Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETMonday, June 29, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages162 briefings today
Geopolitics & PoliticsSunday, June 28, 2026

Framework Deal with Beirut Hailed by Israel, Denounced as "Null" by Hezbollah

The Washington-brokered agreement conditions Israeli withdrawal on the disarmament of the Iran-backed group, a provision Hezbollah says crosses all red lines.

On 27 June, Israel, Lebanon and the United States signed a framework agreement in Washington that explicitly links a staged Israeli military withdrawal from southern Lebanon to the verified disarmament of all non-state armed groups, chiefly the Iran-backed Shiite movement Hezbollah. Within hours, Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem declared the text "null and void", describing it as a "humiliation" and a "surrender of sovereignty". Israeli airstrikes on Lebanese territory continued the following day, with the state-run National News Agency reporting a strike near Deir Siryan and Taybeh, underscoring the fragility of the new diplomatic architecture.

The Israeli government has framed the accord as a historic strategic victory. In a televised briefing, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it represented a "blow to Iran and Hezbollah", adding that Israeli forces would remain in a ten-kilometre security zone inside Lebanon "until Hezbollah and the rest of the terror groups are disarmed". Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered troops to prepare for an extended stay. Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun, in a phone call with US President Donald Trump, committed the state to "assume its responsibilities" in implementing the deal, which he called a first step towards restoring sovereignty. Yet Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah warned that enforcing disarmament would require the state to "go to civil war", while Qassem insisted his fighters would keep "our finger on the trigger" and continue resistance.

The text, released by the US State Department, sets out a sequenced process: an initial Israeli withdrawal from two pilot zones, to be replaced by the Lebanese Armed Forces, followed by gradual expansion as Hezbollah is disarmed. It expresses the intent to "conclusively end the conflict" and formally terminate the state of war. Diplomatically, however, the agreement exists in tension with a separate US-Iran memorandum of understanding that established a deconfliction mechanism for Lebanon, in which Iran is included but Israel is not. Viewed from Tehran, the framework is seen as an effort to sideline the so-called axis of resistance and consolidate Israeli military gains—an interpretation echoed by Hezbollah’s media.

Implementation remains deeply uncertain. Hezbollah’s rejection and street protests in Beirut signal the risk of internal destabilisation, while the Lebanese army has historically proved unable or unwilling to confront the group. France has stated its readiness to "contribute" to the deal’s execution, and several Arab states have welcomed the initiative, but the diplomatic track runs parallel to continued military operations. A previous ceasefire agreed in April 2026 collapsed, and UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which mandated Hezbollah’s withdrawal north of the Litani River, was never enforced. The Israeli military has already withdrawn from one pilot zone, but officials in Jerusalem say further steps depend entirely on the Lebanese state’s capacity to impose its monopoly on force. For now, the agreement remains a statement of intent whose translation into practice will test Lebanon’s political cohesion and the credibility of the US-led mediation.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

20%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Israeli pressIndian & South Asian press
Israeli press
TriumphPragmatism

Netanyahu presents the deal as a historic victory that strengthens Israel and weakens Hezbollah and Iran, reaffirming Israel's right to maintain a security zone in southern Lebanon until disarmament. The strike is portrayed as a necessary defensive action against a threat.

Indian & South Asian press
OutrageSkepticism

Hezbollah's leader rejects the US-brokered deal as a humiliating surrender that legitimizes Israeli occupation and violates Lebanese sovereignty. The group vows to continue resistance until full Israeli withdrawal, dismissing the framework as null and void.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
From Keypads to Touchscreens: The Stories We’ll Stream and Read This July·BIS warns AI bubble, inflation and sovereign debt threaten global stability·Data-Driven Agility Becomes Competitive Imperative as Firms Rethink Talent and Time·Machado’s push to return to quake-stricken Venezuela strains ties with Washington and Caracas·Night-time screen light linked to 30% higher obesity risk, as psychology reframes resilience as a learned skill·Brazil Stun Japan with Late Martinelli Winner to Reach Last 16·A pair of aviators eclipses a state visit at the Élysée·Air cargo demand rises 6% in May but tariff fears distort trade flows·From Keypads to Touchscreens: The Stories We’ll Stream and Read This July·BIS warns AI bubble, inflation and sovereign debt threaten global stability·Data-Driven Agility Becomes Competitive Imperative as Firms Rethink Talent and Time·Machado’s push to return to quake-stricken Venezuela strains ties with Washington and Caracas·Night-time screen light linked to 30% higher obesity risk, as psychology reframes resilience as a learned skill·Brazil Stun Japan with Late Martinelli Winner to Reach Last 16·A pair of aviators eclipses a state visit at the Élysée·Air cargo demand rises 6% in May but tariff fears distort trade flows·
Upd. 01:21 PM2 languages · 3 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

Framework Deal with Beirut Hailed by Israel, Denounced as "Null" by Hezbollah

The Washington-brokered agreement conditions Israeli withdrawal on the disarmament of the Iran-backed group, a provision Hezbollah says crosses all red lines.

On 27 June, Israel, Lebanon and the United States signed a framework agreement in Washington that explicitly links a staged Israeli military withdrawal from southern Lebanon to the verified disarmament of all non-state armed groups, chiefly the Iran-backed Shiite movement Hezbollah. Within hours, Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem declared the text "null and void", describing it as a "humiliation" and a "surrender of sovereignty". Israeli airstrikes on Lebanese territory continued the following day, with the state-run National News Agency reporting a strike near Deir Siryan and Taybeh, underscoring the fragility of the new diplomatic architecture.

The Israeli government has framed the accord as a historic strategic victory. In a televised briefing, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it represented a "blow to Iran and Hezbollah", adding that Israeli forces would remain in a ten-kilometre security zone inside Lebanon "until Hezbollah and the rest of the terror groups are disarmed". Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered troops to prepare for an extended stay. Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun, in a phone call with US President Donald Trump, committed the state to "assume its responsibilities" in implementing the deal, which he called a first step towards restoring sovereignty. Yet Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah warned that enforcing disarmament would require the state to "go to civil war", while Qassem insisted his fighters would keep "our finger on the trigger" and continue resistance.

The text, released by the US State Department, sets out a sequenced process: an initial Israeli withdrawal from two pilot zones, to be replaced by the Lebanese Armed Forces, followed by gradual expansion as Hezbollah is disarmed. It expresses the intent to "conclusively end the conflict" and formally terminate the state of war. Diplomatically, however, the agreement exists in tension with a separate US-Iran memorandum of understanding that established a deconfliction mechanism for Lebanon, in which Iran is included but Israel is not. Viewed from Tehran, the framework is seen as an effort to sideline the so-called axis of resistance and consolidate Israeli military gains—an interpretation echoed by Hezbollah’s media.

Implementation remains deeply uncertain. Hezbollah’s rejection and street protests in Beirut signal the risk of internal destabilisation, while the Lebanese army has historically proved unable or unwilling to confront the group. France has stated its readiness to "contribute" to the deal’s execution, and several Arab states have welcomed the initiative, but the diplomatic track runs parallel to continued military operations. A previous ceasefire agreed in April 2026 collapsed, and UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which mandated Hezbollah’s withdrawal north of the Litani River, was never enforced. The Israeli military has already withdrawn from one pilot zone, but officials in Jerusalem say further steps depend entirely on the Lebanese state’s capacity to impose its monopoly on force. For now, the agreement remains a statement of intent whose translation into practice will test Lebanon’s political cohesion and the credibility of the US-led mediation.

Source divergence

Geopolitics & Politics · 3 outlets · 2 languages

20%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable11%
Critical89%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Israeli pressIndian & South Asian press
Israeli press
TriumphPragmatism

Netanyahu presents the deal as a historic victory that strengthens Israel and weakens Hezbollah and Iran, reaffirming Israel's right to maintain a security zone in southern Lebanon until disarmament. The strike is portrayed as a necessary defensive action against a threat.

Indian & South Asian press
OutrageSkepticism

Hezbollah's leader rejects the US-brokered deal as a humiliating surrender that legitimizes Israeli occupation and violates Lebanese sovereignty. The group vows to continue resistance until full Israeli withdrawal, dismissing the framework as null and void.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 2 languages

Broaden your view

From Economy & Markets

EU and China Launch Three-Month Trade Talks with Joint Monitoring Mechanism

8 languages · 14 outlets

From Technology

WhatsApp Opens Username Reservations for 3 Billion Users Ahead of Privacy Shift

6 languages · 28 outlets

From Science & Health

Ebola Outbreak Spreads to Fourth Congolese Province as First Case Confirmed in France

5 languages · 11 outlets

Read more