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The Israeli PM is reportedly ready for a truce, once he determines how to present it to the public as a victory
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is ready to accept a US-brokered ceasefire deal with Hezbollah in Lebanon after some final details are ironed out, Israeli and American media outlets have reported.
Under the terms of the deal, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Hezbollah would cease hostilities, while the paramilitary group pulls its fighters in southern Lebanon back across the Litani River, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on Sunday. The IDF would then pull out of the area between the river and the so-called ‘blue line’, which separates Lebanon from Israel and the occupied Golan Heights.
Both parties would renegotiate the contours of this border, while an international body led by the US would ensure that southern Lebanon remains demilitarized. Should Hezbollah break the terms of the truce, the US would support fresh military operations by the IDF.
Israeli forces waged a low-intensity campaign against Hezbollah fighters along the blue line until September, when Israel’s sabotage of thousands of Hezbollah communication devices signaled the start of a major bombing campaign in Lebanon, followed by a ground operation in the south of the country. Dozens of senior Hezbollah commanders have been killed in Israeli airstrikes, including the paramilitary group’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah.
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Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon are thought to have killed more than 3,670 people since September, according to the country’s health ministry. This figure does not differentiate between civilians and Hezbollah militants.
The IDF has acknowledged the deaths of 80 Israeli soldiers and law enforcement personnel in Lebanon and along the blue line since October 2023. Hezbollah claims that Israel is downplaying its losses, and that the true body count is far higher.
According to US news site Axios, the deal was almost hammered out last Thursday, when the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former defense minister, Yoav Gallant. The talks reportedly stalled after France – which was involved as a mediator – suggested that it would enforce the warrants, but resumed when US envoy Amos Hochstein threatened to end the discussions unless Netanyahu moved toward a ceasefire in the coming days.
READ MORE: War fatigue growing in Israel – WaPo
Netanyahu met with cabinet ministers and intelligence chiefs to discuss the ceasefire on Sunday, Axios reported. According to Hebrew media, Netanyahu’s chief concern is figuring out how to sell the ceasefire to the Israeli public as a win.
The IDF continued to pound Beirut with airstrikes on Monday, after killing dozens of people in a series of intense bombardments on the city over the weekend. Hezbollah responded by launching around 250 rockets into Israel on Sunday, wounding at least seven people, and targeting northern Israel with another rocket barrage on Monday afternoon.