Israeli warplanes have launched dozens of strikes across southern
Lebanon despite a new agreement supposedly brokered by
Donald Trump aiming to bolster the tattered ceasefire in
Lebanon.The US president said on Monday that he had stopped an imminent Israeli strike on Beirut and that he had spoken to
Israel’s prime minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, and representatives of
Hezbollah and both agreed that “all shooting will stop”.But on Tuesday,
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported 30 Israeli strikes across the south. Near the city of
Sidon, rescuers recovered the bodies of six members of the same family, including two children and a woman, after an Israeli strike.The Israeli military also issued a new evacuation warning for the southern city of
Nabatiyeh before new strikes, accusing the “
Hezbollah terror organisation” of violating the ceasefire.A deal to reduce or stop levels of violence between
Israel and
Hezbollah, a militant Islamist movement with close links to
Tehran, would support Washington’s efforts to reach a new ceasefire agreement with
Iran.A Lebanese man drives his car that was damaged in an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese port city of
Tyre. Photograph: Marwan Naamani/Zuma Press Wire/ShutterstockTrump on Tuesday denied reports from semi-official news agencies in
Iran that
Tehran had paused negotiations until
Israel stopped its offensive in
Lebanon.“The conversations between us have been going on continuously, including four days ago, three days ago, two days ago, one day ago, and today,” he said in a social media post.
Hezbollah has not claimed any recent strikes in
Israel, saying instead it attacked Israeli troops who have pushed into
Lebanon to establish a security zone between 5 and 10 kilometres wide.The Israeli military said on Tuesday it intercepted two projectiles fired overnight from
Lebanon towards the northern city of
Safed, while a drone struck a military position in western Galilee, close to the border with
Lebanon, the Times of
Israel newspaper reported. No injuries were reported.This most recent round of conflict in
Lebanon began when
Hezbollah fired rockets at
Israel on 2 March in retaliation for its killing of
Iran’s supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a wave of airstrikes carried out on the first day of the US-Israeli offensive against
Iran.In recent days there has been a dramatic intensification in fighting and bombardment.Over the weekend, Israeli troops raised their flag over Beaufort Castle, marking their deepest incursion into southern
Lebanon since the end of the 1982 to 2000 occupation.
Hezbollah responded with even deeper rocket attacks into northern
Israel.A destroyed house near
Sidon in southern
Lebanon. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesCiting what he called
Hezbollah’s “repeated violations” of a ceasefire officially in place since 17 April but never respected by either side, Netanyahu had ordered strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, a densely populated
Hezbollah stronghold.According to the US news outlet Axios, however, Trump called Netanyahu “fucking crazy” and accused him of putting peace talks with
Iran at risk.Channel 12, a prominent independent Israeli news network, contested the details of the call. Amit Segal, the network’s chief political analyst who is close to Netanyahu’s political circles, said Trump had not attacked the Israeli prime minister personally and that the two had come to an agreement that Netanyahu would refrain from attacking the Beirut suburbs if
Hezbollah ceased its attacks on
Israel.Netanyahu and his defence minister,
Israel Katz, said they had given instructions to strike “terrorist targets” in the southern suburbs for what they described as “repeated and ongoing violations of the ceasefire by
Hezbollah”.The bombing order marked the most serious escalation of
Israel’s war in
Lebanon since the supposed ceasefire and was followed by
Iran’s political leadership calling off all further negotiations, maintaining that a ceasefire in
Lebanon was a precondition for a broader truce with the US.Katz said Washington “endorsed” the principle that his country would strike Beirut’s southern suburbs if
Hezbollah launched any further attacks on
Israel. “If Israeli towns continue to be attacked, we will evacuate and strike the Shia Dahiyeh quarter in Beirut,
Hezbollah’s stronghold,” Katz said.In the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital, which many residents had fled the day before, many shops were closed on Tuesday, while a military drone flew over the area at low altitude, according to an Agence France-Presse journalist.A man speaks on a mobile phone while standing near a destroyed building in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Tuesday. Photograph: Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty ImagesLayla Shehab, 35, decided to return as “we found the situation has calmed down a bit”.Lebanese and Israeli delegations have begun a new round of talks in Washington, the fourth between the two countries, which have no diplomatic relations, since the start of the war.Mahmoud Qmati, a senior
Hezbollah official, told AFP on Tuesday that the group “will not accept a partial ceasefire”.“The Zionist enemy should know that any aggression against the [southern] suburbs [of Beirut] could lead to a deeper and stronger response” from the group, he added.Since mid-March, Trump has repeatedly said he is close to a deal with
Tehran, which would postpone the most difficult and sensitive issues including the future of
Iran’s nuclear programme. A priority for Trump is to reopen the strait of Hormuz, the critical waterway whose closure caused oil prices to spike, inflicting economic pain far beyond the region.