An Israeli soldier occupies a military position overlooking the so-called Yellow Line in the central
Gaza Strip, Tuesday, May 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) By MELANIE LIDMAN and WILLIAM JARRETT Updated 1:49 PM MESZ, June 18, 2026 Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit JERUSALEM (AP) — Over the past two and a half years,
Israel has taken control of swaths of Gaza,
Lebanon and
Syria that amount to its biggest expansion of militarily occupied lands in decades. It is an area larger than many major cities — roughly 1,000 square kilometers (386 square miles) — and
Israel has said it plans to stay indefinitely. The land seizures began in the aftermath of
Hamas’
2023 cross-border attack, which ignited wars on multiple fronts. The Israeli military took over large portions of Gaza as part of a broad invasion, and later seized control of chunks of
Lebanon and
Syria.
Israel calls these areas “buffer zones” and says they are needed to prevent future attacks by militant groups. In Gaza and
Lebanon, Israeli land seizures and evacuation warnings have pushed out more than 3 million people, and troops have demolished towns and neighborhoods, creating large, depopulated zones. The “buffer zones” — equivalent to roughly 5% of
Israel’s area soon after its founding — are not new borders, which require an agreement between two countries. But many fear these changes could become long-lasting.
Iran has made
Israel’s withdrawal from
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Russia 2 MIN READ Since its founding in 1948,
Israel has never had clear borders. Its boundaries have shifted through wars, annexations, ceasefires and peace agreements.
Israel and
Hezbollah have fought multiple wars since the
Iran-backed Lebanese militant group was formed in 1982.
Israel occupied much of southern
Lebanon between 1982–2000, saying it was necessary to protect northern Israeli communities. After
Israel’s withdrawal in 2000, the U.N. drew up a boundary between the two countries. A year of fighting between
Israel and
Hezbollah ended with an October 2024 ceasefire. That truce collapsed in March, days into the U.S.-Israeli war against
Iran. Following missile and drone attacks by
Hezbollah,
Israel launched a ground invasion into
Lebanon. When fighting was halted in April,
Israel said the military would occupy an area up to 10 kilometers (6 miles) deep.
Israel now holds 608 square kilometers (234 square miles) in
Lebanon, according to experts with the Carnegie Middle East Center. Evacuation warnings have forced about 1.2 million Lebanese to flee, and
Israel has warned civilians against returning.
Hezbollah has condemned
Israel’s presence inside
Lebanon, and the Lebanese government has called for
Israel to withdraw.
Israel seized the
Gaza Strip from Egypt in the 1967 Mideast War. It unilaterally withdrew troops and settlers from the territory in 2005.
Hamas militants overran the territory two years later, and their Oct. 7, 2023, attack on
Israel launched the devastating war in Gaza. When the Gaza ceasefire went into effect in October 2025,
Israel withdrew its troops to a zone demarcated by the so-called “yellow line,” giving it control of just over half the strip. Almost the entire population of Gaza, more than 2 million people, has been squeezed into vast, squalid tent cities dependent on international aid. The military has bulldozed or demolished wide swaths of the zone, and the area, where most of Gaza’s agricultural land lies, is inaccessible to Palestinians. Israeli forces are meant to complete a fuller withdrawal under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire. But the U.S.-backed diplomat overseeing the truce says progress is deadlocked over the central sticking point of disarming
Hamas. With the ceasefire process stuck,
Israel has since moved the line west and expanded its control to more than 60% of Gaza — 194 square kilometers (75 square miles), according to rights group Gisha. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israeli control of Gaza will increase to 70%.
Israel captured the Golan Heights from
Syria during the 1967 Mideast war and later annexed it -- a move not widely recognized by the international community. After the 1973 Mideast war, the U.N. created a buffer zone in southern
Syria next to the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, patrolled by a U.N. force of about 1,100 troops. In December 2024, after the surprise downfall of Syrian President Bashar Assad,
Israel moved its troops into the U.N. buffer zone, saying it was concerned that Syrian rebels could attack
Israel. It also wanted to disrupt
Iran’s ability to smuggle weapons through
Syria to
Hezbollah militants in
Lebanon. The U.N. and other critics say the seizure of land violates a 1974 ceasefire agreement. Civilians in the area have not been instructed to evacuate but have faced checkpoints and tension, with occasional clashes between Israeli soldiers and villagers.
Syria’s interim president, Ahmad al-Sharaa, has called on
Israel to withdraw from the area that the U.N. says is 235 square kilometers (91 square miles). Since capturing the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war,
Israel has built well over 100 settlements across the occupied territory. The government has approved 47 new settlements and formalized or expanded 55 existing settlements just since 2022, according to Peace Now. After the war in Gaza began,
Israel expanded its military operations in the West Bank, displacing tens of thousands of Palestinians from their homes. Some of the new settlements approved recently are retroactive legalizations of tiny outposts, while others are neighborhoods of existing settlements. The precipitous growth of settlements stems from settler leaders and supporters holding key positions in
Israel’s government and a U.S. administration that is largely pro-settlement. The international community considers them illegal. The expanded settlements have put enormous restrictions on the daily lives of Palestinians, who view them as the main barrier to a lasting peace agreement because they are built on lands they seek for a future state. MELANIE LIDMAN Lidman is an Associated Press reporter based in Tel Aviv,
Israel.