
Israeli strike targets Shaqra as lasting peace proves elusive
An Israeli strike targeted Thursday a bulldozer on the Baraasheet-Shaqra road after an Israeli infantry force entered the outskirts of Houla at dawn and detonated a house there.
Israeli troops entered Lebanon on September 30, 2024, after nearly a year of cross-border exchanges launched by Hezbollah in support of Gaza.
Under a November truce, which was based on a United Nations resolution that ended the 2006 war, only U.N. peacekeepers and the Lebanese army may bear arms south of the Litani river, which runs around 30 kilometers from the Israeli border.
Israel was supposed to withdraw all of its forces but has kept troops in five areas it deems strategic.
It has continued to launch frequent strikes, mainly on what it says are suspected Hezbollah positions and operatives.
A strike on Tuesday killed three people, according to the Lebanese health ministry.
The Israeli military said it had killed a currency dealer responsible for transferring funds from Iran to Hezbollah.
Lebanon saw Israeli ground invasions in 1978 and 1982 that prompted the creation of U.N. peacekeeping force UNIFIL, which remains in place to this day, and the formation of Hezbollah with Iran's support.
The militant group went on to fight devastating wars with Israel in 2006 and 2024.
After the 2006 ceasefire, rocket launches from Lebanon and Israeli raids and air strikes on Hezbollah targets occurred sporadically until an uptick in hostilities in 2023.
Truces involving Israel have a history of unravelling with no long-term settlement with its foes.
While the war with Iran was the first direct confrontation between the arch enemies, Israel's wars in Lebanon and Gaza saw it battle Tehran-backed militant groups Hezbollah and Hamas repeatedly over several decades.
- Iran -
Israel and Iran had fought a low-intensity shadow war for decades before they entered into direct hostilities on June 13.
Prior to the war, Israel had acknowledged cyberattacks on Iran's nuclear program, while its intelligence services have been linked to assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists.
Iran has long been accused by Israel and Western governments of funding and transferring weapons to militant groups in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and the Palestinian territories -- its so-called "axis of resistance".
After the ceasefire was announced on Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to prevent Tehran ever rebuilding its nuclear facilities, raising the prospect of further conflict.
- Syria -
Israel's last formal ceasefire with Syria was the 1974 disengagement agreement which followed the previous year's Arab-Israeli war.
As in Lebanon, a U.N. peacekeeping mission formed to monitor the agreement, UNDOF, remains in place today.
After the overthrow of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in December last year, Israel sent troops into the buffer zone set up by the agreement to separate Syrian and Israeli forces.
It also carried out an intensive bombing campaign against Syrian military assets to prevent them falling into the hands of the new Islamist-led government, which it regards as jihadist.
Iranian-backed groups, including Lebanon's Hezbollah, which had been severely weakened in its war with Israel, had helped keep Assad in power through more than 13 years of civil war and were repeatedly pounded by previous Israeli air strikes.
- Gaza -
Israel launched a withering offensive in Gaza after Hamas's attack of October 2023 left 1,219 people dead.
Now in its 21st month, the conflict has killed 56,156 Palestinians.
A first truce in November 2023 allowed the release of hostages seized during the Hamas attack, but did not achieve lasting peace.
Another ceasefire did not come until January 2025, lasting six weeks despite occasional strikes, but collapsed in March when Israel resumed major operations.
Previous wars in Gaza in 2008, 2012, 2014, 2021 and 2023 ended with ceasefires, mostly brokered by Egypt.
They were all repeatedly broken by Israeli strikes and incursions or by rocket fire from Palestinian factions inside Gaza.
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Ya Libnan
26 minutes ago
- Ya Libnan
Israel eyes peace accords with Syria, Lebanon
Israel said Monday it is 'interested' in striking peace agreements with neighbouring Lebanon and Syria, a potentially historic shift in the region after decades of war and animosity. With Syria under new leadership after the fall of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad and Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah movement weakened, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar told journalists his government wanted more normalisation agreements with Arab countries. 'Israel is interested in expanding the Abraham Accords circle of peace and normalisation,' Saar said of the US-brokered deals that Israel signed with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco in 2020, during US President Donald Trump's first term. 'We have an interest in adding countries such as Syria and Lebanon, our neighbors — to the circle of peace and normalisation while safeguarding Israel's essential and security interests,' Saar told a news conference in Jerusalem alongside his Austrian counterpart Beate Meinl-Reisinger. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that Israel's recent 'victory' in a 12-day war against Iran 'opens the path to dramatically enlarge the peace accords'. Control of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights has long been a source of tension between Israel and Syria, which are technically still at war. Saar insisted that the strategic plateau, which Israel seized from Syria in 1967 and later annexed in a move not recognised by the United Nations, 'will remain part of the State of Israel' under any future peace agreement. Following Assad's overthrow in December, Israel moved forces into the UN-patrolled demilitarised zone in the Golan, and has carried out hundreds of strikes against military targets in Syria. In Lebanon, the clout of militant group Hezbollah has diminished after it had emerged bruised from a conflict with Israel last year, fuelled by Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza. Israel, however, has kept up strikes against Hezbollah despite a November ceasefire. There was no immediate response from Lebanese or Syrian officials to Saar's remarks. US officials say the end of the 12-day war between Israel and Iran with a ceasefire on June 24 has raised prospects for broader peace efforts in the region. On Sunday, a senior US diplomat called for peace agreements by Israel with Syria and Lebanon in the wake of the Iran-Israel ceasefire and expected there would be discussions about it. Tom Barrack, the US ambassador to Turkey who is also a special envoy to Syria, said Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa 'has indicated that he doesn't hate Israel and that he wants peace on that border,' Barrack told Turkish news agency Anadolu. 'I think that will also happen with Lebanon. It's a necessity to have an agreement with Israel,' he added. Pressure has risen on the Israeli government to end its offensive in the Gaza Strip, prompted by Hamas's deadly attack in October 2023. 'Everybody is starting to move back towards the Abraham Accords, especially as the Gaza situation dissipates,' Barrack said. 'What just happened between Israel and Iran is an opportunity for all of us to say: 'Time out. Let's create a new road',' he added. 'The Middle East is ready to have a new dialogue, people are tired of the same old story.' Advanced talks Israel and Syria are holding 'advanced talks' on a bilateral agreement halting hostilities between the countries, a senior Israeli official told The Times of Israel on Monday. The contacts are focused on coordination around security matters, said the official, who would not speculate on when a full peace deal between the two enemy states could turn into reality, The daily added Premature But a statement quoting unnamed Syrian official source says normalization not possible 'unless the occupation… withdraws from the areas it has penetrated,' adheres to 1970s armistice deal. FRANCE 24/NEWS AGENCIES


Nahar Net
5 hours ago
- Nahar Net
Details of US envoy's proposal for Lebanon revealed
by Naharnet Newsdesk 13 hours A high-ranking political source, familiar with ongoing talks, has confirmed to al-Joumhouria newspaper that U.S. envoy Tom Barrack's six-page paper presented to Lebanon focuses on Hezbollah's disarmament, as well as that of other factions, and Lebanon's relationship with Syria, including border demarcation. The document also emphasizes the implementation of financial reforms as a prerequisite for reconstruction, in exchange for Israel's complete withdrawal and cessation of violations, including assassinations against Hezbollah commanders and members. The source revealed that the document also proposes a new path, facilitated by the United Nations, to resolve the issue of Lebanese prisoners held by Israel. The paper also contains two options for Lebanon to choose from according to the source. The first option calls for President Joseph Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri to secure a commitment from Hezbollah to implement the proposal's provisions. The second option calls for Cabinet to unanimously issue a resolution adopting the proposal, which Hezbollah would fully and officially endorse. Although the document does not specify a deadline, the source said Barrack mentioned a four-month timeline for achieving arms monopoly in the hands of the state across Lebanon, not only south of the Litani River. This would involve disarming all unauthorized militias, with the entire agreement to be implemented by the end of the current year, al-Joumhouria reported.


Nahar Net
5 hours ago
- Nahar Net
Hezbollah reportedly preparing its own response to US paper
Hezbollah reportedly preparing its own response to US paper Hezbollah is waiting to receive a copy of the Lebanese paper that is being prepared by President Joseph Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri and PM Nawaf Salam in response to the paper submitted by U.S. envoy Tom Barrack, informed political sources said. The Lebanese response will consider the current government's Ministerial Statement as 'a Lebanese acknowledgment of the monopolization of arms in the hands of the state' and will demand that Israel stop its strikes and release the Lebanese captives, the sources told ad-Diyar newspaper. The sources also revealed that a panel formed by Hezbollah is about to finalize its own 'paper,' which will be 'more than mere remarks or amendments, but rather a complete paper detailing Hezbollah's stance on the points mentioned in the U.S. paper.' Hezbollah's stance 'will stress that Lebanon has committed and implemented what it had pledged to do' and will 'reject any attempts aimed at passing a new agreement that replaces the November 27 agreement,' the sources added.