The meeting comes under a US-brokered ceasefire between West Jerusalem and Hezbollah that has been in effect since November 2024
Israel and Lebanon have conducted their first direct talks in decades as part of a US-brokered ceasefire that ended the war between the Jewish State and the military group Hezbollah.
Civilian representatives from both sides met on Wednesday at the headquarters of the UN peacekeeping force in Naqoura, Lebanon, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said, as cited by media. The meeting, held under a mechanism set up after the November 2024 truce, was the first to include civilian officials instead of solely military officers.
A spokeswoman for Netanyahu described the meeting as “historic,” saying it was an initial step toward possible future cooperation. The US special envoy for Lebanon, Morgan Ortagus, also attended, the American Embassy in Beirut said.
Earlier in the day, Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam told reporters that any future economic cooperation with Israel could come only after a peace agreement. “We are still far from that,” he said.
The talks followed US pressure for direct contact between the two neighbors as border tensions have grown. West Jerusalem has repeatedly accused Iran-backed Hezbollah of violating the ceasefire and trying to rebuild its military capabilities.
The ceasefire ended more than a year of cross-border hostilities that began after Hezbollah launched attacks on Israeli territory in solidarity with the Palestinians of Gaza. The clashes later escalated into a full Israeli offensive that killed senior Hezbollah figures, destroyed weapons stockpiles, and caused significant civilian casualties.
Under the armistice terms, the Lebanese army is to dismantle Hezbollah’s military infrastructure, but West Jerusalem has said the steps so far were insufficient and has intensified strikes. Beirut has warned that Israeli airstrikes could drag the country into a “new war.”
Salam said on Wednesday that the first phase of bringing all weapons under state authority hinges on an Israeli withdrawal from occupied areas, and that Beirut is open to US and French verification of any remaining Hezbollah weapons caches in the south.
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Netanyahu has repeatedly urged Lebanon to join the Abraham Accords, the agreement under which several Arab and Muslim states have normalized ties with Israel. Beirut has not endorsed that approach.
The last direct Israel-Lebanon talks were held in 1983 after Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, producing an agreement that would have established relations but was never ratified.
