The fifth round of direct Israel-Lebanon talks opened at the US State Department on 23 June, ran more than eight hours and produced no joint statement, then moved to the Pentagon on 24 June for a security-only session, with a final round set for Thursday 25 June 1. Israel tabled maps for a "model zone" south of the Litani river where the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) would deploy under US supervision. Israeli ambassador Yechiel Leiter called the talks "a train wreck" at the open; Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said Beirut would accept "nothing less" than an Israeli withdrawal.
The round carries weight beyond Lebanon. Iran set a Lebanon ceasefire as the precondition for opening its deferred nuclear sub-talks , which makes this table the gating mechanism for the entire Islamabad framework.
The "model zone" concept revives the architecture of UN Resolution 1701, under which the Lebanese Army was meant to hold south of the Litani after 2006 and never fully did. Israel is now demanding that deployment as the condition for its own withdrawal, inverting the 1701 sequence and giving Hezbollah every incentive to keep the zone contested. Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered his forces to hold position south of the river , the physical block the talks must overcome before the nuclear questions can open.
