Israel, Lebanon extend ceasefire after U.S. talks

Summary

Israel, Lebanon extended a ceasefire by 45 days after U.S.-facilitated talks in Washington and scheduled more negotiations.

Why this matters

The extension lowers the immediate risk of renewed fighting along the Israel-Lebanon border and keeps open the highest-level talks between the countries in decades. The negotiations also intersect with wider U.S.-Iran diplomacy, linking the border conflict to broader regional tensions.

Israel and Lebanon agreed to extend their ceasefire by 45 days after two days of U.S.-facilitated talks in Washington, with further meetings planned in the coming weeks.

The ceasefire had been due to expire on Sunday.

The Lebanese and Israeli delegations issued positive statements after what was their third meeting since Israel stepped up airstrikes on Lebanon after Hezbollah fired missiles at Israel on March 2, three days into the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.

Hezbollah and Israel have continued to exchange fire, mainly in southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces occupy a self-declared security zone.

Lebanon’s delegation, attending despite objections from the Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah, has prioritized ending hostilities. Israel has said Hezbollah must be disarmed as part of any broader peace agreement with Lebanon.

The Washington meetings, the highest-level contact between Lebanon and Israel in decades, expanded to include security and military officials.

Lebanon’s delegation said it wanted to turn the ceasefire into a lasting peace agreement.

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