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Trump says Israel-Lebanon ceasefire extended by three weeks

Yesterday marked the most significant test of the ceasefire yet, after Israeli strikes killed a Lebanese journalist.

A man walks into a bombed-out building with a Lebanese flag hanging from the door

Roughly halfway through the 10-day ceasefire, Lebanese and Israeli negotiators are meeting in Washington DC today to discuss a more durable resolution to the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah that erupted anew in early March. Source: Getty / Scott Peterson

US President Donald Trump says the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel will be extended by three weeks after envoys from the two countries met at the White House.

The announcement comes a day after Israeli strikes killed at least five people, including a journalist, marking the deadliest day since the ceasfire began.

Addressing journalists at the White House, Trump said he would work with the Lebanese government to "protect itself from Hezbollah."

The previous ceasefire agreement, reached after talks between the two nations' ambassadors to Washington last week, had been set to expire on Sunday, and has yielded a significant reduction in violence. Attacks have continued in southern Lebanon, however, where Israeli troops have seized a self-declared buffer zone.

Iran-backed Hezbollah has said it has "the right to resist" occupying forces.

A US official said the latest round of talks, initially set to be hosted by the State Department, had been moved to the White House.

Recent contacts with Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio had focused on halting escalation and launching negotiations aimed at ending the state of war, securing Israel’s withdrawal from occupied territory and deploying the Lebanese army to the international border, the Lebanese presidency said in a statement.

Deadliest day since ceasefire

Wednesday was Lebanon's deadliest day since the ceasefire took effect on 16 April.

The Israeli military said on Thursday that it killed two armed individuals in southern Lebanon after identifying them approaching soldiers and posing what it described as "an immediate threat."

It was not immediately clear whether the incident was related to strikes reported earlier in nearby areas by Lebanon's health ministry, which said an Israeli air strike had killed three people and artillery shelling wounded two others, including a child.

Those killed by Israeli strikes included Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil, according to a senior Lebanese military official and her employer, Al-Akhbar newspaper.

Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah said the group wanted the ceasefire to continue but "on the basis of full compliance by the Israeli enemy". At a televised press conference, he reiterated Hezbollah's objections to the face-to-face talks and urged the government to cancel all forms of direct contact with Israel.

Hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel reignited on 2 March, when the group opened fire in support of Iran in the regional war. The ceasefire in Lebanon emerged separately from Washington’s efforts to resolve its conflict with Tehran, though Iran had called for Lebanon to be included in any broader truce.

Hezbollah said it carried out four operations in south Lebanon on Wednesday in response to Israeli strikes.

Nearly 2,500 people have been killed in Lebanon since Israel went on the offensive following Hezbollah's 2 March attack, according to Lebanese authorities.

Israel is occupying a belt of the south that extends 5 to 10 km (3 to 6 miles) into Lebanon, saying it aims to shield northern Israel from attacks by Hezbollah, which has fired hundreds of rockets during the war.

Israel's military reiterated a warning to residents of south Lebanon not to cross into the area.

Lebanon to seek end of Israeli demolitions

Fadlallah said full compliance with the ceasefire meant Israel must "halt assassinations, completely cease fire ... halt the destruction of villages", followed by paving the way for an Israeli withdrawal through "procedures undertaken by the Lebanese state but not via direct negotiations".

A Lebanese official said Lebanon wants a ceasefire extension as a prerequisite for talks to expand beyond the ambassadorial level to the next phase, in which Lebanon would push for an Israeli withdrawal, the return of Lebanese detained in Israel and a delineation of the land border.

Israel says its objectives in the talks with Lebanon include securing the dismantlement of Hezbollah and creating conditions for a peace deal. Israel has sought to make common cause with Lebanon's government over Hezbollah, which Beirut has been seeking to disarm peacefully for the past year.

Israel will be represented by its US ambassador, Yechiel Leiter. Rubio hosted the first meeting between Leiter and Moawad on 14 April — the highest-level contact between Lebanon and Israel in decades.

Washington has denied any link between its Lebanon mediation and diplomacy over the Iran war.

Hezbollah says the Lebanon ceasefire was the result of Iranian pressure rather than US mediation.


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4 min read

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Source: Reuters


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