U.S. Intelligence Expects Israel to Continue Lebanon Strikes Despite
Cease-Fire
The
new cease-fire between the United States and Iran calls for an end to fighting
in Lebanon, but U.S. intelligence officials do not expect Israel to halt its
strikes on Hezbollah.
Point Summary
·
U.S.
intelligence believes Israel is likely to continue military operations against
Hezbollah despite the U.S.-Iran cease-fire agreement.
·
Israel
considers Hezbollah a major security threat and faces domestic pressure to
respond to attacks.
·
The
cease-fire calls for an end to fighting in Lebanon, but Israel is not a
signatory to the agreement.
·
Israeli
Ambassador Yechiel Leiter said Israel has halted offensive operations but will
keep troops in southern Lebanon for security reasons.
·
Recent
Israeli airstrikes followed a Hezbollah drone attack that killed four Israeli
soldiers.
·
The
clashes led to the postponement of U.S.-Iran talks scheduled in Switzerland.
·
Many
Israelis oppose the cease-fire, arguing it fails to address Iran’s missile
program and limits Israeli military actions.
·
U.S.
intelligence agencies doubt that commitments to halt fighting will be fully
maintained.
·
Relations
between U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu remain strained over the agreement.
·
Analysts
warn that continued Israeli-Hezbollah clashes could undermine efforts to
achieve a lasting peace deal.
[ABS
News Service/20.06.2026]
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of
Israel is likely to continue military action against Hezbollah, despite the
cease-fire deal between the United States and Iran that specifically calls for a halt
to fighting in Lebanon, according to a recent U.S. intelligence report,
American officials said.
Mr. Netanyahu is under intense domestic
pressure to continue operations against Hezbollah’s ongoing attacks on northern
Israel. Israel views Hezbollah, the potent militia and political group in
Lebanon funded by Iran, as a critical threat, and officials there do not
believe the attacks can go unanswered.
U.S. intelligence agencies believe Israel
is likely to continue such operations, even if they hinder negotiations between
Iran and the United States that are supposed to address elements of Iran’s
nuclear program and secure a permanent peace deal, according to the officials.
The cease-fire deal is
deeply unpopular in Israel, where commentators criticize its failure to address Iran’s
missile program, its requirement that U.S. forces leave the region and,
especially, its constraints on Israeli military operations in Lebanon.
Israel is not a party to the accord,
which was signed this week. But the Israeli ambassador to the United States,
Yechiel Leiter, said on Friday that his country had committed to an immediate
cease-fire and
“halted all offensive operations” in Lebanon. He insisted Israeli forces would
remain in southern Lebanon and said Israel would never compromise
on its security.
The recent intelligence assessments show
the skepticism inside American spy agencies that such commitments will hold,
given the security concerns.
Earlier on Friday, Israel had conducted
airstrikes in Lebanon, after a Hezbollah drone strike killed four Israeli
soldiers in an ambush in Israeli-controlled southern Lebanon. The
Israeli strikes killed at least 47 people. The strikes followed other Israeli
military operations against Hezbollah.
Those clashes led to a postponement of
talks between U.S. and Iranian officials, which had been set to begin Friday in
Switzerland.
The new intelligence assessment was reported earlier by The Washington Post.
Those recent intelligence reports outline
what has been obvious in public: Mr. Netanyahu and other Israeli security
officials are uncomfortable with the memorandum of understanding between the
United States and Iran. At the same time, relations between President Trump and
Mr. Netanyahu are strained, even if there is little indication the Israeli
prime minister will give up on the relationship.
Officials said Mr. Netanyahu was counting
on relations with Mr. Trump strengthening once more before he faces Israeli
voters this fall. Mr. Netanyahu’s standing and influence with Mr. Trump has
waxed and waned before, though the high stakes of the accord with Iran appears
to have pushed relations to a low.
The most recent intelligence report was
written before Vice President JD
Vance strongly criticized Mr. Netanyahu on Thursday.
At
a news conference to promote the U.S. deal with Iran, Mr. Vance lashed out at members of
Mr. Netanyahu’s cabinet who had criticized the United States or Mr. Trump over
the cease-fire.
“Donald J. Trump is the only head of
state in the entire world who is sympathetic to the nation of Israel at this
moment in time, and he happens to be the head of state of the world’s
superpower,” Mr. Vance said. “If I was in the cabinet of the Israeli government,
I might not be attacking the only powerful ally that I have anywhere left in
the entire world.”
Representatives of the Israeli Embassy in
Washington did not immediately return a request for comment. But Israeli
officials have said their operations in Lebanon are defensive in the face of
attacks by Hezbollah.