Israel, Lebanon sign U.S.-brokered deal on sovereignty

Advertisement oopStory continues belowThis advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Subscribe $1 for 6 months Advertisement 2AdvertisementThis advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Article contentNama Hamadeh, Lebanon’s ambassador to the United States, echoed Netanyahu’s sentiment.Article content“The trilateral framework we signed today is the first step on the road to restoring Lebanese sovereignty and territorial integrity, securing a permanent and final cessation of hostilities,” she said.Article contentHamadeh added that it will enable “our people to go back to
the land” and let “all Lebanese to live in peace, security and prosperity.”Article contentYechiel Leiter, Israeli ambassador to the United States, complimented Hamadeh. “You and your team set an example for patriotism to your country,” he said. “You fight like a lioness.”Article contentLeiter pointed to his stunning remarks at the outset of talks this week in which he warned of the dangers of the memorandum of understanding signed by the United States and Iran and the potential opening it gave Tehran to derail peace between
Israel and Lebanon.Article content“With a lot of hard work, we have put the train back on the tracks and going in the right direction,” Leiter said. “Final destination? Peace between our two countries. Real peace, where both countries will live in security, where Israel’s and Lebanon’s sovereignty will be respected, honored and protected.”Article contentArticle contentIn response to a question from JNS, Leiter told reporters after the announcement that those comments at the start of the week were directed to Washington “to make it very clear,
and they did so during the course of these talks, that Iran will be kept out of the Lebanon equation that we’ve achieved through this framework agreement.Article content“I think it’s a tremendous accomplishment,” he told JNS.Article contentDuring the ceremony, Leiter credited “the resilience of the people of Israel, and especially the residents of our northern Galilee,” who have been hit constantly by Hezbollah, along with the courage of the IDF, for making the agreement possible.Article contentHe told reporters that talks this week were “intense” and
“difficult,” but the agreement signed Friday “will allow for the achievement of a full peace agreement between our two countries.”Article content(Hezbollah) are hostile occupiers of LebanonArticle contentIsrael is at war with Hezbollah, not Lebanon, he reiterated.Article content“The agreement facilitates Israel’s continued presence in a security zone until such time that the Lebanese army is strong enough and supported enough by the United States in order to assume full responsibility over Lebanese sovereignty,” Leiter said. “This will be a staged and performance-based move forward to the
degree that the Lebanese army performs in dismantling and disarming Hezbollah.”Article contentArticle content“We will proceed with additional pilot zones and the ultimate determination of an internationally recognized, secure and agreed-upon border,” Leiter said.Article contentHe added that Lebanon’s sovereignty “is not going to be expressed fully as long as Hezbollah is occupying their country.”Article content“These are hostile occupiers of Lebanon,” he said. “They need to go out.”Article contentIsrael will not fully withdraw until “we have completely neutralized Lebanon from terrorism” and “not before that,” according to
Leiter.Article contentIn the meantime, there will be no timeline placed on getting the job done, “because there are other factors that are malign influencers that could cause a delay,” he said.Article content“It really depends on the Lebanese army,” he said. “It depends on the support the Lebanese army gets from the United States, and we think it’s going to be solid.”Article content“The IDF’s freedom of military action will be maintained throughout the security zone to eliminate threats of any kind,” a senior Israeli diplomatic official
said.Article contentRecent statements from Lebanese officials gave Leiter confidence, the envoy said, that “confidence-building measures,” including changes in the language of laws that criminalize recognition of Israel and contact with Israelis, are coming.Article content“We want to get in our car in Tel Aviv and take a drive up to Beirut,” Leiter said. “We want Beirut to come down and take a drive to Tel Aviv. That’s where we’re going.”Article content Latest from Shopping Essentials These are the world’s most beautiful airports for 2026 An architecture
and design jury has highlighted seven terminals you won’t mind missing your connection in 6 hours ago Travel Made in Canada: You can’t top these patriotic T-shirts for July 1 How can you celebrate your home and native land without the proper attire? Enter the classic Canada Day T-shirt. 7 hours ago Life When does Prime Day end in Canada? Here’s exactly when to stop shopping Amazon’s 4-day sale ends tonight, but times vary based on where you’re located in Canada 8 hours ago Amazon
Prime Day Advertisement 3Story continues belowThis advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 5 pop-of-colour pieces for summer from Canadian brands From a sporty dress to a cropped toper, to a perfect lipstick shade, these five pop-of-colour finds from Canadian brands are sure to brighten up your seasonal style. 9 hours ago Fashion & Beauty Flight attendants and gate agents reveal 11 things you should never do when flying Airline staff share passenger behaviours that make their jobs extra difficult and travel
extra miserable 12 hours ago Travel Featured Local Savings
Israel Lebanon agreement, U.S.-brokered framework, Lebanese sovereignty, cessation of hostilities, Hezbollah, Yechiel Leiter, Nama Hamadeh, security zone, Lebanese army
So who gets control of the land though? “sovereignty” sounds nice but…
I don’t even get it. They sign a deal and then say it’s to restore sovereignty, but Israel is literally still there? Seems like PR. Also Iran is mentioned a lot like that fixes everything.
Wait, wasn’t the US and Iran thing the real problem? But the article says Leiter was talking to Washington to keep Iran out of the “equation” with Lebanon… so like, Iran just disappears? lol. I’m sure it’ll be peace any day now.
“First step on the road” is such a cop-out phrase. Every time it’s like sign a framework, then hope nobody breaks it. And calling her “lioness” is weirdly intense, like this is supposed to be diplomacy? People act like territorial integrity means one side’s peace and the other side’s silence.