Iran War
Live Updates: Trump Says Lebanon Cease-Fire Is Extended by 3 Weeks
The
Israeli military said it had struck Hezbollah targets on Friday, but its truce
with Lebanon appeared to be holding. Stopping the fighting between Israel and
the Iran-backed militia could help end the war in Iran.
April 24,
2026, 5:12 a.m. ET43 minutes ago
Abdi
Latif DahirEuan Ward and Qasim NaumanAbdi Latif Dahir and Euan Ward reported
from Beirut, Lebanon.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/24/world/iran-war-trump-hormuz
Here’s
the latest.
The
Israeli military said on Friday that it carried out strikes on Hezbollah
targets in southern Lebanon, a day after President Trump announced a three-week
extension of the cease-fire there, though there were no immediate reports of
significant fighting between Israel and the Iran-backed militant group.
Mr. Trump
made the announcement on Thursday after hosting a meeting at the White House
between Israeli and Lebanese diplomats. Hezbollah, which did not have
representatives at the talks, did not immediately comment on the announcement.
Neither did Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel or President Joseph
Aoun of Lebanon.
Lebanon’s
state-run news agency reported Israeli airstrikes and artillery fire overnight
in several towns and villages in southern Lebanon, and demolition operations in
two towns on Friday morning. The Israeli military said early Friday that it had
struck two rocket launchers in southern Lebanon. Under the terms of the
cease-fire, Israel can act in self-defense but not carry out offensive
operations against Lebanese targets.
A durable
peace would hinge on Lebanon’s ability to rein in Hezbollah, a powerful
political and fighting force that wields significant control over large areas
of the country’s south.
The
conflict in Lebanon has killed nearly 2,300 Lebanese people, 15 Israeli
soldiers and two civilians in Israel since it began in March, according to
official tallies. Stopping that fighting is considered crucial to advancing any
U.S.-Israeli peace agreement with Iran.
After a
separate cease-fire paused the Iran war, hostilities have shifted to the waters
in and around the Strait of Hormuz, a key conduit for oil and gas. The United
States and Iran have in recent days seized vessels they said were violating
their respective restrictions on shipping, and on Thursday, Mr. Trump ordered
the U.S. Navy to “shoot and kill any boat” laying mines in the strait.
Here’s
what else we’re covering:
Pentagon
briefing: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are scheduled to hold a news conference at 8 a.m.
Eastern on Friday. The Times will stream it live.
High
price tag: White House officials have refused to estimate the cost of the war
so far, but two independent groups say it has been staggering: between $28
billion and $35 billion, or just under $1 billion a day.
World
Cup: Iran’s soccer team will be allowed into the United States to play in the
tournament this summer, but not Iranians with ties to the country’s military,
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said.


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