Lebanon
5 briefs
The Lebanon Ceasefire Is Holding on Paper and Collapsing on the Ground
Thirteen people were killed in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon on Friday. Hezbollah fired back. Both sides are calling this a ceasefire.
Trump Extended a Ceasefire That Lebanon Cannot Keep
The Oval Office meeting produced a three-week truce extension and a photo opportunity. It did not produce a party that controls Hezbollah. That remains the only thing that matters.
Israel and Lebanon Have a Ceasefire. Hezbollah Is Not Part of It.
The 10-day truce excludes the party doing most of the fighting. Israel has reserved the right to strike at any time. Hezbollah says occupied land gives Lebanon 'the right to resist.' This is not a ceasefire. It is a pause with paperwork.
Israel and Lebanon Met in Washington. One Side Wanted a Ceasefire. The Other Wanted Disarmament.
The first direct Israel-Lebanon diplomatic talks in 30 years ended without agreement. Israel came to demand Hezbollah's disarmament. Lebanon came to ask for a ceasefire. Those are not the same conversation.
The Ceasefire Has Three Versions. None of Them Cover Lebanon.
VP Vance admitted there are three conflicting drafts of the Iran truce circulating simultaneously. That isn't a diplomatic misunderstanding. It is the deal.