Israeli army confirms it'll keep occupying 5 hills in south Lebanon

W460

The Israeli army said its forces will remain at five "strategic points" inside Lebanon beyond Tuesday, when the deadline for troop withdrawal from south Lebanon under a fragile ceasefire expires.

"Based on the current situation, we will leave small amounts of troops deployed temporarily in five strategic points along the border in Lebanon so we can continue to defend our residents and to make sure there's no immediate threat," Israeli military spokesman Nadav Shoshani told journalists on Monday.

"This is a temporary measure until the Lebanese armed forces are able to fully implement the understanding," he added.

The Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire has been in effect since November 27, after more than two months of all-out war during which Israel launched ground operations.

Under the deal, Lebanon's military was to deploy in the south alongside United Nations peacekeepers as the Israeli army withdrew over a 60-day period that was later extended to February 18.

Hezbollah was to pull back north of the Litani River -- about 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the border -- and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure in the south.

A committee involving the United States, France, Lebanon, Israel and U.N. peacekeepers is tasked with ensuring any ceasefire violations are identified and dealt with.

"This is what we have discussed with the mechanism, and (this is what) is agreed upon moving forward, a temporary placement of our forces in these five points for the defense of our people," Shoshani said.

Officials in Lebanon have demanded Israel's full withdrawal by Tuesday, after Israeli forces missed the earlier January deadline.

Shoshani said the five locations provide vantage points or are located across from communities in northern Israel.

Israel is committed to carrying out the withdrawal in “the right way, in a gradual way, and in a way that the security of our civilians is kept," he told reporters.

President Joseph Aoun told reporters Monday that the ceasefire agreement “must be respected,” saying “the Israeli enemy cannot be trusted.”

He said Lebanese officials “are working diplomatically to achieve the complete Israeli withdrawal, and I will not accept that a single Israeli remains on Lebanese territory.”

Comments 2
Missing arturo 17 February 2025, 18:29

One way to resolve this is for Lebanon to certify that Hezbollah has fully withdrawn to north of the Litani and has no military infrastructure south of the Litani. France and the US would grant Israel assurance that Lebanon's certification is correct.

Missing un520 17 February 2025, 22:02

Didnt they certify this in 2006 also?