The fifth round of Lebanon-Israel talks in Washington ended on Thursday 25 June without an agreed map for a Litani model zone, the deliverable both sides had been expected to produce 1. The Litani is the river in southern Lebanon that marks the notional withdrawal line set by UN Security Council Resolution 1701 in 2006. Sources briefed on the negotiations told Axios there was "more regression than steps forward" 2. The parties left Washington with no joint statement.
The deadlock has an internal logic, not a gap a mediator can split. Lebanon wants the pilot Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) deployment, the first stage of a handover, in areas the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) currently hold; Israel wants it only in areas free of IDF troops. Lebanon and Israel are demanding mirror-image maps, so no single deployment location satisfies both. Israel had tabled its Litani model-zone maps when the round opened , and President Joseph Aoun of Lebanon said the model areas remained pending Israeli approval.
The collapse reaches well past Lebanon. Iran set a Lebanon ceasefire with an LAF handover as its precondition for nuclear talks , and the IDF is holding south of the Litani after redeploying from Debbine to Khiam . With Round 5 producing nothing to sign, that precondition stays unmet and the nuclear sub-track stays frozen. Israel, not Iran, holds the most effective lever over the memorandum's verification clause: its refusal to withdraw in Lebanon keeps Iran's nuclear gate shut, and no Round 6 date has been set to reopen it.
