Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
19MAY

Lebanon truce collapses, dozens killed in days

2 min read
17:44UTC

Israeli forces killed at least 20 people in south Lebanon on 20 June and 16 more on 21 June, hours after a renewed ceasefire collapsed. Netanyahu and Katz ordered the IDF to hold its positions.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Israeli strikes killed dozens in Lebanon, the breach Iran cites to keep Hormuz closed.

Israeli forces killed at least 20 people in south Lebanon on Saturday 20 June, then 16 more the following day, hours after a ceasefire renewed at 4pm on Friday 19 June collapsed 1. Times of Israel put the Saturday toll as high as 27. The renewed truce, brokered by the US, Qatar and Iran, held for a matter of hours before strikes and rocket fire resumed.

Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to hold their positions in occupied Lebanese territory rather than pull back, with a hold-fire instruction that applies everywhere except one contested hill. Israel said Hezbollah fired more than 50 projectiles at its positions overnight. The orders mean the IDF is staying put, and that refusal to withdraw is the specific fact Iran's foreign ministry has converted into pressure.

The diplomacy and the casualties run on separate tracks. Tehran sent its negotiators to the Switzerland talks while keeping the MOU formally alive, then used the Lebanon front to justify closing the Strait of Hormuz. Spokesman Baghaei had already reframed Lebanon from an outright annulment trigger into a compliance demand placed on Washington . The lever works only as long as the killing continues, which ties the strait's status to a body count 1,500 miles to the west.

The deal Iran invokes does not bind the party doing the killing. Israel was never a signatory to the Islamabad memorandum of understanding (MOU) and rejected its terms , treating the Lebanon front as a sovereign decision. Iran is holding Washington responsible for a ceasefire that Israel, the government whose forces are in Lebanon, never agreed to honour.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah (a Lebanese militant group backed by Iran) was renewed on the afternoon of 19 June. It collapsed within hours. Israeli forces killed at least 20 people in Lebanon on 20 June and 16 more on 21 June. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered his forces to hold their positions in southern Lebanon rather than pull back. The broader context is that Israel never agreed to the Iran-US peace deal (the Islamabad MOU). It can continue operating in Lebanon regardless of what Iran and the United States negotiate. Iran has used Israel's Lebanon operations as the legal reason to close the Strait of Hormuz. The Lebanon front and the Hormuz standoff are therefore directly linked: what Israel does in Lebanon shapes what Iran's military does at sea.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Israel never signed the Islamabad MOU. Netanyahu's government explicitly stated on 14-15 June that the IDF would remain in Lebanon for an unlimited period. The ceasefire's collapse was therefore not a failure of implementation, it was the predictable outcome of a ceasefire text that two of its four practical parties (Israel and Hezbollah) had not signed.

The structural driver is Israel's strategic objective in Lebanon: to maintain a buffer zone south of the Litani River that prevents Hezbollah rocket attacks on northern Israeli towns.

That objective is incompatible with any ceasefire that requires IDF withdrawal as a condition, because withdrawal re-exposes the communities Netanyahu is protecting. Hezbollah's mirror objective, to retain weapons and operational capacity in the south, is equally non-negotiable from its domestic-legitimacy standpoint.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Each Lebanon truce collapse gives Iran's IRGC a fresh legal pretext under the MOU's Article 1 to declare Hormuz closed again, directly linking Lebanese civilian deaths to global energy markets.

  • Consequence

    Netanyahu's hold-position order means the IDF is not withdrawing from Lebanon regardless of Swiss talks outcomes, structurally preventing any MOU implementation that requires Israeli compliance.

First Reported In

Update #134 · Hormuz shuts as Vance flies to Geneva

Times of Israel· 21 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Oil market and P&I insurers
Oil market and P&I insurers
Brent cleared $87 intraday only once CENTCOM's blockade became physical rather than declared, even though P&I Clubs had already excluded Hormuz war risk a week earlier on 7 July: capital hedged ahead of enforcement, but prices moved only after it.
UAE reporting
UAE reporting
UAE reporting placed the Omani tanker deaths at one seafarer against the International Maritime Agency's count of two, the first time in this war that a Gulf state's casualty figures have diverged from an international monitor's.
Jordan
Jordan
Iranian strikes reached Jordan again on 14 July as part of the Gulf-wide retaliation for the Hormuz blockade, extending the conflict's geographic footprint to a state with no direct stake in the strait itself.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain sounded air-raid sirens on 14 July during Iran's Gulf-wide retaliation, the same day CENTCOM's blockade order and fourth night of strikes pushed the conflict's physical reach into the wider Gulf littoral.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait intercepted Iranian missiles and drones on 14 July as Tehran's blockade retaliation reached Gulf states beyond Iran's immediate shoreline, confirming Kuwaiti airspace now sits inside Iran's retaliatory envelope.
Oman
Oman
Oman absorbed the war's first tanker casualties in its own waters on 14 July, with two supertankers disabled and seafarers killed, putting the sultanate's shipping lanes directly in the path of the blockade fight for the first time.