© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.
All rights reserved.
Version 7.6.4
Capturing Beaufort Castle is a turning point — Hezbollah used that ridge for years to rain hundreds of rockets down on Israeli communities below. Since the operation began, 8,000 Hezbollah fighters have been eliminated, Israeli forces have crossed the Litani River and taken dominant terrain and the mission to restore security to northern residents is advancing on every front.
Planting a flag on an empty, UNESCO-protected ruin is a PR stunt masking a strategic dead end, not a military victory. No resistance fighters were inside Beaufort Castle; Israeli troops flanked it, snapped photos and immediately withdrew, all while still bombing the surrounding area. The longer this unwinnable Zionist campaign drags on, the heavier the losses mount.
For nearly nine centuries, Beaufort Castle watched empires rise and fall from its rocky throne above the Litani. Crusaders, Saladin, Mamluks, Ottomans, guerrillas and armies all left their mark. Today, fighter jets circle where pilgrims and tourists once stood. Despite UNESCO's enhanced protection, explosions echo through its ancient stones, turning a monument of shared history into another casualty of Lebanon's widening war.