Israeli forces carried out new strikes in southern Lebanon on Wednesday, despite renewed criticism from President Donald Trump over Israel’s actions there.
Israeli jets struck the Nabatieh al-Fawqa area and the outskirts of nearby Kfar Tebnit, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency said.
On Tuesday, Trump said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu needed “to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon.” Speaking at the Group of Seven summit in France, he said Israel had been fighting Hezbollah for “too long and too many people are being killed.”
Both Israel and Hezbollah had carried out attacks against each other since a U.S.-Iran agreement was announced Sunday night. Earlier that day, an Israeli airstrike on Beirut, in response to a cross-border rocket attack by Hezbollah, had added pressure to efforts to finalize the deal.
Trump said he had a “great relationship” with Netanyahu, but added that he “didn’t like that he did an attack… that was too much.” He also said: “Without the United States, there would be no Israel. Without me, there would be no Israel because no other president was willing to do what I did.”
Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, warned that Tehran would view any Israeli attack on Lebanon, or continued Israeli military presence on Lebanese territory, as a violation of the interim agreement with the United States.
The text of the agreement, described as a memorandum of understanding, had not been officially released. Mediator Pakistan said it included Lebanon.
Switzerland’s Foreign Ministry told Schweiz Heute that both sides were expected to sign the deal Friday in the Swiss resort of Bürgenstock. Trump said he would likely hold a news conference to read the agreement between the United States and Iran “word by word.”
He also said the deal meant Iran would “never have a nuclear weapon” and that the Strait of Hormuz would reopen and be “toll-free.” Trump said the deal would be better than the one negotiated under President Barack Obama.
“We didn’t pay for it like Obama did. He paid billions of dollars,” Trump said Tuesday.
Under the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, Iran agreed with the United States and five other world powers to limit its nuclear activities and allow international inspections in return for sanctions relief and the release of frozen funds.