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Israel-Gaza WarCease-fire negotiations Israeli hostage rescue Rafah operation
Gaza aid Remaining hostages
Israel-Gaza WarCease-fire negotiations Israeli hostage rescue Rafah operation
Gaza aid Remaining hostages



AS WAR LOOMS AND FLIGHTS DWINDLE, LEBANESE GRAPPLE WITH WHETHER TO FLEE

The exodus from Lebanon began last week after back-to-back assassinations
targeted a Hezbollah commander near Beirut and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in
Tehran.

7 min
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Beirut airport packed as people urged to leave Lebanon
0:44

Crowds gathered at the Beirut-Rafic Al Hariri International Airport on Aug. 5,
looking for flights to leave Lebanon, amid rising tensions in the region.
(Video: Reuters)
By Susannah George
and 
Suzan Haidamous
August 7, 2024 at 5:34 p.m. EDT

BEIRUT — Vacations cut short, hurried goodbyes and last-minute flights at
exorbitant fares — residents and tourists, heeding warnings of an impending war,
are scrambling to leave summertime Lebanon as tensions build between Israel and
Hezbollah, Iran’s Lebanese ally.

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Britain has ordered its citizens to “leave Lebanon now,” while Paris is urging
French nationals to depart “as soon as possible.” The U.S. Embassy in Beirut, in
an alert over the weekend, instructed Americans who wish to leave to “book any
ticket available to them.”



At the Beirut airport, passengers waited for delayed flights or for seats to
open up, tired children resting against luggage carts piled high with suitcases,
their parents sipping coffee out of paper cups. As airlines such as Lufthansa,
Air France and Royal Jordanian cancel flights to and from the country, ticket
prices have skyrocketed, putting them out of reach for many Lebanese grappling
with the effects of an economic crisis, including soaring inflation and a
currency that has lost much of its value.

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“The options are few and it’s very expensive, but for now, people are getting
out,” said Samer Shamass, 55, the owner of a small travel agency in Beirut.

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Passengers described having to make tough decisions about whether to leave, and
then rushing to find flights, or having family members outside Lebanon pay for
their tickets.

Mireille Malaket, 31, said by phone on Wednesday that she had scrambled to
rebook her ticket home to Canada last week. “The whole situation changed really
fast,” she said, adding that the atmosphere felt “tense” from the moment she
arrived in Lebanon in early July. “I could have waited, but it would have been a
risk.”



The exodus from Lebanon, a vibrant but crisis-ridden nation of about 5.3 million
people, began last week after back-to-back assassinations targeted a senior
Hezbollah commander near Beirut and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.

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Israel said it “eliminated” the Hezbollah commander, Fuad Shukr, on July 30 as
retaliation for a rocket strike days earlier that killed 12 children on a soccer
field in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. Hours later, on July 31, Haniyeh
was also killed, in a blast while visiting Iran. Israel has not commented on
Haniyeh’s killing, but U.S. officials were informed by Israel immediately
afterward that it was responsible — and Iran has vowed revenge for the attack on
its soil.

“After the assassination of Haniyeh, Iran finds itself obliged to respond. After
the assassination of Fuad [Shukr], Hezbollah finds itself obliged to respond,”
the Lebanese group’s leader, Hasan Nasrallah, said Tuesday in a live video
address to supporters in Beirut.

Israel and Hezbollah, Lebanon’s most powerful political and military movement,
have traded cross-border fire for months, in clashes that started soon after
Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, igniting
a war. Since then, near-daily Israeli strikes have displaced close to 100,000
people from the border region in southern Lebanon, and have killed 114 civilians
and noncombatants, according to a Washington Post tally.

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In Israel, Hezbollah rocket and drone attacks have also forced 62,000 people
from their homes in northern Israel and killed 23 civilians.

But Nasrallah on Tuesday signaled that this time was different, that the
assassination of a senior commander near Beirut required a much stronger
response. For months, he said, one part of Lebanon has served as the front line,
with frequent casualties and funerals, while in another part of the country
“it’s concerts and leisure, lunches and dinners, restaurants are full, hotels
are full.”

“We did not escalate, even when our commanders were killed,” he said, but added
that “no one can tell us, inside or outside Lebanon, to deal with [the] attack”
on Shukr as if it were a normal strike.



Despite the underlying fears, much of life in Beirut continues as normal.
Rush-hour traffic snarls the city’s narrow downtown streets and at night
restaurants and bars fill up with revelers. But a heightened level of anxiety
hangs over the sense of routine. When Israeli fighter jets broke the sound
barrier above Beirut as Nasrallah began to speak Tuesday, the city collectively
took a beat, fearing the sound marked the beginning of an attack.

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The last time Israel and Hezbollah fought an all-out war was in 2006, when
Hezbollah fighters ambushed Israeli troops on the border, killing three and
kidnapping two. Eighteen years later, the devastation of that conflict looms
large for many Lebanese. Back then, Israeli fighter jets targeted the Beirut
airport on the second day of the war, also bombing key roads and bridges and
blockading Lebanon’s ports.

At Shamass’s travel agency, the phones have been ringing nonstop since Shukr was
killed in an airstrike in Haret Hreik, just south of the capital, he said. Most
of those who are booking travel are people who came to Lebanon to visit extended
family for the summer.

“They have jobs, their kids have school, it makes sense to go,” Shamass said.

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But for residents of Lebanon, where an estimated 44 percent of the population
lives in poverty, according to the World Bank, there is nowhere to go. Lebanon
only shares borders with Israel and Syria, whose economy is also in free fall.

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The cost of a one-way ticket out of Lebanon is more than what many Lebanese
households make in a month. A flight from Beirut to Paris on Lebanon’s Middle
East Airlines costs about $300, and to Istanbul on Turkish Airlines, prices jump
to roughly $500 one way. A survey by Human Rights Watch in 2022 put the median
monthly household income in Lebanon at $122.

Tourism has also served as a lifeline for the Lebanese economy, with most other
sectors hobbled by the collapse. It accounted for more than 10 percent of the
country’s gross domestic product in 2022, according to the World Bank.



Bryan Stern is the founder of the Grey Bull Rescue Foundation, an organization
that specializes in extracting and evacuating U.S. citizens from conflict and
disaster zones. He said his group has started preparing for missions in Lebanon,
chartering boats and working to secure access to planes.

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“If you are an American in Beirut, there are just fewer paths out of the country
for you,” said Stern, who described his foundation as one that fills the “gaps”
left by the U.S. government.

Still, he said he’s encouraging people to get on commercial flights if they can.

“We are the last resort,” he said. “We are not war-zone Uber.”

But not everyone wants to leave. Some Lebanese citizens are returning home so
they can be close to family if there’s war — or at least so they’re not stranded
elsewhere if the airport is destroyed or damaged again.

“We are all traumatized by what happened in 2006 and the blockade,” said Jean
Riachi, 61, a banker who cut short his vacation in Greece to come back to
Lebanon on Saturday. “No one wants to take a chance to be stuck.”

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During the last war, Riachi said, the Israeli strikes on roads and bridges put
everyone on edge: “When you were on the road you were always thinking: It could
come at any time.”

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But now that they’re back in Lebanon, Riachi and his family haven’t changed
their daily routines. The restaurants and shops in his Badaro neighborhood are
full as most people continue to enjoy the summer, he said.

His children, grown and living abroad, have also returned to be near him and
their mother if the conflict escalates, he said.

“They want to be home,” Riachi said, laughing. “It’s not very special to our
family, most Lebanese are like this.”

Mohamad El Chamaa contributed to this report.


ISRAEL-GAZA WAR

The Israel-Gaza war has gone on for months, and tensions have spilled into the
surrounding Middle East region.

The war: On Oct. 7, Hamas militants launched an unprecedented cross-border
attack on Israel that included the taking of civilian hostages at a music
festival. See photos and videos of how the deadly assault unfolded. Israel
declared war on Hamas in response, launching a ground invasion that fueled the
biggest displacement in the region since Israel’s creation in 1948. In July
2024, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed in an attack Hamas has blamed on
Israel.

Gaza crisis: In the Gaza Strip, Israel has waged one of this century’s most
destructive wars, killing tens of thousands and plunging at least half of the
population into “famine-like conditions.” For months, Israel has resisted
pressure from Western allies to allow more humanitarian aid into the enclave.

U.S. involvement: Despite tensions between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and some U.S. politicians, including President Biden, the United
States supports Israel with weapons, funds aid packages, and has vetoed or
abstained from the United Nations’ cease-fire resolutions.

History: The roots of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and mistrust are deep and
complex, predating the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948. Read more
on the history of the Gaza Strip.

Show more

Share
686 Comments
Israel-Gaza war
HAND CURATED
 * Israel says Hamas top military commander killed; Hamas political leader
   mourned in Iran
   August 1, 2024
   
   Israel says Hamas top military commander killed; Hamas political leader
   mourned in Iran
   August 1, 2024
 * Where does Hamas go from here?
   July 31, 2024
   
   Where does Hamas go from here?
   July 31, 2024
 * Who are Hamas’s top leaders? What to know about Yehiya Sinwar.
   August 7, 2024
   
   Who are Hamas’s top leaders? What to know about Yehiya Sinwar.
   August 7, 2024

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