Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a fleeting, heavily publicized visit to southern Lebanon on Monday before returning home to declare that the war would press ahead, including the establishment of a permanent “security zone” inside Lebanese territory.
In a short video released shortly after crossing back into Israel, Netanyahu said he had received an operational briefing from troops on the ground. “The war will continue,” he stated, underscoring that Israeli forces would maintain pressure on Hezbollah even as diplomatic talks with the Lebanese government are scheduled for Tuesday.
While the Lebanese capital and its southern suburbs have seen a relative lull in Israeli air activity over the past 48 hours reportedly at Washington’s urging to preserve space for negotiations the situation in the south remains intense. Multiple airstrikes hit villages and infrastructure across the border region throughout the day.
One strike directly hit an ambulance clearly marked with the Lebanese Red Cross emblem near the southern front, killing a paramedic and seriously wounding another, according to Lebanese emergency services. Rescue workers described the incident as a deliberate targeting of a civilian medical convoy.
Israeli aircraft also focused heavily on the strategic town of Bint Jbeil, a Hezbollah stronghold during past conflicts. Analysts suggest the renewed emphasis on the area may be an attempt by Israel to secure a visible battlefield success before Tuesday’s talks begin.
Israeli officials have confirmed they are holding direct discussions with the Lebanese state but have been careful to stress that no ceasefire negotiations are underway with Hezbollah itself. The distinction appears deliberate: Lebanon’s government is not a combatant in the current fighting, yet Israeli strikes have repeatedly hit Lebanese state infrastructure and employees in the south.
Some diplomats and analysts believe Israel is effectively trying to engineer a return to the lopsided ceasefire arrangement that took effect in November 2024. Under that deal, Hezbollah halted its rocket and missile fire into Israel, but Israeli warplanes and drones continued to conduct strikes inside Lebanon, and Israeli ground forces retained their forward positions inside Lebanese territory.
By publicly rejecting any ceasefire dialogue with Hezbollah while simultaneously negotiating with Beirut, Israel appears intent on preserving its operational freedom in the south even as the diplomatic track moves forward.
The Lebanese government and Hezbollah have both condemned the continued Israeli presence and strikes, calling them violations of Lebanese sovereignty. Tuesday’s talks are expected to focus on de-escalation, but with Netanyahu’s latest remarks and the day’s violence, the path to any durable agreement remains uncertain.
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