Foreign
Ceasefire in Lebanon to be announced at 10 p.m., takes effect at 10 a.m.
The war cabinet is expected to meet at 6 p.m. to approve the agreement in Lebanon.
A ceasefire in Lebanon will be announced at 10 p.m. by the United States and France, according to Lebanese channel Al Jadeed.
Presidents Biden and Macron will announce the deal during the night, with the alleged agreement set to take effect at 10 a.m. tomorrow.
This comes after several days of strained last-minute negotiation, in which Israel pushed for the removal of France as guarantor of the security situation in Lebanon, citing current diplomatic tensions between France and Israel.
The deal must still pass through the war cabinet, which is expected to meet at 6 p.m. to approve the agreement in Lebanon. Netanyahu is also expected to run the ceasefire past by the heads of the local authorities in the North.
If the cabinet approves the ceasefire agreement, it will go into effect regardless of the announcement.
Members of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee demanded Defense Minister Israel Katz present the ceasefire agreement to them before final approval.
What’s on the table?
An Israeli official told Maariv that the ceasefire was not the end of the war and that Israel maintained its right to respond to any threat.
The source also said that the severing of the connection between the Gazan and Lebanese fronts would leave Hamas isolated.
Sources told Saudi channel Al Hadath that there would be no buffer zone in South Lebanon according to the agreement.
Hassan Fadlallah, a Hezbollah MP, told Reuters in response to the announcement tha Hezbollah would remain active, including in providing social services to displaced Lebanese civilians.
Fadlallah called the final hours before the ceasefire “dangerous, sensitive hours,” given that the IDF launched a large-scale attack on Beirut earlier on Tuesday.
MK Zvi Sukkot, Otzmah Yehudit, said he would support a ceasefire as the IDF had managed to remove 80% of the leading figures in Hezbollah, reversing his previous opposition.
Several other right-wing figures have come out either conditionally approving or rejecting the ceasefire, including Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Naftali Bennett.