Lebanon and Israel hold first direct talks since 1993 at US State Department

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2026-04-14T15:50:27+00:00

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Shafaq News- Washington

Lebanon and Israel met Tuesday at the US State Department in Washington
in their first direct ambassador-level contact since 1993, with the two sides
entering the talks divided over core objectives.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said today he
hopes the Washington meeting will mark “a beginning to ending the
suffering of the Lebanese people.”

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio attended alongside Israeli Ambassador
to the United States Yechiel Leiter, Lebanese Ambassador to the United States
Nada Hamadeh Mouawad, and US Ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa.

Lebanon entered the talks seeking a firm ceasefire commitment as a precondition
to broader negotiations, a position the Lebanese government has maintained
publicly since the latest escalation began. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu said he agreed to the talks in response to Lebanese requests, framing
the engagement around Hezbollah’s disarmament and the eventual normalization of
relations between the two parties. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon
Sa’ar said earlier Tuesday that Tel Aviv’s objective was “peace and
normalization” with Lebanon.

Read more: Beirut’s southern suburb empties overnight: Stories of displacement under fire

The two sides entered the session with sharply divergent positions.
Israeli media reported that Tel Aviv agreed only to limit strikes on Beirut and
reduce the intensity of operations elsewhere in Lebanon, stopping short of a
ceasefire. An Israeli official was quoted as saying Israel had not come to
release “peace doves.” A US official told The Times of Israel that
disarming Hezbollah remains Washington’s primary focus in the negotiations.

In the opening session, Rubio described the talks
as “a historic opportunity” and acknowledged the parties were
“dealing with decades of history and complexities.” He framed
Washington’s objective as bringing “an end to thirty years of
Hezbollah’s influence in Lebanon.”

Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group and political party
that has been the central subject of Israeli military operations since the
latest round of fighting began, publicly opposed the talks. Hezbollah
Secretary-General Naim Qassem, in a televised address Monday, called the
negotiations “futile” and said no party had the right to commit
Lebanon to a diplomatic path without internal consensus.

Wafiq Safa, a senior member of Hezbollah’s political council, told the
Associated Press on the eve of the talks that the group was “not
interested in or concerned with them at all” and would not be bound by any
agreement reached.

Seventeen countries, including Britain and France, issued a joint
statement welcoming the talks and urging both sides to “seize the
opportunity.” The statement called for Lebanon’s inclusion in broader
regional de-escalation efforts and said direct negotiations could open a path
toward lasting security across the region.

#Lebanon | We, Ministers of Foreign Affairs of 🇦🇺 🇧🇪🇭🇷 🇨🇾🇩🇰🇫🇮🇫🇷🇬🇷 🇮🇪🇮🇸 🇱🇺 🇲🇹🇳🇱🇵🇹🇳🇴🇬🇧🇸🇮 🇪🇸 and🇸🇪 call for the inclusion of Lebanon in the regional de-escalation efforts.➡️ https://t.co/ub6vSf8hcl pic.twitter.com/PcAYvolOGD

— France Diplomacy 🇫🇷🇪🇺 (@francediplo_EN) April 14, 2026

The Washington talks follow a March 9 initiative by President Aoun, who called for a full cessation of Israeli hostilities, army deployment
to tension areas, the confiscation of all unauthorized weapons, and the opening
of direct negotiations with Israel. The two sides have no formal diplomatic
relations. Lebanon has been under sustained Israeli bombardment since Hezbollah
launched rockets toward Israel on March 2; Lebanese health authorities have
reported more than 2,000 deaths from Israeli strikes over the past six weeks.

Fighting continued on the day of the talks, with the Lebanese Ministry of Health reporting 35 killed and 159 wounded in the last 24 hours in the south and Beqaa. The Israeli army said it
eliminated a Hezbollah cell it engaged overnight in the southern Lebanese city of Bint
Jbeil.

The Washington talks are framed by both US and Israeli officials as
preparatory, intended to establish a framework for future negotiations rather
than produce an immediate agreement, according to an official briefed on Israeli
strategy who spoke to NPR on condition of anonymity.



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