
Netanyahu says Christian villages in Lebanon sought Israeli annexation; US pushes parallel withdrawal deal
The Israeli premier claimed on US television that border communities asked for annexation to escape Hezbollah — a narrative dismissed by the villages and attributed by Lebanese sources to domestic pressure over a Washington-brokered ceasefire, while CENTCOM mediates a separate security arrangement.
In an interview with Fox News, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asserted that Christian villages in southern Lebanon had requested annexation by Israel, stating his military protects them from Hezbollah. The claim, made just days after Israel and Lebanon signed a US-mediated peace framework in Washington on 26 June, was immediately challenged by Christian border communities. In a prior joint statement, those villages had categorically denied reaching out to Israeli officials, calling reports of such appeals “fabricated” and reaffirming their loyalty to the Lebanese state.
Viewed from Beirut, the remarks are interpreted as a political manoeuvre under domestic strain. Lebanese political sources cited by Al-Jadeed say Netanyahu is making “negative statements” to manage internal fallout from the trilateral framework signed with the US and Lebanon, which envisages an Israeli withdrawal. “Israeli leaders refuse to appear as if they are being forced to pull out,” one Lebanese source noted. The same framework was denounced by Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem as a humiliation that cedes sovereignty, underlining the fragility of the uneasy calm.
In parallel, the Washington-driven diplomatic track focuses on security arrangements rather than annexation rhetoric. The commander of US Central Command has entered the mediation channel directly, working to accelerate an Israeli withdrawal in exchange for enhanced Lebanese army deployments under American supervision. The talks also aim to set up a Lebanese-American-Israeli security committee, intended to oversee implementation on the ground. US officials have expressed impatience with unilateral Israeli actions in Lebanon in the past, and the CENTCOM intervention signals a determination to anchor the ceasefire in a verifiable mechanism even as Netanyahu insists Israeli forces will remain in the country.
The broader regional context complicates the stand-off. Israeli leadership has long justified cross-border operations as necessary to secure the north and enable the return of evacuated residents, while warning that US-Iranian understandings risk weakening Israel's ability to counter Hezbollah. For their part, European analysts note that the annexation remarks — made on a US network — may be aimed at shaping American public opinion ahead of anticipated US-Iran technical talks in Doha. At the same time, the White House is reaching out to other regional players: Al-Jadeed reports that President Trump intends to meet Syrian leader Ahmad al-Sharaa on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Turkey, hinting at a wider realignment effort.
The dossier now moves to the formation of the trilateral security committee and the pace of the Israeli withdrawal, with CENTCOM expected to visit the northern sector to assess the first steps. The Lebanese army, meanwhile, is expanding its presence in the south under the emerging arrangement, though Hezbollah’s rejection of the framework ensures that the ceasefire will be tested by localised friction. The next concrete milestone is the convening of the Lebanese-American-Israeli committee, with a timeline that remains subject to the ongoing mediation in Beirut and Washington.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Netanyahu states that Lebanese Christian villages have requested annexation to Israel for protection from Hezbollah. The news is reported as a direct statement, without questioning its veracity. The broader context of a US-backed withdrawal deal is not emphasized.
Netanyahu told Fox News that some Christian villages in southern Lebanon requested annexation, claiming the Israeli army protects them from Hezbollah. The news is presented with balanced coverage, including the context of the conflict and US diplomatic efforts. There is no clear stance, but a cautious tone emerges.
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