Israel has intensified airstrikes on Beirut's southern suburbs—Hezbollah's stronghold—in the past 24 hours, targeting infrastructure amid an expanded ground offensive in southern Lebanon that began March 2, 2026. These actions follow evacuation orders and strikes on bridges over the Litani River, escalating the conflict after a prior ceasefire collapsed, with over 500 targets hit in the war's first week alone. Hezbollah retaliations with rockets continue, drawing Lebanon deeper into hostilities. Traders weigh daily strike patterns against stalled diplomatic talks and Israel's stated aim to control territory up to 30 km from the border, with no major de-escalation signals as of March 28. Upcoming UN Security Council discussions on Lebanon could influence trajectories.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedIsrael military action against Beirut on...?
Israel military action against Beirut on...?
$18,254 Vol.
April 1
63%
April 2
51%
April 3
57%
April 4
51%
April 5
51%
April 6
51%
April 7
60%
April 8
62%
April 9
55%
April 10
63%
$18,254 Vol.
April 1
63%
April 2
51%
April 3
57%
April 4
51%
April 5
51%
April 6
51%
April 7
60%
April 8
62%
April 9
55%
April 10
63%
For the purposes of this market, a qualifying "strike" is defined as the use of aerial bombs, drones, or missiles (including cruise or ballistic missiles) launched by Israeli military forces that impact within Greater Beirut.
For the purposes of this market, “Greater Beirut” refers to the continuous urbanized zone that encompasses all of the Beirut Governorate and the adjacent coastal and suburban municipalities of the Mount Lebanon Governorate. For this market, the geographic boundaries as defined in the map “Location of the Greater Beirut Area” (https://polymarket-upload.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/Beirut-3ffb23044f.png) from Faour & Mhawej (2014), Mapping Urban Transitions in the Greater Beirut Area Using Different Space Platforms (https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/3/3/941) will be used. If the precise location of a strike cannot be clearly attributed to the defined territory based on the referenced map, it will not qualify.
Missiles or drones that are intercepted and surface-to-air missile strikes will not be sufficient for a "Yes" resolution, regardless of whether they land on the specified territory or cause damage.
Actions such as artillery fire, small arms fire, FPV or ground based ATGM strikes, ground incursions, naval shelling, cyberattacks, or other operations conducted by Israeli ground operatives will not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be official government/military statements (Israeli or foreign), multilateral bodies (UN, etc.), or a consensus of credible reporting from major international media and national broadcasters/newspapers.
If the date/time of a strike cannot be confirmed by a consensus of credible reporting by the end of the third calendar date after this market's end date, it will resolve to "No" regardless of whether a strike was later confirmed to have taken place.
Market Opened: Mar 24, 2026, 1:04 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For the purposes of this market, a qualifying "strike" is defined as the use of aerial bombs, drones, or missiles (including cruise or ballistic missiles) launched by Israeli military forces that impact within Greater Beirut.
For the purposes of this market, “Greater Beirut” refers to the continuous urbanized zone that encompasses all of the Beirut Governorate and the adjacent coastal and suburban municipalities of the Mount Lebanon Governorate. For this market, the geographic boundaries as defined in the map “Location of the Greater Beirut Area” (https://polymarket-upload.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/Beirut-3ffb23044f.png) from Faour & Mhawej (2014), Mapping Urban Transitions in the Greater Beirut Area Using Different Space Platforms (https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/3/3/941) will be used. If the precise location of a strike cannot be clearly attributed to the defined territory based on the referenced map, it will not qualify.
Missiles or drones that are intercepted and surface-to-air missile strikes will not be sufficient for a "Yes" resolution, regardless of whether they land on the specified territory or cause damage.
Actions such as artillery fire, small arms fire, FPV or ground based ATGM strikes, ground incursions, naval shelling, cyberattacks, or other operations conducted by Israeli ground operatives will not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be official government/military statements (Israeli or foreign), multilateral bodies (UN, etc.), or a consensus of credible reporting from major international media and national broadcasters/newspapers.
If the date/time of a strike cannot be confirmed by a consensus of credible reporting by the end of the third calendar date after this market's end date, it will resolve to "No" regardless of whether a strike was later confirmed to have taken place.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Israel has intensified airstrikes on Beirut's southern suburbs—Hezbollah's stronghold—in the past 24 hours, targeting infrastructure amid an expanded ground offensive in southern Lebanon that began March 2, 2026. These actions follow evacuation orders and strikes on bridges over the Litani River, escalating the conflict after a prior ceasefire collapsed, with over 500 targets hit in the war's first week alone. Hezbollah retaliations with rockets continue, drawing Lebanon deeper into hostilities. Traders weigh daily strike patterns against stalled diplomatic talks and Israel's stated aim to control territory up to 30 km from the border, with no major de-escalation signals as of March 28. Upcoming UN Security Council discussions on Lebanon could influence trajectories.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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