Lebanon’s President
Joseph Aoun is under pressure to meet with
Israel’s
Benjamin Netanyahu on a US visit this month.Lebanese President
Joseph Aoun looks on during a meeting at the Presidential Palace in Nicosia,
Cyprus. [Petros Karadjias/ Reuters]Published On 5 May 2026Beirut,
Lebanon – As the battles rage on in southern
Lebanon, pressure is mounting on President
Joseph Aoun to meet directly with
Israel’s Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, in an event that could further incite internal tensions in the country.While no date has been set,
Lebanon’s Aoun will reportedly visit the
White House later in May, a month after
Israel and
Lebanon’s first direct negotiations in decades, which have divided Lebanese people.Recommended Stories list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3Smotrich says he promised his son ‘more destruction’ in Lebanonlist 2 of 3‘Starmer’s referendum’: How local elections could expose a fractured UKlist 3 of 3Iran war: What’s happening on day 67 as Hormuz crisis deepens?end of listThe decision to enter into direct negotiations with
Israel especially angered
Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed political and military group.
Hezbollah does want an end to the war, but prefers indirect negotiations to achieve that goal, as well as the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanese land.Analysts told Al Jazeera that internal tensions in
Lebanon mean there is little likelihood of Aoun meeting Netanyahu in Washington, as such a meeting would not have widespread, cross-communal support in
Lebanon.“The push for an Aoun–Netanyahu summit is being driven by the calendar and by Washington’s appetite for a visible deliverable,”
Dania Arayssi, a senior analyst at
New Lines Institute for Strategy and Policy, told Al Jazeera. “The April 26 ceasefire expires on May 17, the US Embassy in Beirut has now publicly conditioned American support on the meeting taking place, and the Trump administration is looking for an Abraham Accords-style photo opportunity that frames
Lebanon as the next domino after the
Iran ceasefire.”Israeli provocationsIsrael began its war on
Lebanon in October 2023, the day after the beginning of the war on Gaza. A ceasefire was agreed between
Israel and
Hezbollah in November 2024, but
Israel continued to attack
Lebanon periodically, violating the ceasefire more than 10,000 times in 15 months.
Hezbollah eventually responded on March 2, following the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei two days earlier.
Israel invaded
Lebanon, where it has gone about systematically destroying southern towns and villages, and since March 2, its attacks have killed almost 2,700 people, including more than 100 healthcare workers. More than 1.2 million people have been displaced by
Israel’s attacks, with displacement orders ongoing.Despite a ceasefire announced by
United States President Donald Trump on April 16,
Israel and
Hezbollah have continued to fight, mostly on Lebanese territory occupied by the Israelis.In an effort to halt the war and end
Israel’s occupation of southern
Lebanon, the Lebanese government has agreed to direct negotiations with the Israeli government, with the US acting as mediator – but those negotiations have been between the Israeli and Lebanese ambassadors to the US, and not more senior officials.For their part, the Israelis say they want the Lebanese government to disarm
Hezbollah to keep northern towns in
Israel safe from attacks.Some in the Lebanese government say their efforts to disarm
Hezbollah have been undermined by
Israel’s ceasefire violations and attacks on
Lebanon. The Lebanese government declared
Hezbollah’s military activities illegal on March 2.
Israel has tried to stir existing sectarian divides in
Lebanon during its attacks this year, partially by attempting to cause tensions between
Lebanon’s Shia community, from which
Hezbollah draws most of its support, and its other religious groups.Those sectarian tensions have been simmering of late. In one incident, a Lebanese television station played a cartoon disparagingly depicting
Hezbollah fighters and their leader Naim Qassem as characters from the mobile video game “Angry Birds”. Some
Hezbollah supporters responded by sharing images insulting the Maronite Christian patriarch.For Aoun – a Maronite Christian – to shake hands with Netanyahu, a man who recently posted a video of a demolition carried out by Israeli forces in southern
Lebanon, would be interpreted as a further provocation by many in
Lebanon, analysts said.“The sight of President Aoun shaking hands with Netanyahu would have very negative ramifications in
Lebanon,” Nicholas Blanford, a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council and the author of a book on
Hezbollah, told Al Jazeera.No regional backingThe likelihood of such a meeting happening seems to be waning, however.For his part, Aoun has said it is not the right time to meet Netanyahu.“We must first reach a security agreement and stop the Israeli attacks on us before we raise the issue of a meeting between us,”
Lebanon’s president said in a statement on Monday.Domestically, the issue has little support. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a staunch
Hezbollah ally, has said negotiations with
Israel cannot begin before the end of the war, while Druze leader Walid Jumblatt has said
Lebanon cannot negotiate while under fire.“Aoun’s hesitation reflects that he does not have the domestic consensus required to legitimise a presidential summit while
Israel still occupies positions inside
Lebanon, while strikes are ongoing, and while a million people remain displaced,” Arayssi said.The situation might have been different “if the ceasefire had held better and if images of destruction had not continued, including the destruction of churches and Christian villages”, Nadim Houry of the Paris-based Arab Reform Initiative said.But without a wider consensus, Houry said he did not believe Aoun would agree to meet Netanyahu.“Aoun doesn’t have clear regional backing, and it is not just
Hezbollah that is opposed,” Houry told Al Jazeera. “I don’t see [Aoun] committing political suicide at this point when nothing is to be given. The conditions aren’t there.”The push, however, seems to be coming from the US side, where, despite launching a war on
Iran that has engulfed the better part of the region, Trump regularly refers to his supposed peacemaking credentials.“The Trump administration risks moving too quickly trying to secure the optics of President Aoun meeting Netanyahu and shaking hands in the
White House,” Blanford said. “The Americans should dial back a little bit on this. They have to understand the very complex realities in
Lebanon. And optics are important.”Recently, when US Ambassador to
Lebanon Michel Issa was asked about a direct meeting between Aoun and Netanyahu, he dismissed the sensitivity around the issue. Issa said he felt it would be beneficial for Aoun to lay out his terms and for Netanyahu to listen.Analysts said, however, that some in the US administration recognise the sensitivity of forcing such a meeting between
Israel and
Lebanon.“Some folks in the US administration realise that such a meeting will destabilise
Lebanon, and they realise that it is not such a good idea to have it right now, considering the ongoing situation, attacks and destruction in
Lebanon,” Houry said.No Saudi support for meetingThe lack of support for such a move is not just domestic, but also regional.Saudi Arabian officials have held meetings in recent weeks with Aoun and Berri, in an effort to find a consensus among Lebanese figures and a unified
Lebanon position. Saudi Arabia has tried to bring
Lebanon in line with a wider Arab position of not normalising relations with
Israel until a clear roadmap for a Palestinian state is established.“Saudi Arabia and others in the Arab region are not so keen on [a direct meeting between leaders] right now,” Houry said. “They definitely want a ceasefire in
Lebanon, but they don’t want
Lebanon moving toward direct negotiations with
Israel through a meeting between
Benjamin Netanyahu and
Joseph Aoun while they are opposed to it.”