Israeli strikes kill 10 in Lebanon after truce, with prospect of U.S.-Iran talks unclear
Rescuers embrace as they work at the site of an Israeli air strike in Barish, Tyre district, Lebanon, June 20, 2026. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
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Israeli strikes killed at least 10 people in Lebanon on
Saturday, hours after a truce took effect, Israel saying it was reacting to
attacks from Hezbollah and the Iran-backed group saying it would not allow
Israel "freedom of movement" in Lebanon.
A halt to the fighting in Lebanon is a condition for
starting 60 days of U.S.-Iranian talks to resolve disputes over
Iran’s nuclear program and other thorny issues key to forging a more durable
deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and stabilise global oil supplies. It was
not clear when those talks might get underway.
Wednesday's interim U.S.-Iran deal requires both countries
and their allies to stop military operations on all fronts, including in
Lebanon.
But Israel, left out of the talks, says it is not party to
the deal, and will keep its forces in the 5% or so of Lebanese territory that
it currently occupies.
A U.S. official had said the truce took effect at 4 p.m.
(1300 GMT) on Friday, and Israeli and Hezbollah sources confirmed the agreement
to Reuters.
ISRAEL SAYS IT IS RESPONDING TO
HEZBOLLAH ATTACKS
Lebanon's state news agency NNA said Israeli warplanes and
drones had on Saturday struck locations across southern Lebanon and the Bekaa
Valley, both strongholds of Hezbollah.
An Israeli military official said Hezbollah had fired more
than 50 projectiles at Israeli forces in southern Lebanon overnight, and that
Israel had attacked what it described as Hezbollah targets in response.
Hezbollah did not immediately claim responsibility. But a
senior Hezbollah official told Reuters the group would not allow Israeli forces
freedom of movement in Lebanese territory, nor accept a return to the situation
that existed before March 2.
Lebanon was sucked into the regional war when Hezbollah
attacked Israel after it and its ally, the United States, began their war on
Iran and Israel responded with an offensive against Hezbollah that included
invading south Lebanon.
One of the deadliest Israeli strikes on Saturday hit a
three-storey residential building in the town of Barish in the Tyre district,
killing a father, a mother and their two children, a town official said.
The Lebanese army said an Israeli strike had also killed a
soldier on the Kfarrumman-Nabatieh road.
Israel's Arabic-language military spokesperson said calm and
stability could be achieved if Hezbollah ceased what she described as hostile
activities and violations of agreements.
She said Israel's presence in Lebanon was intended to
remove threats and dismantle Hezbollah infrastructure, not to harm Lebanese
civilians.
Lebanon's health ministry says 3,912 people have been killed
in Israeli attacks since March 2, including medics, women and children. Israel
says at least 32 Israeli soldiers and four civilians have been killed.
As the fighting raged, it was unclear if any substantive
talks would get under way soon between the U.S. and Iran to turn this week's
interim 14-point pact into a lasting deal to end the war that the
U.S. and Israel launched on February 28.
Mohsin Naqvi, interior minister of Pakistan, which has been
mediating in the conflict, was in Tehran for talks with Foreign
Minister Abbas Araqchi, Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson said, according to
Iran's ISNA news agency.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance had this week cancelled plans
to head to Switzerland for talks with Iran, which Bern says it is ready to
facilitate, as tension between Israel and Hezbollah rose.
The White House would not confirm reports that U.S.
President Donald Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump's son-in-law Jared
Kushner still planned to meet Iranian officials in Switzerland.
On Friday, Swiss authorities met officials
from Qatar, which has also been supporting the negotiations, at the mountain
resort of Buergenstock, near Lucerne.
The Iran war has killed at least 8,000 people, mostly in
Iran and Lebanon. It has pushed up energy prices, stoking inflation worldwide.
The interim deal foresees relief for Iran from economic
sanctions, the unfreezing of assets worth tens of billions of dollars and
immediate U.S. waivers for its exports of oil.
It also provides for a $300-billion reconstruction fund for Iran and other
financial incentives.
Trump again defended the deal after criticism in Washington,
including some from Republican allies in Congress who question whether he
conceded too much to end a war unpopular with most Americans ahead of midterm
elections in November.
"The War has diminished Iran!" Trump wrote on
social media on Friday, adding, "We didn’t meet out of desperation, Iran
did. They are FINISHED! We’ll play out the 60 days. They get no money, not 10
cents!"

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