
Israeli Officer Killed in South Lebanon as Framework Accord Fuels Internal Dispute
A Golani brigade captain died in a pre-dawn clash with a Hezbollah fighter in Deir Seryan, testing the two-day-old Israel-Lebanon agreement amid condemnation from far‑right Israeli minister Ben-Gvir and Hezbollah’s rejection of the deal.
An Israeli officer was killed and a soldier wounded in the early hours of Sunday in the southern Lebanese village of Deir Seryan, according to a statement from the Israel Defence Forces. Captain David Hazut, 21, a platoon commander from the Golani Brigade’s 12th Battalion, died after his unit entered a building and encountered a Hezbollah operative who opened fire at close range, the military’s initial probe concluded. The clash occurred roughly two days after Israel and Lebanon signed a framework agreement in Washington aimed at de‑escalating hostilities along the frontier, and brings Israel’s military losses since the conflict erupted in early March to 38 soldiers and one civilian contractor.
The incident has sharpened divergent Israeli assessments of the accord. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu portrayed the agreement as a strategic achievement that restores Israel’s rules of engagement on its northern border and applies pressure on Iran and Hezbollah. By contrast, National Security Minister Itamar Ben‑Gvir denounced it as “a big mistake,” asserting in a Telegram post that the Lebanese state cannot be trusted to disarm Hezbollah. Ben‑Gvir’s objection underscores a wider tension within the Israeli cabinet over the perceived concessions embedded in the diplomatic track.
From Beirut, Hezbollah‑affiliated media described the Deir Seryan operation as a legitimate act of resistance. The Lebanese group had already rejected the framework agreement, according to Israeli security sources cited by Tribunnews, casting doubt on the durability of any ceasefire. Iran’s foreign minister added a further layer of conditionality, stating that Israel must withdraw from what it called occupied Lebanese territory and that the first step must be a cessation of the war on all fronts. Meanwhile, the Gulf Cooperation Council and the United Arab Emirates issued separate condemnations of what they termed Iranian terrorist attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait—a sign that any Lebanon‑centred diplomacy remains entangled in broader Persian Gulf tensions.
On the ground, the Israeli military launched follow‑up airstrikes on Hezbollah sites in the Deir Seryan area and continued to search for the operative who escaped. Lebanon’s state news agency reported new Israeli shelling on the outskirts of Deir Seryan and Taybeh. With Hezbollah refusing the framework text, Israeli hardliners mobilising against it, and kinetic exchanges persisting, the agreement’s implementation appears fragile. The next diplomatic moves are expected in the coming days as mediators seek to bridge the gaps, but the events in Deir Seryan have injected immediate uncertainty into a process that was already viewed sceptically in several regional capitals.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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An Israeli officer was killed in a clash with a Hezbollah militant in southern Lebanon. The military reported the incident and provided details on the soldier's identity and the circumstances, noting it was part of ongoing hostilities.
The Israeli enemy announced the killing of an officer in battles with the resistance in southern Lebanon. Media reports framed the incident as a military confrontation with Hezbollah, emphasizing the ongoing conflict and the high cost for Israel.
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