the source items describe strikes and imagery, not names or numbers.
The structural pattern this evening sits inside is a low-intensity but persistent cross-border campaign that has continued past the formal cessation of hostilities. Israeli officials have framed the post-2024 architecture as a "understanding" rather than a treaty — a posture that gives Jerusalem significant latitude to act against what it calls Hezbollah rearmament, while leaving Beirut with limited recourse except diplomatic protest. Lebanese state institutions have complained repeatedly through UNIFIL and the UN Security Council; Iran-backed media, including outlets cited by wfwitness, have used the strikes to argue that the agreement is already functionally dead. Whether tonight's operation marks a step-change — a high-yield tunnel demolition rather than a localised strike — or fits the established pattern depends on what the IDF says in the coming hours, and on whether the seismic warning it has flagged actually materialises on Israeli phones.
What is clear, and what the timeline itself demonstrates, is the gap between the public information environment on each side of the border. Israeli audiences receive early-warning advisories calibrated to seismic thresholds; Lebanese audiences receive Telegram footage and casualty reports assembled by local journalists, often without official attribution; international wire coverage, where it exists at all in the source material, depends heavily on the same channels. The two information regimes describe the same evening from different geometries, and the policy debate in Tel Aviv, Beirut, Washington and Tehran is being conducted against that asymmetry.
Three things to watch over the next twenty-four hours. First, the IDF's own confirmation — or silence — on the tunnel demolition, which would establish whether the evening's headline is an air campaign or an engineering operation. Second, UNIFIL statements, which have become the principal international ledger for cross-border incidents and which often surface Israeli and Lebanese positions side by side. Third, Hezbollah's response, which the source material does not address and which would convert tonight's pressure into a decision point for the group's still-incomplete post-war posture. Each of those inputs will tell us whether 28 June was a continuation or an inflection.
Desk note: Monexus framed the evening's events from the available wire and Telegram inputs, presenting the IDF's demolition advisory and the airstrike reporting as parallel streams rather than collapsing them into a single narrative. Where source material is battlefield-circulation rather than confirmed reporting, this publication flagged the gap rather than papering over it.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/englishabuali
- https://t.me/wfwitness
- https://t.me/wfwitness
- https://t.me/wfwitness
- https://t.me/wfwitness
- https://t.me/thecradlemedia