Trump Announces 10-Day 'Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire' - Because Pretending the Lebanese Government Controls Hezbollah Has Worked So Well Before.
In a move that defies basic reality, President Donald Trump announced Thursday that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire starting at 5 p.m. EST, framing it as a step toward "lasting peace" between the two countries. The only problem? Israel and Lebanon are not at war. The actual conflict is between Israel and the Iranian-backed terror group Hezbollah, which has turned southern Lebanon into its personal rocket-launching pad and military base for years. Hezbollah, not the feeble Lebanese government in Beirut, initiated the latest round on March 2, 2026, by firing rockets at Israel in solidarity with Iran.
Basically, Iran said they will not retunr to the negotiating table unless Trump oprganizes a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon. Trump caved, pressured Netnayahu, who in turn caved and Voila! Once again, diplomacy demands the polite fiction: slap an "Israel-Lebanon" label on the truce, act as if Beirut's weak politicians and the Lebanese Armed Forces actually run the country, and hope everyone ignores the armed militia that answers to Tehran, not Lebanon.
Trump, after conversations with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, declared the pause would give breathing room for further talk, the first direct high-level contacts in over 30 years. He directed Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio to push for a permanent deal. This is the same diplomatic theater that produced UN Resolution 1701 in 2006: a grand promise that Hezbollah would disarm and retreat north of the Litani River, enforced by the "official" Lebanese state. Two decades later, Hezbollah is stronger, better armed, embedded deeper into Lebanese society and politics, and still launching attacks from Lebanese soil.
Hezbollah's leaders have already dismissed the talks as "futile" and made clear they will not abide by any agreement that limits their arsenal or freedom to attack Israel. The group continues rocket and drone fire even as Israeli forces pound its positions in southern Lebanon. Israel has been crystal clear: it will not accept another paper ceasefire that leaves Hezbollah intact on the border. Operations will likely resume the moment Hezbollah violates the pause, which history suggests is not a matter of "if," but "when." (Read More)
