BEIRUT, June 28 — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday declared his country’s agreement with...BEIRUT, June 28 — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday declared his country’s agreement with...

Hezbollah rejects deal with Israel, which expects ‘extended stay’ in Lebanon

2026/06/28 09:35
4 min read
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BEIRUT, June 28 — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday declared his country’s agreement with Lebanon “a blow to Iran and Hezbollah”, while the militant group’s leader Naim Qassem declared it void.

The agreement, which was signed in Washington on Friday after five rounds of talks and aims to pave the way to peace between the neighbours, includes plans to disarm Hezbollah.

Qassem called the agreement “humiliating, shameful, and a surrender of sovereignty” and warned that it could lead to the Israeli annexation of southern Lebanon.

“This agreement is null and void, and the provisions of the Iranian-American memorandum of understanding must be implemented,” he said, referring to the deal between the two powers to end the broader Middle East war, which includes a ceasefire in Lebanon.

While Qassem attacked the deal, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz insisted that the country’s troops would be able to stay in Lebanon so long as Hezbollah remained armed.

He said he had instructed Israeli troops “to prepare for an extended stay” in southern Lebanon and that “there will be no redeployment by Israel in southern Lebanon, no withdrawal, as long as the terrorist organisation Hezbollah is not disarmed throughout Lebanon”.

His prime minister, Netanyahu, reiterated that point in a televised briefing, saying that both the US and Lebanon “have recognised Israel’s right to maintain a security zone inside Lebanon for as long as it remains necessary to safeguard our security.”

Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun told his US counterpart Donald Trump in a phone call yesterday that the Lebanese state will assume responsibility for implementing the agreement, his office said.

According to a statement Aoun told Trump he hoped “the United States would help prevent any violations of the deal and ensure that all commitments are fulfilled, notably by pressuring Israel to withdraw from the areas it occupies in southern Lebanon to facilitate the deployment of the Lebanese army up to the international border.”

The deal has drawn criticism from within Israel, with far-right Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir yesterday denouncing it and saying only Israeli forces were capable of disarming Hezbollah.

Lebanon was drawn into the regional war on March 2 when Tehran-backed Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel to avenge the killing of Iran’s supreme leader in US-Israeli strikes.

Israel responded with heavy airstrikes and an invasion of southern Lebanon, where its troops occupy swathes of territory and have been carrying out extensive demolitions of homes and other buildings.

Iran insists any deal to end the broader war must include Lebanon, while the Lebanese government has repeatedly tried to separate the negotiating tracks.

Katz on Saturday said Israel would use “great force” against Iran if it “tries to attack Israel to prevent the implementation of the agreement” with Lebanon.

‘Humiliating and shameful’ 

Hezbollah supporters took to the streets of Beirut on Friday night to protest the framework.

In western Beirut’s Hamra street, 48-year-old Ahmad Shamas told AFP on Saturday that “the agreement reached is a humiliating and shameful one”.

Another local, Husam Beiruiti, 43, wasn’t ready to write the agreement off, and said he saw no other solution.

“I don’t think it will stop the Israeli aggression... Let’s wait and see what this agreement achieves,” he added.

Yesterday evening, the military vowed to maintain public order, saying it would “not allow any breach of security or threat to civil peace”.

Hezbollah has opposed the direct negotiations between Lebanon and Israel, which have been ongoing since April.

An April 17 ceasefire failed to stop the fighting, but the violence has decreased since the US and Iran reached their memorandum of understanding last week.

The Israeli military said yesterday that it had targeted “suspected terrorists” who posed a threat to its soldiers in southern Lebanon, and Lebanese state media reported strikes in the south.

The health ministry later reported at least one person killed and two wounded.

According to the text of the deal shared by the US State Department, Lebanon and Israel, officially at war for decades, expressed their intent to “conclusively end the conflict, address its underlying causes, and to therewith formally conclude any state of war between them”.

The agreement sets up a process during which Lebanon’s military is due to “restore effective sovereign authority over all Lebanese territory, pending the verified disarmament of non-state armed groups”. — AFP

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