
What will Lebanon leaders tell Ortagus?
by Naharnet Newsdesk 04 April 2025, 13:52
As Deputy U.S. Special Envoy for Middle East Morgan Ortagus is due in Beirut in a diplomatic bid to resolve several outstanding issues between Lebanon and Israel, Israel carried out Friday a strike on south Lebanon's port city of Sidon, killing a Hamas commander, despite a truce reached in late November.
A senior official told al-Joumhouria newspaper that the three Lebanese leaders - Speaker Nabih Berri, PM Nawaf Salam and President Joseph Aoun - will tell Ortagus that Lebanon's priority is the implementation of the ceasefire agreement, the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the five points where they are still deployed in south Lebanon and the cessation of Israeli attacks and violations.
The sticking points between Lebanon and Israel that the U.S. is planning to address include the 5 points still occupied in south Lebanon and the release of Lebanese prisoners who were kidnapped during the war. But Washington also wants to address the remaining disputed points along the Blue Line on the Lebanese-Israeli border, by "bringing together Lebanon and Israel for talks aimed at diplomatically resolving" these issues.
Lebanon, for its part, has refused direct negotiations and its leaders have said many times that Lebanon is not ready for normalizing ties with Israel.
The official said that Lebanon wants the border demarcation to be negotiated through a military and technical committee and not through direct talks, like in 2022 when Lebanese and Israeli leaders separately signed a U.S.-brokered maritime demarcation deal after months of indirect talks.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Manar
2 hours ago
- Al Manar
Al-Mashat Warns Investment Companies in ‘Israel': Leave Before It's Too Late
The head of Yemen's Supreme Political Council, Mahdi al-Mashat, urged all companies investing in the Israeli occupation entity to 'take the Yemeni warning seriously,' urging them to 'leave quickly.' In statements to the Yemeni Saba News Agency on Sunday, al-Mashat warned that the environment in the Israeli occupation entity is 'unsafe' for these companies, stressing that they 'must bear the consequences of their insistence (on remaining) and be responsible for any losses they may incur.' A source in the Yemeni Ministry of Defense to Saba News Agency: – 'Foreign investors and companies operating within the Zionist entity must leave immediately; the environment will not remain safe, and it is best to do so while the opportunity still exists.' – 'Our missiles are… — The Cradle (@TheCradleMedia) June 1, 2025 This warning follows a statement from Yemen's Ministry of Defense on Saturday advising foreign investors to 'leave immediately' while 'the opportunity remains.' Al-Mashat cautioned that additional measures may be implemented in coming days, placing companies at 'real and significant risk.' He criticized Netanyahu's government for 'gambling with investor safety' and announced that Yemeni authorities would soon establish a departure deadline. The Yemeni leader also revealed that some companies have already begun relocating assets following earlier warnings. In a related development, Al-Mashat designated all Israeli military air and maritime routes as combat zones unsafe for civilian traffic. This declaration came after Israeli warplanes struck Sanaa International Airport, prompting him to warn Israeli settlers that 'bunkers will no longer be safe.' Al-Mashat stated that Yemen's armed forces can engage Israeli aircraft without disrupting international navigation. 'Our armed forces will be able to deal with the hostile Zionist aircraft without any harm to air and maritime navigation,' he said.


Ya Libnan
3 hours ago
- Ya Libnan
What to know about attack at Boulder rally for Israeli hostages
An attack in Boulder , Colorado, near a rally calling for the release of Hamas-held hostages in Gaza left multiple people with burns on Sunday in an attack that the FBI is investigating as terrorism, officials said. A suspect was taken into custody after witnesses reported that a man with 'a makeshift flame thrower' yelling ''free Palestine' threw an incendiary device into the crowd' during the attack, FBI Denver Special Agent in Charge Mark Michalek said at a Sunday evening briefing . Run For Their Lives , which organized the walk in support of the hostages, said in a statement the group met at 1pm local time to walk the length of the Pearl Street Mall and back when the incident happened. Zoom in: FBI chief Kash Patel on X called the incident a 'targeted terror attack,' though Redfearn said at a Sunday afternoon briefing that police were not treating the incident as terrorism during the early stages of the investigation and it was too early to speculate on a motive. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard wrote on X that the Office of the DNI's National Counterterrorism Center was 'working with the FBI and local law enforcement on the ground investigating the targeted terror attack against a weekly meeting of Jewish community members.


Ya Libnan
3 hours ago
- Ya Libnan
Normalization with Israel only possible with two-state-solution, says Lebanon PM
'I would like to see a two-state solution, Israel withdrawing from the occupied territories in exchange for peace, and that peace will lead to normalization,' said the PM. Nawaf Salam, Prime Minister of Lebanon and former President of the International Court of Justice , said in an interview with CNN in Dubai this week that his country's normalization of relations with Israel would only be possible through a two-state solution that includes the creation of a Palestinian state. 'I would like to see a two-state solution, Israel withdrawing from the occupied territories in exchange for peace, and that peace will lead to normalization . Normalization is part of the vision.' Salam also said during the interview that Israel's presence 'in parts of southern Lebanon is undermining Beirut's attempts to restore sovereignty,' and added that he would like the US to pressure Israel to withdraw from the five outposts that it established a few hundred meters from the border. 'Israeli presence in Lebanon is a red line for everyone. This is not a red line for Hezbollah alone,' he added in the interview. He previously did an interview with Sky News Arabia this week, and told the source that his government would not be cooperating closely with Iran, and said that Lebanon would only consider peace with Israel if it was 'real peace.' 'We are a peace-seeking nation, but we want a real peace. Israel is occupying territories that belong to our country,' he said. As ICJ president, Salam initially presided over South Africa's ongoing genocide case against Israel.