
Israel and Lebanon conclude agreements – but many hurdles remain
A ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel has been in place since 19 December.
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5 agency rewrites / co-publications detected
Summary
A ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel has been in place since 19 December. Citrinowicz calls the central acceptance of the agreement that Hezbollah will ultimately be disarmed highly questionable. Fadlallah said that Hezbollah would oppose any government measures resulting from the agreement, cling to its weapons and not allow the authorities to impose their will on the Lebanese people.
Furthermore, The government declared Hezbollah’s military activities illegal earlier this year. Contrary to what the leadership in Tehran and Hezbollah demands, Israel does not have to withdraw from a self-determined “safe zone” in southern Lebanon under the framework agreement until state groups such as Hezbollah have been disarmed. Lebanon is obliged not to allow its territory to be used as a starting point for armed attacks on other states, but cannot enforce this.
In addition, The Gulf state of Bahrain reported an Iranian attack with drones. There is little indication that further withdrawals will take place under current conditions.
Cross-referenced from 6 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
A ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel has been in place since 19 December.
reliability low1/4 sourcesCitrinowicz calls the central acceptance of the agreement that Hezbollah will ultimately be disarmed highly questionable.
reliability low1/4 sourcesFadlallah said that Hezbollah would oppose any government measures resulting from the agreement, cling to its weapons and not allow the authorities to impose their will on the Lebanese people.
reliability low1/4 sourcesThe government declared Hezbollah’s military activities illegal earlier this year.
reliability low1/4 sourcesContrary to what the leadership in Tehran and Hezbollah demands, Israel does not have to withdraw from a self-determined “safe zone” in southern Lebanon under the framework agreement until state groups such as Hezbollah have been disarmed.
reliability low1/4 sourcesLebanon is obliged not to allow its territory to be used as a starting point for armed attacks on other states, but cannot enforce this.
reliability low1/4 sourcesThe Gulf state of Bahrain reported an Iranian attack with drones.
reliability low1/4 sourcesThere is little indication that further withdrawals will take place under current conditions.
reliability low1/4 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
In two areas, peace will soon be tested.
according to n-tv - Politik +1Hezbollah is the extended arm of the Iranian regime in Lebanon and forms a state within a state there.
according to Watson Schweiz +1The agreement is certainly an impressive diplomatic achievement, but we've seen similar optimism before, most notably in Gaza.
according to Watson Schweiz +1
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
Left side
- illegal
Right side
- illegal
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
A ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel has been in place since 19 December.
omitted byCentercovered byLeft sideRight sideCitrinowicz calls the central acceptance of the agreement that Hezbollah will ultimately be disarmed highly questionable.
omitted byCentercovered byLeft sideRight sideFadlallah said that Hezbollah would oppose any government measures resulting from the agreement on its weapons
omitted byCentercovered byLeft sideRight sideBut previous agreements show that Implementation is by no means certain.
omitted byCentercovered byLeft sideRight sideThe government declared Hezbollah’s military activities illegal earlier this year.
omitted byCentercovered byLeft sideRight side