
The Israeli military has carried out a new round of air strikes in southern Lebanon, less than a day after Israel and Lebanon held their first direct talks in decades.
Residents of the towns of Mjadel, Baraachit, Jbaa and Mahrouna were told to evacuate areas around locations that the Israeli military alleged were weapons warehouses belonging to the Iranian-backed group. No casualties have been reported.
An Israeli military spokesman said the sites constituted a ceasefire violation and warned that it would continue to operate "to remove any threat" to Israel.
Israel has carried out near-daily strikes on Lebanon since a ceasefire took effect in November 2024, following 13 months of conflict.
There was no immediate comment from Lebanon's leaders to Thursday's strikes. Lebanese politicians have previously condemned similar strikes as ceasefire violations.
Under the first phase of a deal brokered by the US and France, Israeli troops were to withdraw from southern Lebanon, while Hezbollah was to remove its fighters and weapons from south of the Litani river, about 30km (20 miles) from the border with Israel - a plan the group and its allies oppose.
Israel has maintained positions at several strategic border sites and stepped up its air strikes in recent weeks. It is an escalation officials say is driven by Hezbollah's attempts to rebuild its military infrastructure and what they see as limited Lebanese government efforts to disarm the group.
Thursday's strikes came less than 24 hours after Israel and Lebanon sent civilian envoys to the Lebanese border town of Naqoura for their first direct talks in decades.
The talks, hosted at the headquarters of the UN peacekeeping mission, Unifil, took place during a meeting of the ceasefire monitoring committee, which until now had only included military officers from the US, France, Lebanon, Israel and Unifil.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office issued a statement saying the meeting "took place in a good atmosphere" and that it "was agreed that ideas would be formulated to advance possible economic cooperation between Israel and Lebanon".
It also said that Israeli envoys "clarified that the disarmament of Hezbollah is obligatory, regardless of the advancement of economic co-operation".
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam was more cautious, saying Lebanon remained "far" from diplomatic normalisation with Israel and that the talks were focused on "defusing tension".
"We are not yet at peace talks," he told reporters, saying Lebanon's priorities were the cessation of hostilities, the release of Lebanese detainees held by Israel, and Israel's full withdrawal from its territory.
He added that Beirut was open to the deployment of French and US troops to help verify efforts to disarm Hezbollah.
The latest strikes and diplomatic moves coincide with a visit by a UN Security Council delegation to Lebanon to review the stalled implementation of the ceasefire.
latest_posts
- 1
Israeli naval intelligence reduces Iranian threat to Strait of Hormuz - 2
What we know about the 'Stranger Things' spinoff — plus the one cast member who guessed it correctly - 3
Audits of 6 European Busssiness Class Flights - 4
Step by step instructions to Keep up with Ideal Oral Cleanliness at Home - 5
From Iran to Israel: An Iranian volunteer’s unlikely stand in wartime
NASA begins fueling rocket to launch astronauts on the first lunar trip in half a century
The 15 Most Powerful Forerunners in Business
Tatiana Schlossberg's diagnosis puts spotlight on leukemia: What to know
The Ascent of the Kona SUV: How Hyundai's Reduced Hybrid Is Vanquishing the Streets
Turning into a Distributed Writer: My Composing Process
Eleven Creations And Developments That Steered History
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS isn't an alien spacecraft, astronomers confirm. 'In the end, there were no surprises.'
Instructions to Utilize Your Brain science Certification to Work on Corporate Culture
Explainer-What Novo Nordisk's weight-loss pill approval means for company, patients












