
Netanyahu Defies US-Iran Accord, Refuses Lebanon Withdrawal
The Israeli prime minister insists on maintaining a security zone in southern Lebanon, challenging a Washington-Tehran memorandum that calls for a full troop pullout and an end to hostilities.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has bluntly rejected any immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon, declaring that the military will hold a "security zone" inside Lebanese territory for as long as Israel’s security needs demand. Speaking on Thursday at a ceremony in the occupied West Bank, Netanyahu framed the buffer strip — which extends roughly 10 kilometres north of the frontier — as an indispensable barrier between Hezbollah and Israel’s northern communities. The remarks came barely 24 hours after the United States and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding designed to halt fighting across multiple regional fronts, including Lebanon, and to reaffirm Lebanese sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Viewed from Washington, the memorandum was intended to fold the Lebanese theatre into a broader de-escalation between the US and Iran, creating a pathway for a negotiated end to hostilities that have ravaged the border area. Yet Israel was not a party to those talks, and the Netanyahu government has made clear it will not be bound by an agreement it did not shape. Israeli officials are reported to be engaged in "tough negotiations" with the White House to preserve their military positions, while the Israel Defense Forces issued a separate statement confirming that troops would remain deployed in the security zone and continue operations against Hezbollah. The divergence has opened a rare public rift between Jerusalem and Washington at a moment when the Biden administration — or its successor — is seeking to stabilise the Levant.
In Beirut, the prime minister’s words were received as confirmation that the true test of any diplomatic framework will be whether Israeli forces actually leave Lebanese soil. The Lebanese government regards the zone as occupied territory under illegal military control, and officials have long insisted that full withdrawal is a precondition for lasting calm. From Tehran’s perspective, the Israeli stance threatens to unravel the memorandum’s logic. Iranian military commanders had already warned of a "harsh response" to continued ceasefire violations, and the foreign ministry signalled that the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon must form part of any final settlement. The Iranian calculus links the Lebanese front directly to the broader US-Iran understanding, making Netanyahu’s defiance a potential trigger for renewed escalation.
Analysts in London and Moscow note that Netanyahu’s position is not merely tactical. By insisting on an open-ended military presence, he is signalling that Israel will dictate its own security architecture regardless of great-power diplomacy. The security zone, first established in early March, has become a domestic political asset for a prime minister facing re-election pressures and a restive northern electorate. Yet the longer Israeli troops remain, the more the US-Iran memorandum risks becoming a dead letter in Lebanon, leaving the borderlands trapped between an unresolved war and a peace deal that one key belligerent refuses to accept.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Netanyahu defies the United States and refuses to withdraw from southern Lebanon, putting Israel at odds with the US-Iran deal and Lebanese sovereignty claims. The Israeli prime minister says the war is not over and the army will remain in a 'security zone' as long as Israel deems necessary.
Israel will not withdraw its troops from southern Lebanon, Netanyahu stated, because security needs require maintaining a buffer zone. The US-Iran memorandum calls for a ceasefire and respect for Lebanese territorial integrity, but Israel insists it will stay as long as necessary.
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