Hebrew-language media channels report an extensive wave of Israeli airstrikes targeting Hezbollah across Lebanon, alongside documentation of structural damage from a strike impacting the Israeli city of Bnei Brak.
On March 2, 2026, Hebrew-language Telegram channels reported a massive wave of Israeli Air Force (IAF) bombardments targeting Hezbollah across Lebanon. חדשות מהשטח בטלגרם, a channel noted for its pro-Israel and anti-Hamas editorial stance, extensively documented the offensive. According to the channel, "the IDF began attacking Hezbollah targets throughout Lebanon", with specific strikes recorded in Beirut's Dahiyeh neighborhood, a known Hezbollah stronghold, as well as in the Beqaa Valley city of Baalbek.
The airstrikes heavily concentrated on southern Lebanon. Multiple sources, including 🔞 חדשות ישראל | ללא צנזורה חדשות ישראל—a channel exhibiting a strongly pro-Israel and pro-Netanyahu bias—shared reports of an IAF strike in southern Lebanon. Similar operational updates were echoed by חדשות ישראל - צאט תגובות. Specific southern targets mentioned in the field reports included Al-Mansouri, Yohmor al-Shaqif, Wadi Jilo, and Al-Taybeh. An unlinked channel, ללא צנזורה, characterized the military operation as a "powerful wave of strikes in Lebanon."
Amid the offensive in Lebanon, Hebrew sources also documented domestic impacts within Israel. חדשות מהשטח בטלגרם shared "documentation from the fall site" and specific footage from inside a damaged building in Bnei Brak, indicating projectiles reached central Israel.
In a highly specific report regarding broader regional tensions, חדשות מהשטח בטלגרם also circulated claims of an exceptionally powerful IAF strike in Iran. The channel reported that the blast was "so powerful, that the remains of a Revolutionary Guard soldier's uniform flew off the building and got caught on a tree in the street."
The provided sources represent a unified Hebrew-language perspective, utilizing clinical military terminology when describing Israeli operations (e.g., "IAF strikes," "attacking Hezbollah targets") while highlighting the domestic toll of incoming fire (e.g., "documentation from the fall site"). Because no Arabic-language sources were present in the provided dataset, a direct cross-narrative comparison of terminology—such as how these same airstrikes might be framed as "aggression" or "targeting civilians" by Lebanese or pro-Hezbollah media—cannot be demonstrated from the current source material. The Israeli channels focus heavily on the operational reach and tactical success of the IDF.
The prompt explicitly requested a cross-narrative analysis comparing Hebrew and Arabic sources. However, the provided dataset exclusively contained messages from Hebrew-language Telegram channels (all exhibiting a pro-Israel sentiment). Consequently, it was impossible to present the Arabic framing, terminology, or causal explanations for these events. The digest proceeds with an analytical review of the unified Hebrew narrative that was provided.