Ceasefire raises hopes in
Lebanon, yet Israeli defiance and past violations cast shadows on lasting peace.Flashing the V sign - displaced residents cross the Bourj Rahal bridge on their way to their village in
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Lebanon, June 15, 2026 [AFP]Published On 15 Jun 2026Beirut,
Lebanon – On Monday morning, people in
Lebanon woke up to yet another ceasefire agreement. An agreement announced between the
United States and
Iran includes
Lebanon – according to Iranian and Pakistani officials – but statements from Israeli officials cast doubt over whether the
Lebanon-since-2023" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="146852" data-entity-type="event">war that has been ravaging
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Lebanon since 2023 is finally over.Videos on Monday showed Lebanese people returning home to areas in the south of the country, though officials warned anyone from border villages not to return until the security situation becomes clearer.Recommended Stories list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3How
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Iran, US reach a tentative deal to end conflictend of listOthers, however, have little to return to.Ali Saleh, a 55-year-old from the southern village of Jwaya, has been displaced at a stadium in
Beirut since early March.“I won’t be heading back home,” he told Al Jazeera. “My house was hit and you know the situation financially is difficult at the moment.”
Lebanon includedOn March 2 ,
Israel intensified its war on
Lebanon for the second time in under two years. The intensification came just a few hours after the pro-Iranian Shia group
Hezbollah fired six rockets at
Israel, its first response to more than 10,000 Israeli violations of the
2024 ceasefire.
Hezbollah launched the attack following the February 28 killing of
Iran’s Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the opening salvoes of the US-Israeli war on
Iran.Since then,
Israel has killed at least 3,783 people in
Lebanon and wounded 11,699. More than 1.2 million have been displaced from the south,
Beirut’s southern suburbs and villages in the Bekaa Valley. Villages have been razed by
Israel’s military, which occupies large swathes of
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Lebanon.In recent weeks, evacuation orders and widespread Israeli bombing of Tyre and Nabatieh have led to mass destruction in two of the south’s most populated areas. The Lebanese army announced on Monday that people should exercise caution when returning to their homes, while Lebanese officials said that people from border villages should not yet return home.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif, said the deal between the US and
Iran announced “the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in
Lebanon”.The announcement was welcomed by
Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun – who has been attempting to reimpose the authority of the Lebanese state in the country. Aoun said that the Lebanese people were now looking forward to “these understandings being translated into practical steps that bring a definitive end to the cycle of violence and open the way to stability, security, recovery and reconstruction”.
Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker and close
Hezbollah ally, Nabih Berri, praised the deal and various regional actors for their role in achieving it, including
Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.He also thanked
Iran and the US for including a clause “on halting Israeli aggression against all of
Lebanon, to preserve its sovereignty over its entire territory”.Another ceasefire?Despite the trepidation, many Lebanese are already returning home.“People started returning to their villages and areas and now they are waiting for the full implementation of the ceasefire and the withdrawal of the Israelis from the areas they occupied,” Qassem Kassir, a Lebanese political analyst told Al Jazeera. “People cannot get a clear read on the situation just yet.”This also is not the first time a ceasefire has been declared between
Lebanon and
Israel. The November 2024 agreement called for a withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanese land and for a cessation of hostilities, while
Hezbollah was required to withdraw its armed presence north of the Litani River.But
Israel never stopped firing on
Lebanon, and
Hezbollah – supported by
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) – reportedly started preparing for another round of fighting.
Israel also didn’t fully withdraw its troops, continuing to occupy five points along the Israeli-Lebanese border.
Hezbollah has said repeatedly that it would not allow the situation to return to a pre-March 2 reality, with
Israel having the freedom to attack and
Hezbollah no right to respond.On April 16 , US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire between
Lebanon and
Israel. The declaration brought an end to attacks on central
Beirut and decreased the regularity of attacks on
Beirut’s suburbs, though
Israel has attacked them since, including on Sunday. But the war in
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Lebanon continued unabated.On June 3 ,
Israel and
Lebanon agreed to a ceasefire after a round of direct negotiations between the two countries. But that declaration had little effect as
Israel kept attacking
Lebanon and
Hezbollah continued to fire rockets at Israeli troops in Lebanese territory and across the border.
Israel defiantQuestions remain over whether the two sides will respect the ceasefire.As of Monday afternoon,
Hezbollah had not carried out any operations since the US-
Iran deal was announced, according to Reuters.But Lebanese state media reported that an Israeli drone strike on a car in
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Lebanon had killed its driver.Israeli officials have met the US-Iranian agreement’s announcement with defiance. Leading politicians have repeatedly insisted that they will not accept any threat from
Lebanon, and will continue to attack
Hezbollah if they deem it necessary.“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and I are pursuing a clear policy of maintaining the Israeli army in the security zones in
Lebanon, Syria and Gaza, without setting a time limit, in order to protect
Israel’s borders and towns from jihadist elements,”
Israel’s Defence Minister,
Israel Katz, said on Monday. “We oppose the withdrawal of the Israeli army from
Lebanon, despite all current and future pressures.”Analysts have expressed scepticism over the deal.“Netanyahu may come up with a lot of surprises, and he may have a power trip with Trump, where he tries to enforce his own terms of the deal,” Karim Safieddine, a non-resident fellow with the Tahrir Institute, told Al Jazeera.Political analyst Kassir said he felt that the new ceasefire was different and that the larger war was over. However, he maintained, there is still work to be done before normal life can resume in
Lebanon.“No one trusts the US or
Israel,” adding that for
Lebanon to have long-lasting and permanent security, it still needed “
Israel’s withdrawal, a return of people to their villages” and a defence plan that has national consensus – unlike the current polarisation that exists over
Hezbollah’s role in the country.