Wars 2023 10/08 Monitoring the Israel and Lebanon War

Wars 2023 10/08 Monitoring the Israel and Lebanon War
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What challenges lie ahead for US-Israel-Lebanon agreement?
Agence France-Presse . Beirut, Lebanon 28 June, 2026, 01:49

Lebanon and Israel, under US sponsorship, have signed an agreement hoping to end hostilities, but experts warn that it does not guarantee Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and its implementation depends on Hezbollah and its backer Iran. Politics(Right)

Lebanon took the step of negotiating directly with Israel despite having no diplomatic relations, after Tehran-backed Hezbollah drew the country into the Middle East war.

But, with Israel saying it will not leave occupied Lebanese territory unless Hezbollah is disarmed, what traps and challenges lie ahead for the agreement?

Will Israel withdraw?

Although the framework agreement mentions an Israeli ‘redeployment’ from Lebanon, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu immediately said that soldiers would remain in a self-declared ‘security zone’ stretching 10 kilometres from the border, ‘as long as Hezbollah has not disarmed’. Arabs& Middle Easterners

‘Yesterday ... we achieved a historic deal for the state of Israel after direct negotiations between Israel and Lebanon,’ Netanyahu said in a televised briefing on the deal. ‘This is a blow to Iran and Hezbollah.’

Imad Salamey, head of the Political and International Studies Department at the Lebanese American University, told AFP that one of the agreement’s shortcomings was that it made ‘no guarantee that Israel will fully withdraw from occupied areas or significantly restrict its military operations in southern Lebanon’.

‘Without firm Israeli commitments, many residents of the south may continue to face insecurity, delayed reconstruction.’

Netanyahu said on Friday that displaced Lebanese civilians would not be allowed to return home to occupied areas.

The agreement merely mentions ‘pilot zones’, where the Lebanese military will take control after an Israeli ‘redeployment’.

An initial two zones have been agreed upon, and future pilots are to be determined by mutual consent.

The Lebanese army would, however, only assume full security responsibility for these zones upon external ‘confirmation’ that non-state armed groups, most notably Hezbollah, are disarmed there.

Where does Hezbollah stand?

From the moment Lebanese authorities announced direct talks with Israel in April, Hezbollah branded the move a ‘sin’.

On Saturday, the group’s leader Naim Qassem called the agreement ‘humiliating, shameful, and a surrender of sovereignty’.

‘This agreement is null and void, and the provisions of the Iranian-American memorandum of understanding must be implemented,’ he said.

Supporters of the group took to the streets of Beirut on Friday night to protest the framework.

Lebanese Parliament speaker and Hezbollah ally Nabih Berri cautioned on Saturday against internal strife and the Lebanese army warned that it would not permit any threat to civil peace.

In the capital’s Hamra street, Ahmad Shamas, a 48-year-old taxi driver, told AFP the agreement was ‘an agreement of humiliation and shame’.

But another resident, Husam al-Beiruti, 43, said that he was neutral towards the agreement. ‘What is the other solution? Is there any solution? Give us a solution we can follow.’

Salamey said that while Hezbollah’s rejection of the agreement was expected, ‘the real question is whether opposition remains political or evolves into direct confrontation with the Lebanese army, particularly if the state receives expanded military and financial support from the United States and its partners’.

In the agreement, Lebanon requested international and Arab support to achieve ‘the complete and verified disarmament of all non-state armed groups,’ alluding to Hezbollah. Politics(Right)

What about Iran?

According to experts, the implementation of the agreement will depend in large part on Hezbollah’s backer, Iran.

Iran has used Lebanon as a key bargaining chip in its negotiations with the United States, sometimes closing the Strait of Hormuz and threatening to walk away from talks over continued Israeli attacks on the country.

Heiko Wimmen, a researcher at the International Crisis Group, told AFP that while the government may be able to ‘take control of the process’ after the latest agreement, ‘Iranian influence in Lebanon is still alive and kicking’.

According to Salamey, the implementation ‘will depend primarily on Iran’s strategic calculations’.

‘Tehran must decide whether the benefits of continued engagement with Washington and sanctions relief outweigh the costs of preserving its military leverage in Lebanon, which has become increasingly expensive’.​
 

Israel strikes Lebanon despite truce framework to end hostilities
Agence France-Presse . Beirut, Lebanon 28 June, 2026, 22:40

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Hezbollah supporters block the old airport road in the southern suburbs of Beirut, with burning tires to protest against the trilateral agreement that was signed between the US, Israel and Lebanon on Saturday. | AFP photo

Israel renewed its strikes on Lebanon on Sunday, Lebanese state media reported, two days after an agreement was signed by the two countries, which a Hezbollah lawmaker warned would lead to ‘internal conflict’.

The strikes come a day after one person was killed in an Israeli strike on the south, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, with the Israeli military saying it targeted Hezbollah members near its self-proclaimed ‘security zone’, which reaches 10 kilometres into Lebanon.

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported several strikes on Sunday.

The Israeli army said a soldier ‘fell in combat’ in southern Lebanon.

In a later statement, Israeli military chief Eyal Zamir approved plans for ‘continued operations in the security zone, in accordance with the ceasefire agreement’.

Hezbollah drew the country into the Middle East war in March with rocket fire aimed at Israel to avenge the killing of Iran’s supreme leader in US-Israeli strikes, and Israel responded with massive airstrikes and a ground invasion.

Lebanese president Joseph Aoun told his US counterpart Donald Trump on Saturday that his country ‘would assume its responsibilities’ in implementing the framework agreement, which was signed in Washington on Friday after five rounds of talks.

The deal aims to pave the way for peace between Israel and Lebanon, who have officially been at war for decades, though Israel’s many conflicts across its northern border have largely been with non-state actors.

The agreement makes any Israeli withdrawal from occupied Lebanese land conditional on Beirut disarming Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the deal ‘historic’ for his country.

Hezbollah strongly opposed the talks with Israel from the start and rejects the agreement, with leader Naim Qassem saying on Saturday that the group would treat the deal as ‘null and void’ and describing it as ‘a surrender of sovereignty’.

His supporters took to the streets on Friday evening to protest the framework.

An AFP correspondent saw signs on Sunday morning that read ‘Lebanon first’ being burned along Beirut’s airport road, which borders the city’s southern suburbs, a Hezbollah stronghold, after previous billboards saying ‘thank you Iran’ were removed.

Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah said on Sunday that ‘the agreement of humiliation and disgrace signed by the authorities will never see the light of day’.

He added that what ‘the authorities have done amounts to sedition aimed at pushing the country into chaos and shifting the conflict from one with the enemy to an internal conflict’.

Hezbollah repeatedly asked Lebanese authorities to link themselves to Iran’s negotiations to end its war with the US, while Tehran has insisted any ceasefire for the Middle East war should include Lebanon.

In a phone conversation with his Lebanese counterpart Nabih Berri, Iranian parliament speaker and head of Tehran’s negotiating delegation Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said that ‘our goal is to end the war in Lebanon, return the refugees to their homes and remove the occupation and the withdrawal of the Zionist regime from the Lebanese territory, and we are seriously pursuing this issue’.

According to the text of the deal shared by the US State Department, Lebanon and Israel expressed their intent to ‘conclusively end the conflict, address its underlying causes and... formally conclude any state of war between them’.

Under the agreement, Lebanon’s military will ‘restore effective sovereign authority over all Lebanese territory, pending the verified disarmament of non-state armed groups’.

Israel’s defence minister Israel Katz, however, has insisted troops will stay in Lebanon so long as Hezbollah remains armed.​
 

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