Here we go again. Israel, Lebanon agree ceasefire framework, but Hezbollah holds the key.
Israel and Lebanon have agreed a ceasefire framework under US guidance, contingent on full Hezbollah withdrawal from southern Lebanon, with comprehensive talks to resume the week of June 22.
Summary:
Source: US State Department statement, June 3
- Israel and Lebanon agreed to a ceasefire and the creation of pilot zones in which Lebanese armed forces would take exclusive control, excluding all non-state actors
- The ceasefire is explicitly contingent on a complete halt to Hezbollah fire and the evacuation of all Hezbollah operatives from the south Litani sector
- Both sides reaffirmed no hostile intent toward one another and committed to continuing direct negotiations
- Delegations discussed a security framework building on Pentagon talks held May 29
- Comprehensive political and security track talks are scheduled to reconvene the week of June 22
- All parties condemned Iran’s attacks on countries in the region
The United States announced on Wednesday that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a ceasefire framework and the creation of pilot zones in southern Lebanon, in what Washington described as the result of US-led negotiations. The agreement, if it holds, would see Lebanese armed forces assume exclusive territorial control in designated areas, with all non-state actors excluded. The State Department said both governments reaffirmed that they have no hostile intent toward one another and committed to continuing direct talks.
The conditions attached to the arrangement, however, are the same conditions that have historically proven impossible to enforce. The ceasefire is explicitly contingent on a complete cessation of Hezbollah fire and the full evacuation of Hezbollah operatives from the south Litani sector. Hezbollah opened the Lebanon front in solidarity with Iran on March 2, when Israel launched its deepest incursion into the country in 25 years. Nothing in the State Department statement explains what mechanism would compel or verify Hezbollah’s compliance this time.
The diplomatic language is careful and the commitments are conditional throughout. Delegations discussed a security framework, building on talks held at the Pentagon on May 29. They agreed to reconvene political and security tracks during the week of June 22. That is three weeks away. All parties condemned Iran’s attacks on countries in the region, a statement that reflects the current alignment of the Lebanese government with Washington’s framing without altering the facts on the ground.
The broader context remains unchanged. The US-Israeli war with Iran is now in its fourth month. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Oil inventories are drawing at an accelerating pace. A Lebanon framework that depends on Hezbollah withdrawal is a significant diplomatic step if it materialises, and a familiar disappointment if it does not.
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The geopolitical risk premium in oil will absorb this headline and largely discount it. A Lebanon ceasefire framed around Hezbollah compliance and pilot zone creation is a process document, not a resolution. The conditions attached, complete cessation of Hezbollah fire and full withdrawal from the south Litani sector, are precisely the conditions that have undone previous arrangements. Markets will note that the next substantive talks are not scheduled until the week of June 22, which is three weeks away. If anything, the announcement confirms that the Lebanon front remains a live variable rather than a closed one, and does nothing to address the Strait of Hormuz or the broader US-Iran conflict that is driving the oil price.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.