Trader consensus heavily favors no U.S. evacuation of the Beirut embassy by March 31, driven by the absence of any State Department order for full staff withdrawal and the holding of the November 2024 Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire, which has reduced immediate threats to U.S. diplomatic facilities in Lebanon. The embassy remains operational, with only prior voluntary departures of non-essential personnel and dependents authorized amid earlier escalations, signaling routine precautions rather than crisis-level risks. High confidence at 97.9% "No" reflects historical patterns where full evacuations follow explicit threat announcements, absent here despite ongoing regional volatility. Realistic shifts could arise from renewed cross-border attacks or direct assaults on U.S. assets, prompting rapid diplomatic repositioning.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$130,771 Vol.
$130,771 Vol.
$130,771 Vol.
$130,771 Vol.
A full evacuation announced within this market's timeframe will qualify for a "Yes" resolution regardless of whether an actual evacuation subsequently takes place within the timeframe.
Announcements of a partial evacuation, where some staff are intended to remain, will not count.
The resolution source will be official statements from the U.S. government, or a consensus of credible reporting confirming the evacuation of the embassy.
Market Opened: Feb 20, 2026, 4:33 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A full evacuation announced within this market's timeframe will qualify for a "Yes" resolution regardless of whether an actual evacuation subsequently takes place within the timeframe.
Announcements of a partial evacuation, where some staff are intended to remain, will not count.
The resolution source will be official statements from the U.S. government, or a consensus of credible reporting confirming the evacuation of the embassy.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus heavily favors no U.S. evacuation of the Beirut embassy by March 31, driven by the absence of any State Department order for full staff withdrawal and the holding of the November 2024 Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire, which has reduced immediate threats to U.S. diplomatic facilities in Lebanon. The embassy remains operational, with only prior voluntary departures of non-essential personnel and dependents authorized amid earlier escalations, signaling routine precautions rather than crisis-level risks. High confidence at 97.9% "No" reflects historical patterns where full evacuations follow explicit threat announcements, absent here despite ongoing regional volatility. Realistic shifts could arise from renewed cross-border attacks or direct assaults on U.S. assets, prompting rapid diplomatic repositioning.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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