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29MAY

Lebanon opens a track in Washington

2 min read
14:36UTC

The fifth round of Lebanon-Israel talks convened in Washington in the week of 22 June, with sessions set for 23 and 25 June, focused on Lebanese Army pilot zones and disarming Hezbollah south of the Litani.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Lebanon-Israel talks resumed in Washington over LAF pilot zones, on Israel's timetable rather than Iran's.

The fifth round of Lebanon-Israel talks convened in Washington in the week of 22 June, with sessions set for 23 and 25 June 1. The agenda covers pilot zones where the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) would take exclusive control, and the disarmament of Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Lebanese armed group, south of the Litani river, the de facto Israel-Lebanon boundary that marks the southern limit of Hezbollah's permitted presence under the ceasefire framework.

This track runs separately from the Switzerland round, and slower. The pilot-zone framework around Beaufort Castle and the Zawtar villages is the same architecture Hezbollah rejected on 4 June, and the group has offered no binding commitment beyond a stated intent to avoid further fighting.

The Washington round handles the IDF Lebanon presence that Iran threatened on 18 June to annul the memorandum over . Israel paces it, which means the issue Tehran has tied to the survival of the whole deal is being settled on a timetable Israel controls, not one the memorandum sets.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Israel and Lebanon are running a separate set of talks in Washington, now in their fifth round. The agenda is about creating specific zones in southern Lebanon where only the Lebanese army would be in control, with no Hezbollah fighters. The goal is to let Israeli forces eventually withdraw from those areas, replacing them with Lebanese state authority. This is a slow process, deliberately kept separate from the larger Iran-US nuclear talks in Switzerland. Israel wants to manage its Lebanon withdrawal on its own timetable, not tied to whatever Iran demands as a condition for the nuclear deal.

Deep Analysis
Escalation

Stabilising on the Lebanon sub-track; the fifth round's continuation despite the ongoing IDF operations (20+ killed on 20 June) indicates both sides see value in maintaining the diplomatic channel even during active hostilities.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Successful establishment of even one LAF pilot zone would give the Lebanese government its first post-war southern-sovereignty foothold, potentially reducing Hezbollah's post-conflict political leverage.

  • Risk

    Iran's Article 1 annulment threat (ID:4356) hangs over the Washington track; if Tehran concludes the pilot zones are cover for a permanent Israeli security zone rather than a genuine withdrawal, it could use the track's existence as further grounds for MOU non-compliance.

First Reported In

Update #135 · Trump's threats peak, his paper stays blank

L'Orient Today· 22 Jun 2026
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