Hezbollah Rockets Kill 7 as US Officials Meet Israeli Counterparts in Jerusalem to Discuss Truce Deal
Senior US officials Amos Hochstein and Brett McGurk arrived in Israel on Thursday to discuss a proposed agreement to de-escalate hostilities with the Hezbollah terrorist group which, according to a leaked draft, would have Israel withdraw from southern Lebanon within a week of signing.
The eight-page draft, which was exposed by Israel’s Kan public broadcaster, stipulated that Israel would retain the right to conduct targeted strikes against imminent threats for a 60-day period. The agreement also outlined the deployment of the Lebanese Army, alongside UNIFIL, the UN’s peacekeeping force in Lebanon, in dismantling Hezbollah’s military infrastructure and blocking unauthorized weapons and ammunition from entering the country.
Throughout the day, US Special Envoy Hochstein and McGurk, who is President Joe Biden’s Middle East adviser, held meetings with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, Shin Bet Director Ronan Bar, Mossad Director David Barnea, and other senior Israeli officials.
The meetings came amid ongoing rocket barrages from Iran-backed Hezbollah into northern Israel which killed seven people and wounded several more. One incident in Metula, which is largely evacuated due to the conflict, killed farmer Omer Weinstein and four of his foreign workers. In a second incident, a 60-year-old and her 30-year-old son were killed in an olive grove near Shfaram from a Hezbollah rocket.
Avi Melamed, a former Israeli intelligence officer and Middle East expert, said all indications pointed to Hezbollah, which wields significant influence in southern Lebanon, signing a ceasefire deal but that in the meantime, the Iran-backed terror group was employing its remaining capabilities in a “rearguard battle” to preserve some leverage.
Even Naim Qassem, who took over from his slain predecessor Hassan Nasrallah as Hezbollah chief, seemed inclined to a ceasefire, despite a fiery first speech in which he threatened Netanyahu’s life.
“He’s trying to save face, but it’s quite clear that Hezbollah ultimately wants to reach some kind of deal to end this matter,” Melamed told The Algemeiner.
“In the eyes of the Arab world, Hezbollah is the defeated party in this war,” he added.
The group had sustained heavy losses and large swaths of south Lebanon have been entirely decimated. According to Melamed, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) was now shifting its focus to striking strategic Hezbollah strongholds such as Baalbek and Qusair — a key city on the Syria-Lebanon border that Hezbollah captured a decade ago during the Syrian civil war and is now using as a transit point for the smuggling of weapons and fighters. The strikes are intended to further degrade Hezbollah’s military assets and increase pressure on the organization to negotiate from a weakened position.
Meanwhile, the IDF confirmed on Thursday that an Israeli strike in southern Lebanon killed Mohammed Khalil Alian, a Hezbollah regional commander overseeing anti-tank missile operations. Alian was targeted in the village of Burj Qallawiyah, where he led Hezbollah’s “Nasser” unit in the Hajir area, a division responsible for many of the rocket, mortar, UAV, and anti-tank missile launches into northern Israel.
Some 70,000 residents of Israel’s north have been evacuated from their homes for over a year, after Hezbollah began launching rockets into the region. The Israeli government has vowed to take whatever measures are necessary, including military action, to ensure the displaced persons can return.
Raz Malka, representing Lobby 1701 — a group formed after the war’s outbreak to advocate for Israel’s northern evacuees — expressed skepticism about the proposed ceasefire agreement.
“We have seven casualties in the north, so it doesn’t feel like it’s safe right now to go back, especially with this agreement,” he told The Algemeiner.
“It’s worth almost nothing,” he said, adding his hope that the Israeli government will ensure the IDF upholds its responsibility to protect the security of northern residents.
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