News
Analysis
Lebanon
Emerges as Weak Link in U.S.-Iran Deal to End War
The
conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, once seen as a secondary front to the
American-Israeli war on Iran, has become one of the main obstacles to ending
it.
Euan Ward Christina Goldbaum
By Euan
Ward and Christina Goldbaum
Reporting
from Beirut, Lebanon
June 19,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/19/world/middleeast/lebanon-us-iran-deal-ceasefire.html
The
preliminary agreement between Iran and the United States had barely come into
effect when it all nearly unraveled on Friday. And, for the second time in
recent weeks, the issue that threatened to derail it was Lebanon.
The
conflict in Lebanon, once seen as a secondary front to the American-Israeli war
on Iran, has become one of the main obstacles to ending it. That dynamic came
into sharp focus on Friday, after fighting between the Iran-backed militant
group Hezbollah and Israel intensified and a new round of talks between Tehran
and Washington in Switzerland was subsequently scuttled.
While
neither side gave a reason for the postponement, three diplomats who spoke on
the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details said that Iran had
withdrawn from the talks because of Israeli strikes in Lebanon.
“Iran’s
new leadership views Lebanon as part and parcel of its own national security,
as previous Israeli advances against Hezbollah in 2024 paved the way for a
direct conflict with Iran,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, a senior fellow at the
Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. “For Iran, the end game is an Israeli
withdrawal from Lebanon.”
The
diplomatic breakdown on Friday was the second time in recent weeks that the
conflict in Lebanon has upended talks between the United States and Iran.
Earlier this month, Israeli strikes on the outskirts of the Lebanese capital,
Beirut, prompted Iran to launch missiles toward Israel and Israel to respond
with its own wave of strikes across Iran.
The
breakdown came days after the United States and Iran signed a preliminary
agreement to end their own war that calls for “the immediate and permanent
termination of military operations” in Lebanon and pledges to safeguard the
country’s “territorial integrity and sovereignty.”
The
inclusion of Lebanon in the deal was seen as a diplomatic victory for Iran,
which has long insisted that any agreement include Lebanon, where its ally,
Hezbollah, attacked Israel in March in solidarity with Tehran. Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, which has not been party to the negotiations, had
staunchly objected to those terms and vowed to continue the military campaign
against Hezbollah.
On
Friday, the Israeli ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said
Israel had committed to an immediate cease-fire and had “halted all offensive
operations” in Lebanon, as diplomats sought to keep the fragile deal between
Iran and the United States on track. But he said that Israeli forces were still
operating in southern Lebanon “to rid the area of Hezbollah and dismantle its
terror infrastructure,” adding, “We will remain there until that mission is
accomplished.”
There was
no immediate comment from Hezbollah.
The terms
of the agreement between the United States and Iran, however, have raised as
many questions as they have answered.
The deal
purports to extend its commitments to Washington and Tehran’s allies, but
neither Israel nor Hezbollah signed the memorandum, and it does not explain how
either side would be compelled to comply. It also does not resolve the two
questions at the heart of the conflict: whether Israel will withdraw from
southern Lebanon and whether Hezbollah will surrender its weapons.
Washington
and Israel had sought to keep the two conflicts separate, while Tehran made
Israel’s campaign in Lebanon a pressure point in negotiations with Washington.
That
strategy left President Trump increasingly concerned that persistent Israeli
attacks could imperil a deal. In recent weeks, Mr. Trump has grown more openly
frustrated with Mr. Netanyahu and pressed him to scale back military
operations.
Since the
agreement was announced, Israel has stopped issuing near-daily evacuation
warnings for towns and villages across southern Lebanon.
Although
Israeli strikes have also continued, their scale and pace had waned
significantly until Friday.
Hezbollah
said it had ambushed Israeli troops advancing on a hillside overlooking
Nabatieh, the large southern Lebanese city, in fighting that killed four
Israeli soldiers, according to the military. Israel responded with more than
150 strikes across southern and eastern Lebanon, killing at least 47 people,
according to Lebanon’s health ministry.
Assaf
Orion, a retired Israeli brigadier general and a fellow at the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, said that although Iran had “managed to connect
the two theaters and leverage these negotiations with Trump to constrain
Israel,” it was still “too early to judge” whether that restraint would hold —
and, if so, for how long.
Lebanon’s
cease-fire with Israel, brokered by the Trump administration in April, offers a
cautionary precedent. It barred Israel from conducting offensive military
operations while preserving the country’s right to take “all necessary measures
in self-defense.”
Within
hours of the announcement, Israel was invoking that broad latitude to continue
strikes. In the weeks that followed, it also expanded its ground invasion
despite the cease-fire. Like the U.S.-Iran agreement announced on Sunday,
Hezbollah was not a signatory.
On
another diplomatic track, the next round of Israeli-Lebanese talks toward a
more stable solution in Lebanon will take place next week in Washington, the
U.S. State Department said in a statement on Friday, after Secretary of State
Marco Rubio spoke with Lebanon’s president, Joseph Aoun.
While it
is unclear how much direct control Iran has over Hezbollah, analysts say Tehran
has exerted a much stronger hand in the group since its former leader, Hassan
Nasrallah, was killed in Israeli airstrikes in 2024.
After
Hezbollah and Israel agreed to a cease-fire later that year, Hezbollah held its
fire despite near-daily Israeli airstrikes, until the U.S.-Israeli war against
Iran began in late February.
Lina
Khatib, an associate fellow at Chatham House in London, said the U.S.-Iran deal
“may create conditions for de-escalation” in Lebanon but did not address the
core issues, including an Israeli withdrawal and the future of Hezbollah’s
arsenal.
Israeli
forces remain stationed across a broad section of southern Lebanon, the largest
occupation of the country in more than two decades. Israel’s offensive has
devastated border towns and forced more than a million people from their homes.
Israel
has signaled it does not feel bound by any Lebanon-related agreements in the
U.S.-Iran talks, and Israeli leaders have said in recent days that they do not
intend to withdraw from the country. That stance puts the agreement’s promise
to safeguard Lebanon’s territorial integrity to an immediate test.
Hezbollah’s
weapons are bound up in the same deadlock. Israel has demanded that the group
disarm before it will consider withdrawal. Hezbollah points to the occupation
as evidence that its arsenal is still needed. Lebanon’s government has pledged
to bring all weapons under state control, but has little ability to secure
either outcome.
“It is
unlikely that the Lebanon conflict is going to be resolved anytime soon,” Ms.
Khatib said.
Reporting
was contributed by Abdi Latif Dahir, Johnatan Reiss, Adam Rasgon and Alan
Yuhas.
Euan Ward
is a Times reporter covering Lebanon and Syria. He is based in Beirut.
Christina
Goldbaum is The Times’s bureau chief in Beirut, leading coverage of Lebanon and
Syria.


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