The Israeli army announced on Thursday that the Givati Brigade completed its “mission” in southern Lebanon after eight months of offensives, as Israeli forces continue to occupy several areas of the country and carry out attacks. Lebanese authorities say Israeli attacks have killed 4,298 people since October 2023.
In a statement, the military said the brigade concluded its combat mission during a ceremony at Camp Filon in northern Israel attended by Northern Command chief Maj. Gen. Rafi Milo.
The army said the brigade initially carried out border operations before launching ground offensives in Khiam, Bint Jbeil, and areas north of the Litani River.
It claimed the brigade destroyed hundreds of Hezbollah sites, killed hundreds of fighters and seized more than 1,000 weapons.
The military gave no reason for ending the deployment.
Field arrangements under US-brokered framework
Israeli daily Haaretz reported that the move was part of a broader troop redeployment and partial withdrawals from selected villages under field arrangements linked to a US-brokered framework agreement signed with Lebanon last week.
Another Israeli media, Yedioth Ahronoth, said the move reflected "political and operational pressure" and aimed to consolidate a so-called “buffer zone” rather than end Israel's military occupation in southern Lebanon.
Last Saturday, Israeli Army Radio reported that the military had begun reducing its occupation forces in southern Lebanon from five divisions to two following the framework agreement.
Beirut and Tel Aviv signed the US-mediated agreement last Friday, providing for a phased Israeli withdrawal from Lebanese territory beginning with two unspecified pilot areas.
The agreement, however, does not set a timetable for a full withdrawal and links further pullbacks to the Lebanese army assuming security responsibilities and the disarmament of non-state armed groups, including Hezbollah.














