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European Tech Sovereignty
16JUL

Lebanon is where the deal cracks first

3 min read
09:32UTC

The IRGC says Israel breached the Lebanon ceasefire 84 times in two days; Iran's military threatened retaliation while the US and Iran dispute whether the deal even covers Hezbollah.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Lebanon's disputed scope gives Iran a ready violation claim before Friday's Geneva ceremony.

Lebanon was the one front the memorandum was meant to quiet, and it is breaking the deal first. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says Israel violated the Lebanon ceasefire 84 times in two days 1; the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed intercepting Hezbollah rockets fired at its troops in the south . On Tuesday 16 June Iran's military command issued a formal threat of retaliation if Israel's southern Lebanon offensive continues 2. That threat, already on the record, is the fuse that can detonate the ceasefire before Friday's Geneva ceremony. Israel's Defence Minister says troops stay inside a 25-mile "security zone".

The two sides do not even agree the deal covers Lebanon. US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee stated flatly that "Hezbollah is not included in the deal" 3; Iran and Pakistan insist it covers all fronts, Lebanon included. JD Vance has said both that the memorandum is "not conditioned on Israel withdrawing from Lebanon" and that it "envisioned a ceasefire that covers both Iran and Lebanon". Those two formulations cannot both hold.

The gap between them hands Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi a ready-made violation claim to carry into Geneva. A ceasefire with no agreed scope is a ceasefire either side can declare broken at the moment it suits them, and Araghchi already holds the 84-violation count as his pretext. Israel's cabinet has separately repudiated the deal outright , so Lebanon is contested both across the front line and from inside Jerusalem's own government.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran and the US signed a ceasefire, but they couldn't agree whether it covered the fighting in Lebanon between Israel and Hezbollah. The US ambassador to Israel said Hezbollah was not in the deal; Iran and Pakistan said it was. Meanwhile, the fighting continued: Iran claimed Israel broke the Lebanon ceasefire 84 times in two days, and Israeli troops confirmed they fired back at Hezbollah rockets. To make things more complicated, the US Vice President Vance made two different public statements about whether the deal required Israel to pull its troops out of Lebanon. He said both yes and no. That contradiction gives Iran an easy excuse to say the deal is already broken, before the formal ceremony has even happened on Friday.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Lebanon's ambiguous status in the MOU has a direct cause: Israel was excluded from the negotiations. Qatar, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey brokered the text. None of them can commit Israel to a ceasefire.

Washington declined to make Israeli Lebanon withdrawal a precondition for US signatures. The result is a ceasefire text that both Iran and the US read to their domestic audiences as covering or excluding Lebanon, depending on which statement Vance made most recently.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Iran can invoke the MOU's violation clause over Lebanon ceasefire breaches before Friday's Geneva ceremony, using Vance's two incompatible statements as evidence of US bad faith.

  • Risk

    Without an explicit Lebanon annex with enforcement mechanisms, Israeli-Hezbollah exchanges provide Iran a permanent trigger to suspend MOU compliance throughout the 60-day nuclear window.

First Reported In

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