Israel, Lebanon agree U.S.-brokered plan for Hezbollah disarmament
Israel and Lebanon agreed to a U.S.-brokered framework tying Hezbollah's disarmament to Israel's phased withdrawal, but Hezbollah rejected it and Israel retains control of occupied areas. The deal aim
Israel and Lebanon have reached a U.S.-brokered framework deal to ease months of fighting, but the agreement skips key demands from Hezbollah and side
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera →Why This Matters
The proposed framework represents a rare attempt to decouple Israel’s phased territorial withdrawal from Lebanon from the broader conflict dynamics, particularly Hezbollah’s armed status—a move that could redefine regional deterrence calculus if it holds. More critically, it tests whether Washington can still broker even modest de-escalation in the Middle East, where its leverage has eroded amid the Gaza war and shifting alliances.
Background Context
The 2006 UN Resolution 1701, which ended the last major Israel-Hezbollah war, mandated Hezbollah’s disarmament but was never enforced—a failure that normalized the group’s military posture and turned southern Lebanon into a de facto Iranian-backed garrison. Meanwhile, Israel’s occupation of Shebaa Farms and Kfar Shouba Hills, claimed by Lebanon, has become a symbolic sticking point despite its limited strategic value.
What Happens Next
The immediate risk is that Hezbollah’s rejection emboldens Israel to escalate its strikes on Lebanon, particularly if it perceives the group as exploiting the stalled deal to fortify its positions. Conversely, if the framework survives diplomatic turbulence, it could pave the way for indirect talks on border demarcation—a long-standing obstacle to a permanent ceasefire. The wild card remains whether regional actors like Iran or Saudi Arabia, now pivoting toward a fragile détente, will pressure Hezbollah to soften its stance.
Bigger Picture
The deal reflects a broader erosion of post-Cold War arms control norms in the Middle East, where non-state actors now dictate the pace of negotiations far more than in previous decades. It also underscores how localized conflicts—once contained within national borders—now function as proxy battlegrounds for geopolitical rivalries, complicating even the most basic confidence-building measures.

