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Middle East News Updated Jun 27, 2026

Lebanon President Vows to Implement Israel Deal Amid Hezbollah Opposition

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has vowed to advance the Lebanon-Israel framework agreement signed in Washington, calling it a step toward restoring full sovereignty. Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah immediately rejected the deal, stating the group would confront any implementation and retain its weapons. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the Israeli military will remain in southern Lebanon's security zone unless Hezbollah disarms. The agreement, sponsored by the U.S., includes provisions for Israeli withdrawal from two areas and addressing Hezbollah's tunnels.

Lebanese president vows to advance agreement signed with Israel; Hezbollah lawmaker rejects deal

Beirut, June 27

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said that the Lebanon-Israel framework agreement signed earlier in the day in Washington marked the beginning of the path toward restoring Lebanon's full sovereignty, vowing to continue working until the process is completed.

In a statement issued by the Lebanese Presidency on Friday (local time), Aoun said the agreement represents the first step toward enabling displaced Lebanese to return to their land, stressing that Lebanon would no longer accept occupation.

Aoun thanked Washington for hosting and sponsoring the negotiations and expressed gratitude to Arab and friendly countries that backed Lebanon throughout the process, reports Xinhua news agency.

The deal drew immediate opposition from Hezbollah. Its lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah said Friday the group would confront any attempt to implement the framework and would not relinquish its weapons, according to Lebanese news website Elnashra.

Fadlallah noted that Iran, a close ally of Hezbollah, had made clear that Tehran would not sign an agreement with Washington before a full Israeli withdrawal from Lebanese territory, Elnashra reported.

The framework agreement between Israel and Lebanon aims to resolve longstanding disputes. According to Israel's state-owned Kan TV News, it includes the withdrawal of Israeli forces from two areas in southern Lebanon as part of a pilot program.

The parties also agreed on how to address Hezbollah's tunnels in southern Lebanon and deal with the group's growing strength, Kan added.

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a recorded video statement Friday evening that the Israeli military will remain in the "security zone" it holds in southern Lebanon as long as Hezbollah does not disarm.

The remarks came shortly after Israel, Lebanon, and the United States signed a framework agreement in Washington, announced by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Netanyahu described the agreement as a "major achievement" for Israel, signed after lengthy negotiations in Washington between Israel and Lebanon.

He framed the agreement as a major blow to Iran, which he said had been trying to force an Israeli withdrawal.

Israeli forces on Friday continued ground and aerial operations in southern Lebanon, Lebanese media reported.

In the border town of Ain Arab, Israeli troops launched a large-scale combing operation hours after taking seven people -- three Lebanese residents and four Syrian farm workers -- into Israeli-held territory, Lebanon's National News Agency (NNA) reported.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priyanka N

From an Indian perspective, this looks like the usual great power game — US brokers a deal, Israel gets what it wants, and Lebanon remains stuck between a foreign-backed state and an Iranian-backed militia. The common Lebanese people just want to return to their homes. Reminds me of how complicated our own neighborhood is with Pakistan and Afghanistan. Hope the displaced Lebanese get their lands back soon 🙏.

David E

So Israel gets to keep its "pilot program" withdrawals, Hezbollah keeps its weapons, and the US takes credit for another empty agreement. Netanyahu saying it's a "major achievement" while his troops are literally abducting Lebanese and Syrian farmers? That's not peace, that's occupation with a fancy document attached.

Rajesh Q

As an Indian, I feel for Lebanon. They're caught between a rock and a hard place — Israel wants security, Hezbollah wants resistance, and ordinary people are paying the price. The agreement mentions addressing Hezbollah's tunnels and strength, but how can that work when the group says it won't disarm? Without trust on both sides, this is just ink on paper. We saw the same with many accords in our region.

Simran P

The hypocricy is loud here! Israel talks about "framework agreement" while taking seven people hostage in the same breath? Netanyahu says Hezbollah must disarm, but Israeli soldiers are literally occupying Lebanese soil. This isn't a peace deal — it's a surrender document dressed up in diplomatic language. Lebanon needs real sovereignty, not US-sponsored theater 🎭.

Arun Y

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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