EXPLAINERNetanyahu agrees to halt operations near
Beirut while
Hezbollah says it will stop attacks on
Israel, as Trump says he spoke to
Hezbollah through ‘highly placed representatives’.First responders gather at the site of an Israeli strike that hit near a hospital in the southern Lebanese city of
Tyre on June 1, 2026 [AFP]Published On 2 Jun 2026United States President
Donald Trump says
Israel and
Hezbollah have agreed to halt attacks following indirect talks through intermediaries.Posting on Truth Social on Monday, Trump said he had spoken with both Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and, through “highly placed representatives”,
Hezbollah.Recommended Stories list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3Lebanon latest:
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Israel pushes past the Litani, Lebanese question the purpose of UNIFILlist 3 of 3Iran warns Israeli attacks in
Lebanon and Gaza threaten US ceasefire talksend of list“I had a very good call with
Hezbollah, and they agreed that all shooting will stop – that
Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack
Israel,” he wrote.No US president has ever spoken with
Hezbollah, either directly or via intermediaries. At present, Washington has designated the group as a “terrorist” organisation.According to statements from
Lebanon’s embassy in Washington, the proposal would see
Hezbollah stop attacks on
Israel in exchange for
Israel halting strikes on
Beirut and its southern suburbs.Trump also said Netanyahu had agreed to pull back any Israeli troops preparing to attack the Lebanese capital,
Beirut. Separately, Netanyahu said he had discussed this with Trump but that
Israel would push ahead with plans to strike
Beirut if
Hezbollah makes any further attacks on
Israel.Here is what we know so far.Why does this announcement matter for the
Iran" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="121993" data-entity-type="event">war on
Iran?
Iran has stated that one of its conditions for any agreement on ending the war with the US is that
Israel withdraw from
Lebanon.The
Iran-backed armed group,
Hezbollah, which is based in
Lebanon, began firing on northern
Israel after the first US-Israeli strikes on Tehran at the end of February.Until then, the
Iran-backed group had not attacked
Israel since a November 2024 ceasefire was announced, despite near-daily breaches of the agreement by
Israel.Since early March,
Israel has continued to launch near-daily attacks on
Lebanon and currently occupies about one-fifth of the country.According to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, more than 3,412 people have been killed and 10,269 wounded in Israeli attacks on the country since March 2.The escalation has displaced more than one million people in
Lebanon and raised fears that
Israel could launch deeper operations towards
Beirut.On Sunday, Iranian state media reported that Tehran was suspending message exchanges with Washington in protest.Following Trump’s announcement on Monday,
Lebanon’s UN Ambassador Ahmad Arafa commended the Trump administration for “constructive efforts aimed at giving diplomacy a chance”.The announcement is also significant because previous ceasefire attempts between
Israel and
Lebanon have repeatedly collapsed. A 10-day truce announced on April 22, and later extended by three weeks, failed to produce a halt in fighting.A boy looks through a damaged room of the Jabal Amel Hospital into a destroyed building that was hit in an Israeli air strike in the southern port city of
Tyre,
Lebanon [AP Photo]How have
Hezbollah,
Israel responded to Trump’s announcement?On Monday, Netanyahu’s office said
Israel would reserve the right to strike
Beirut if
Hezbollah attacks continue.“If
Hezbollah does not cease attacking our cities and citizens …
Israel will attack terror targets in
Beirut,” he said.On Monday,
Israel’s military issued new forced displacement orders, warning residents of the southern suburbs to flee to “preserve their safety”, reiterating that if
Hezbollah continues to target
Israel with rockets, Israeli forces would attack
Beirut’s Dahiyeh area.On Tuesday morning, there had been no reports of Israeli attacks on the Lebanese capital. However,
Israel has continued attacks on southern
Lebanon, firing artillery near Nabatieh and hitting the villages of Choukine and Kfar Tibnit, Al Jazeera reported.Meanwhile,
Lebanon’s embassy in Washington released a detailed statement saying
Hezbollah had accepted a US proposal for a “mutual cessation of attacks”.“Under the proposed arrangement, Israeli strikes on
Beirut’s southern suburbs would cease in exchange for
Hezbollah refraining from carrying out attacks against
Israel, with the ceasefire framework to be expanded to encompass all Lebanese territories,” the statement said.Prominent
Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah says the group supports a “full ceasefire on all Lebanese territory”.The ceasefire would be a precursor to the withdrawal of Israeli troops from
Lebanon, Fadlallah told the al-Manar broadcaster.Lebanese parliamentary speaker Nabih Berri, a prominent ally of
Hezbollah, said in a statement that he could vouch for the armed movement’s “full, comprehensive and immediate” adherence to a ceasefire. “The real issue is who will force
Israel to halt its aggression?” he added.According to Sami Nader, an analyst and director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs,
Israel’s attacks on
Lebanon are a “very dangerous escalation” of the current conflict.“What we are seeing is a systemic demolition of infrastructure. It’s going beyond this ‘Yellow Line’,” Nader told Al Jazeera. “The only solution to this is to decouple the
Lebanon ceasefire from the Iranian one.“Practically, everyone except
Hezbollah wants the decoupling of the
Lebanon ceasefire from the Iranian one,” he added, but warned that the Lebanese government needs international involvement to achieve a ceasefire.
Israel’s “Yellow Line” is a military zone stretching roughly 10km (six miles) north of the border inside southern
Lebanon.(Al Jazeera)What is the significance of Trump’s communications with
Hezbollah?“This is unprecedented, if he really spoke to
Hezbollah and not one of its allies,” said Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem, reporting from
Beirut,
Lebanon.“This could be a breakthrough in
Hezbollah-US relations since the 1980s,” he added.
Hezbollah (which means “Party of God” in Arabic) was formed in 1982 to fight
Israel’s occupation of southern
Lebanon that year.Since the fighting in
Lebanon restarted in early March, the US has taken a hardline approach towards
Hezbollah. On April 24, Trump demanded that
Iran stop funding
Hezbollah as part of any broader regional settlement.Secretary of State Marco Rubio has described
Hezbollah as the main obstacle to peace between
Israel and
Lebanon, saying last month that “the problem with
Israel and
Lebanon is not
Israel or
Lebanon, it’s
Hezbollah.”Meanwhile,
Hezbollah’s chief Naim Qassem previously dismissed direct, US-mediated talks with
Israel, calling them “futile”. Senior
Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah has also denounced US-backed diplomacy between
Lebanon and
Israel as a “national sin” which would deepen divisions in the country.Israeli and Lebanese officials held their first direct negotiations since 1983 on April 14 this year, and have met twice more since then.Nevertheless, indirect communication between Washington and
Hezbollah is not unprecedented, despite hostilities.Over the years, US officials have often relied on Lebanese state figures – especially Parliament Speaker Berri – to act as intermediaries when trying to resolve regional crises.In November 2024, the US relied on Berri to help secure a ceasefire agreement between
Hezbollah and
Israel amid
Israel’s genocide in Gaza.