Israel struck roughly 80 Hezbollah sites across South Lebanon and Beirut on Friday 19 June, killing at least 47 Lebanese and four Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers, the Lebanese Health Ministry said in an end-of-day count 1. It was the deadliest day on the Lebanon front since the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), the US-Iran framework, was signed on 18 June. The IDF is Israel's military; Hezbollah is the Iran-aligned Lebanese militia it has fought across the southern border throughout the war.
A ceasefire brokered by the United States and Qatar renewed at 4pm local time, with Washington working the Israeli side and Doha working Hezbollah 2. The truce holds the IDF inside the southern buffer zone with no withdrawal agreed, and Hezbollah gave no formal commitment beyond a stated intention to avoid further conflict. The group had killed IDF reservist Filin near the Litani River the day before , and Tehran had already threatened to annul the deal over the Israeli presence in Lebanon .
The Lebanon clause sits on a front the deal's signatories cannot bind. Israel never signed the MOU, and Defence Minister Israel Katz ruled the south Lebanon deployment unlimited days before the digital signing . National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir demanded further escalation after the strikes. A renewed ceasefire that leaves an unbound IDF in place, against a militia that killed four of its soldiers and promised nothing, extends the asymmetry the annulment threat was built to pressure.
