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Trump halts Israel's strike on Beirut

3 min read
19:51UTC

Donald Trump phoned Benjamin Netanyahu on 1 June and halted Israel's planned Beirut strikes; within hours Lebanon announced a partial ceasefire, the first documented Israeli military reversal under US pressure in 95 days.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's move forced Trump to lean on Israel by phone; the truce rests on no signed text.

Donald Trump halted Israel's planned strikes on Beirut on Monday 1 June after a furious telephone call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the first time in 95 days a US intervention produced a documented Israeli military reversal. Israel had been preparing to bomb the Lebanese capital; within hours of the call it stood down, and Lebanon announced a partial ceasefire under which Hezbollah pledged to stop attacking Israel 1. The deed arrived not through the unsigned memorandum of understanding (MOU), the draft Iran-US ceasefire text still without a signature, but down a phone line.

Trump told Netanyahu "you'd be in prison if it weren't for me" and that "everybody hates you now", per two US officials and a third person briefed on the call; afterwards he told Axios reporter Barak Ravid, "I haven't spoken to him since" 2. One US official called it among the worst Trump-Netanyahu exchanges since the president returned to office. CENTCOM (US Central Command) and the Israeli air force stood the Beirut operation down. A presidential phone call, not a signed order, halted a planned strike on a capital.

The Lebanon clause Trump enforced by telephone is the same one Netanyahu had resisted since 24 May, when he warned the president that the MOU provision would force Israel to wind down its Hezbollah campaign . Enforcement came without a signed text, and Netanyahu did not fully comply. He confirmed Israeli ground operations would continue in southern Lebanon, pushing toward the Zaharani river, the deepest incursion in 25 years, contradicting Trump's claim that troops had "turned around" 3. One deed broke a 95-day pattern for a day. Netanyahu's Zaharani advance, continuing the same day, will test whether the halt outlasts the news cycle that produced it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

On 1 June, US President Donald Trump phoned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and ordered him to stand down from planned airstrikes on Beirut, Lebanon's capital. Israel complied. Lebanon then announced a partial ceasefire, with Hezbollah, the Lebanese armed group that has been fighting Israel, agreeing to stop attacking Israeli territory. Trump's call was the first time in 95 days of the current conflict that Washington directly blocked an Israeli military operation. It came on the same morning that Iran suspended its peace negotiations with the US, suggesting the two were connected: Tehran's walk-out gave Trump a concrete diplomatic reason to press Netanyahu to de-escalate Lebanon, removing Iran's stated justification for freezing talks.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Israel's Lebanon campaign lacked a formal US veto mechanism because the November 2023 Gaza ceasefire framework, the Qatar-Egypt-US mediated text, was never extended to cover Lebanon. Netanyahu's office explicitly excluded Lebanon from the Iran-Israel ceasefire, creating a legal and political vacuum in which Israeli operations in Lebanon ran on their own authorisation.

Trump's 1 June call was not backed by any signed executive instrument; it was personal presidential pressure, which means Netanyahu could resume operations without formally breaching any agreed framework.

A second constraint limited how quickly Hezbollah could de-escalate after pledging the ceasefire. Israel's campaign since September 2024 had killed or displaced much of Hezbollah's senior military command, fragmenting field-unit discipline. Even if Hezbollah's political leadership in Beirut ordered a halt, local commanders in southern Lebanon retained initiative that no swift diplomatic instruction could override.

Escalation

The partial ceasefire is fragile. Netanyahu confirmed ground operations toward the Zaharani river continue, which puts Israeli forces on a geographic trajectory that will eventually re-contact Hezbollah formations regardless of the ceasefire pledge. The 3 June Washington talks are the next scheduled decision point; if those talks produce no formal text, the ceasefire exists only as mutual restraint, which has already broken down multiple times since April.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Iran loses its stated justification for suspending talks if the Lebanon ceasefire holds, which removes one pressure lever but also clarifies that Tehran's 09:56 suspension on 1 June was partly pretextual.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    If Israeli Zaharani operations re-contact Hezbollah positions, Iran will have a renewed justification to keep talks suspended, and the 3 June Washington round will collapse before it starts.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Trump's direct phone call establishes a US presidential veto over Israeli Beirut strikes that was not previously exercised, creating a precedent Netanyahu will need to manage domestically.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #115 · Iran moves first, Trump moves by phone

Axios· 2 Jun 2026
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