Lebanon PM Urges Trump to Intervene, Calls for Ceasefire and Talks with Israel

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam has urgently appealed to US President Donald Trump to intervene and broker an immediate ceasefire in the conflict with Israel. He expressed Lebanon's readiness for direct negotiations with Israel but stated progress is stalled as they await an agenda from Israeli officials. Salam warned of a severe humanitarian crisis, with up to a quarter of Lebanon's population displaced due to the fighting. He firmly rejected any Israeli buffer zone in Lebanon, insisting full sovereignty must be restored before any deal can be negotiated.

Key Points: Lebanon PM Seeks Trump Help for Israel Ceasefire, Talks

  • Call for US-mediated ceasefire
  • Readiness for direct Israel talks
  • Rejection of buffer zones
  • Warning of humanitarian crisis
  • Lebanon's sovereignty as precondition
3 min read

Lebanon PM urges Trump to intervene, calls for immediate ceasefire and talks with Israel

Lebanese PM Nawaf Salam appeals to US President Donald Trump to broker an immediate ceasefire and start direct negotiations with Israel amid escalating conflict.

"I would like to reaffirm to President Trump our readiness to enter into immediate negotiations. - Nawaf Salam"

Beirut, March 20

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam has urged US President Donald Trump to intervene to end the ongoing conflict between Israel and Lebanon, calling for an immediate ceasefire and direct negotiations with Israel, according to CNN.

In an exclusive interview with CNN from Beirut on Thursday (local time), Salam said he wanted a ceasefire " yesterday, not tomorrow", as the death toll from Israel's military campaign against the militant group Hezbollah has reached 1000. Lebanese officials said more than 100 of those killed are children.

Salam appealed directly to Trump for US involvement in ending the conflict, CNN reported.

"To help put an end to the Lebanese conflict. I would like to reaffirm to President Trump our readiness to enter into immediate negotiations," Salam said, according to CNN. He added that the United States is a "strategic partner" and said Trump "more than anyone else" could "play a decisive role" in ending the war.

"So we call on a greater engagement of the US. I mean direct contact. We are ready for negotiations with Israel," he added.

The conflict, now in its third week, began after Hezbollah launched projectiles into Israel following the death of Ayatollah Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, according to CNN.

However, prospects for negotiations have dimmed over the past two days as Israel expanded its military campaign and focused on a wider group invasion in Lebanon.

Salam told CNN that France had suggested possible ideas for a settlement and that there had been contacts with US officials, but he stopped short of confirming that formal talks had begun.

Lebanon does not recognise Israel as a state, a major issue that could complicate any future peace agreement. Asked whether Lebanon might consider recognising Israel as part of a deal, Salam avoided giving a direct answer and instead blamed the lack of progress on Israel, CNN reported.

"We have been for two weeks extending our hands to have direct talks with the Israelis. So far, we haven't received an agenda from the Israelis," he said. Once Lebanon has a "clear agenda" from the Israelis, "then I will definitely answer your question," he added.

Salam also said Lebanon lacks the military capability to disarm Hezbollah on its own and urgently needs military assistance to strengthen the Lebanese army. At the same time, he rejected the possibility of foreign troops being deployed in the country, insisting that Lebanon's territorial integrity must be preserved, according to CNN.

He also warned of a worsening humanitarian crisis, saying that about one million Lebanese people have been displaced due to Israel's military campaign and evacuation orders affecting much of southern Lebanon and southern Beirut, according to CNN.

"That's almost 20 per cent, if not 25 per cent, of the Lebanese population," Salam said, according to CNN. "These people are also the victims of the war. This war has been imposed on us. We didn't seek it, we didn't choose it, and now our main objective is how to end it. Lebanon is turned into a battlefield of the war between Israel and Iran."

Meanwhile, Israel has pushed further into Lebanese territory over the past week, raising concerns that it aims to establish a deeper buffer zone along the border, CNN reported.

Salam rejected the possibility of any such arrangement, according to CNN.

"We cannot accept any buffer zone, security zone, any infringement on our sovereignty," according to CNN, he said. "We cannot negotiate any form of treaty, deal or arrangement with Israel before our sovereignty is fully restored."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
The humanitarian crisis is heartbreaking. One million displaced! This is why India has always advocated for dialogue and peaceful resolution of conflicts. No sovereign nation should be turned into a battlefield for other powers. Hope diplomacy prevails soon.
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Aman W
It's a tough spot for Lebanon. They don't recognize Israel but want to talk. They can't control Hezbollah but don't want foreign help. The PM's appeal to Trump makes sense geopolitically, but will it work? The buffer zone issue is a non-starter for any sovereign country.
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Sarah B
Reading this from Delhi. The parallels to some of our own border challenges are stark. A nation's sovereignty is paramount. While the ceasefire is urgent, lasting peace requires addressing the root cause: non-state armed groups operating within a country's borders. A lesson for many.
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Vikram M
Respectfully, the Lebanese PM's stance feels a bit all over the place. He wants to negotiate but won't answer the recognition question. He needs military aid but refuses foreign troops. Sometimes you have to make tough choices for peace. The suffering of common people must end.
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Kavya N
The children... over 100 killed. That's the real tragedy here, beyond all the politics. As a mother, this news is devastating. The international community must step in and force a stop to this. India should also use its good offices to advocate for peace. 🙏

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