Israel,
Lebanon and the US have signed deal aimed at ending hostilities between
Israel and
Hezbollah, but Lebanese group rejects it outright.Published On 27 Jun 2026The announcement of a
framework agreement between
Israel and
Lebanon after negotiations in the
United States has been met with guarded optimism in
Israel.Friday’s agreement describes a “sequenced process” that will see the Lebanese army restore “effective sovereign authority over all Lebanese territory, pending the verified
disarmament of non-state armed groups” – a clear reference to
Hezbollah, which has been fighting with
Israel since October 2023, with varying levels of intensity.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Hezbollah will not support
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Lebanon framework deallist 2 of 4What is the
framework agreement signed by
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Lebanon?list 3 of 4US,
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Israel’s coming election see an end to Netanyahu’s political career?end of listOnly once that process is completed, will Israeli forces be able to “progressively redeploy” out of the large area of
Lebanon" class="entity-link entity-location" data-entity-id="6972" data-entity-type="location">Southern
Lebanon they have occupied since early March, when they launched a renewed offensive that has killed more than 4,000 people.The Washington framework does not specify what measures will be used to verify
disarmament but outlines two “pilot zones” for an initial Israeli withdrawal, where the Lebanese military “will gradually assume full and effective security responsibility”.
Yossi Mekelberg, a senior consulting fellow at
Chatham House, said “only time and its implementation will determine” whether this is “a real agreement or just something signed” to appease the US,
Israel’s principal backer and a signatory to Friday’s agreement.Last week, Washington and Tehran signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to end the war launched by the US and
Israel against
Iran in late February that was conditional upon
Israel halting its campaign in
Lebanon and agreeing to respect the “territorial integrity and sovereignty of
Lebanon”.“Could an Israeli government really withdraw entirely from
Lebanon and then face the electorate? We don’t know,” said Mekelberg. “Equally, can a Lebanese government ever really deal with
Hezbollah, whose problem it really is? It seems unlikely.”As widely expected,
Hezbollah rejected the framework outright. In a statement on Saturday, the group’s Secretary-General
Naim Qassem called the Washington agreement “null and void” and insisted that the
Iran-US MoU should be the basis for ending the conflict. He also warned against linking
Israel’s withdrawal from
Lebanon to
Hezbollah’s
disarmament, saying that crossed “all red lines”.But how have Israeli politicians reacted to the framework, and how likely is it that it will be implemented?What has
Israel’s PM said?Shortly after the framework’s announcement, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a video statement in which he attempted to sell the agreement to a public that polls show to be reluctant to halt the offensive against
Hezbollah.Describing the agreement as a major blow to
Hezbollah’s ally and the country he has historically cast as
Israel’s nemesis,
Iran, Netanyahu assured the public – particularly citizens of northern
Israel who have been most vulnerable to
Hezbollah fire – that
Israel would maintain its “buffer zone” within Lebanese territory until
Hezbollah was disarmed.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has thrown his weight behind the
framework agreement [File: Ronen Zvulun/Pool/Reuters]“
Iran is trying to coax us to withdraw from
Lebanon" class="entity-link entity-location" data-entity-id="6972" data-entity-type="location">Southern
Lebanon by force,” he said.“And in essence,
Israel,
Lebanon and the
United States are telling
Iran – it is none of your business. You have no role in
Lebanon. Neither you, nor
Hezbollah,” he added.How has
Israel’s opposition reacted?It has been mixed.Israeli opposition leader, Yair Lapid, criticised the framework, saying its terms allowed for
Iran to continue to funnel funds to the group, while at the same time hoping to push it back in
Lebanon.Comments from other politicians have echoed longstanding criticisms of Israeli policy towards
Hezbollah suggesting that it seeks to manage rather than remove the threat posed by the group. Writing on X, former Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that “as long as
Hezbollah exists and grows stronger every day, the next confrontation is only a matter of time despite the agreement”.Other leaders have been critical of the degree to which
Israel has ceded control over its war on
Hezbollah to its allies in the US. Speaking to a Hebrew language podcast earlier this week before the signing of the framework, Gadi Eisenkot, a former chief of staff and currently the man regarded as Netanyahu’s principal challenger, said: “We failed to capitalise on our military achievements and woke up to a security reality that must not be allowed”.What has been the reaction in
Israel’s north?Local leaders in northern
Israel, which is typically the area most exposed to
Hezbollah attacks, greeted news of the agreement with cautious optimism.David Azoulay, head of Metula Regional Council, close to the Lebanese border, welcomed the deal but stressed that any Israeli withdrawal must remain conditional and carefully managed by both the Israeli army and political leadership.“Without the
disarmament of
Hezbollah, there is no full withdrawal,” he said. “Without the
disarmament of the terrorist organisation, there are no agreements.”Eyal Shmueli, head of the council for the small town of Kfar Vradim, about 14km (9 miles) from the Lebanese border, expressed scepticism. “Experience teaches us that the responsibility that was imposed in the distant and short past on the Lebanese government to act to disarm
Hezbollah has not been fulfilled,” he said.Ahron Bregman, a senior teaching fellow in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London, described the framework as an Israeli-US attempt “to drive a wedge between the Lebanese and Iranian fronts” and to curtail “Iranian influence in
Lebanon”.He added: “It won’t work, not in a million years”.For now, Bregman said, neither
Hezbollah, which still regards itself as the defender of
Lebanon in the face of an aggressive
Israel, nor its ally
Iran, whose confidence had been buoyed by having brought the US to the negotiating table, had any interest in giving up its arms or being dismantled.This agreement is likely to join 1701 in the growing pile of unsuccessful Israeli-Lebanese deals,” he added, referring to the United Nations resolution that was adopted in 2006 to end a previous war between
Israel and
Hezbollah.