Netanyahu
calls for talks with Lebanon after bombardment of Beirut threatens ceasefire
Israeli
PM gives no indication bombing will stop after strikes that killed more than
200 people led to global outcry
Julian
Borger Senior international correspondent
Thu 9 Apr
2026 18.49 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/09/israel-bombing-lebanon-us-iran-ceasefire-condemnation
Benjamin
Netanyahu has called for negotiations with Lebanon after worldwide condemnation
of Israel’s intense bombardment of Beirut and other Lebanese cities, which
threatened to undo the US-Iran ceasefire before it was barely a day old.
The
Israeli prime minister said the talks should focus on the disarmament of
Hezbollah and the establishment of “peace relations” with Lebanon, but gave no
undertaking that the bombardment would stop, and there was no immediate sign of
a let up in Israeli strikes. The Lebanese government had requested a ceasefire
before talks began.
More than
200 people were killed by Israeli bombing in the 24 hours after the
announcement of a ceasefire in the Iran war on Tuesday night. The bombardment,
ostensibly aimed at Hezbollah targets, included strikes with heavy munitions on
densely populated areas, which drew outrage from the International Committee of
the Red Cross and other international humanitarian organisations.
The
ferocious attack on Lebanon had threatened to derail hopes of a negotiated end
to the war in Iran, which began with a US-Israeli attack on 28 February.
Despite claims by the US president, Donald Trump, that the Pakistani-brokered
ceasefire had marked significant progress towards bringing a durable peace to
the Middle East, the truce looked in danger of collapsing on its first day.
Iran
warned that, in response to the Israeli attacks after the ceasefire, it would
once more close the strait of Hormuz, the economically critical waterway it had
agreed to open for the two-week duration of the ceasefire. The country’s
president, Masoud Pezeshkian, said negotiations were “meaningless” as long as
Israel continued to bomb Lebanon, placing in doubt US-Iranian talks in Pakistan
scheduled for Saturday. Pezeshkian vowed Iran would not abandon the Lebanese
people.
According
to Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Saeed Khatibzadeh, Iran had been held back
from responding forcefully to Israel’s escalation in Lebanon by Pakistani
intervention urging restraint in the interests of a broader peace agreement.
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, condemned Israel’s “ongoing
aggression against Lebanon”.
Netanyahu
had insisted Lebanon was not included in the Tuesday night ceasefire agreed by
Donald Trump, and vowed the Israeli military would continue to strike Hezbollah
targets “wherever necessary”. The Israeli prime minister said his forces had
killed the secretary to Hezbollah’s leader, Naim Qassem.
Trump
himself backed Netanyahu’s version, telling the public broadcaster PBS that
Lebanon was “not included in the deal” because of Hezbollah’s role. He referred
to the conflict in Lebanon as a “separate skirmish” from the Iranian war and
added: “That’ll get taken care of, too. It’s all right.”
CNN
reported that Netanyahu’s announcement of peace talks with Lebanon had come at
the urging of the US president, who is keen to extricate the US from a war that
he was persuaded to join by Netanyahu, according to multiple accounts of the
lead-up to the conflict.
The US
vice-president, JD Vance, assigned to lead the US delegation to peace talks in
Pakistan, suggested there had been a “legitimate misunderstanding” on the
geographic reach of the ceasefire deal.
Pakistan,
which accelerated its mediation efforts after Trump threatened a
civilisation-ending onslaught, has said Lebanon had been part of the agreement.
Robert
Malley, a former American envoy who led earlier US-Iranian negotiations, said:
“I would trust the Pakistani mediator that Lebanon was included. They put out a
statement that it was included and we did not hear any American correct the
Pakistani version for many hours.
“It looks
like a case of the US reneging and giving the Israeli prime minister
[permission] to go ahead [with bombing] for another 24 hours before they are
‘restrained’”.
Malley
said the best-case scenario for peace talks in Pakistan was that the region was
returned to the status quo before the US-Israeli attacks began on 28 February,
with the strait of Hormuz open, and options for limiting Iran’s nuclear
programme on the table along with some form of financial compensation for
Tehran.
Authorities
in Islamabad began implementing strict security measures in anticipation of the
arrival of delegations for talks, expected to begin on Saturday.
As the
future of the ceasefire looked in peril, Trump issued his latest ultimatum on
social media, vowing a return to US attacks (as he put it, the “Shootin’
Starts”) if Iran failed to comply with “the real agreement”. He made clear that
Tehran had to reopen the strait of Hormuz fully to international shipping, and
that it should have “no nuclear weapons”. He did not mention Lebanon.
US allies
have insisted the ceasefire should be comprehensive. A joint statement by the
UK, EU countries, Canada and Japan called on “all sides to implement the
ceasefire, including in Lebanon”, where Israel is seeking to destroy the
Iranian-backed Hezbollah movement.
Kaja
Kallas, the EU foreign policy chief, said on Thursday: “Hezbollah dragged
Lebanon into the war, but Israel’s right to defend itself does not justify
inflicting such massive destruction. Israeli strikes killed hundreds last
night, making it hard to argue that such heavy-handed actions fall within
self-defence.”
France’s
foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, condemned the Israeli strikes as
“unacceptable” and his British counterpart, Yvette Cooper, described them as
“deeply damaging”, adding that failure to include Lebanon in the ceasefire
would “destabilise the whole region”.
Diplomatic
efforts worldwide have focused on reopening the strait of Hormuz, the gateway
to a fifth of the global flow of oil and liquefied natural gas. Only 11 ships –
four Iranian, four Greek, one Chinese, one Omani and one unknown – were allowed
to pass through the strait in the 24 hours after the ceasefire, less than a
tenth of the prewar flow.
About
1,400 ships remain anchored in the Gulf, trapped first by the war then the
uncertainty that has accompanied the vague and shaky truce. After an initial
plunge in the global oil price after the announcement of the ceasefire, it
began to creep up again towards $100 a barrel on Thursday.

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