Far right warns against emerging Lebanon ceasefire as Hezbollah barrages continue

Man lightly injured by rocket in Nahariya; IDF strikes across Lebanon hit 25 sites belonging to Hezbollah’s executive council

Scene where a Hezbollah rocket hit the northern town of Nahariya, injuring a man, November 25, 2024. (Magen David Adom)
Scene where a Hezbollah rocket hit the northern town of Nahariya, injuring a man, November 25, 2024. (Magen David Adom)

Far-right lawmakers, led by National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, on Monday cautioned against an emerging ceasefire deal with Hezbollah, saying that security would only be restored to the north of Israel through continued fighting against the Lebanon-based terror group until it is destroyed.

The remarks came as a top US adviser met with Defense Minister Israel Katz to discuss a US-mediated deal that reportedly would see both Israel and Hezbollah pull out of southern Lebanon, with some combination of the Lebanese army and international forces taking over security for the strategic region.

While Katz convened with US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Middle East Policy Dan Shapiro, the top Pentagon official responsible for the region, Hezbollah continued to fire drones and rockets at northern Israel, injuring one person. At the same time, Israel hit the terror group’s infrastructure with airstrikes, including areas of Beirut, the Lebanese capital.

The ceasefire talks were one of the issues the two discussed, Katz’s office told The Times of Israel.

Ben Gvir urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reject the US-backed proposal for a ceasefire with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

In a post on X, the ultranationalist Otzma Yehudit party leader warned that accepting the ceasefire deal would mean missing out on a “historic” opportunity to destroy the Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Calling it a “grave mistake,” he urged Netanyahu to “listen to the commanders fighting in the field… precisely now, when Hezbollah is beaten and longs for a ceasefire, we must not stop.”

“It’s not too late to stop this agreement,” he said. “We must continue until we reach total victory!”

Otzma Yehudit party head National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir holds a faction meeting in the Knesset on November 18, 2024. (Chaim Goldberg FLASH90)

Ben Gvir has been categorically opposed to any deal that would see a cessation of hostilities, even temporarily, in both Gaza and Lebanon, and has threatened more than once to pull his party from the coalition in the event that Israel signs a truce agreement. But he did not issue a new ultimatum on Monday.

The leader of the extreme-right Noam party, Deputy Minister Avi Maoz, also spoke out against the reported agreement, warning that any deal that does not include Israeli security control of Lebanese territory up to the Litani River, a natural boundary about 20 kilometers from the border, would be “negligence.”

MK Benny Gantz, leader of the opposition National Unity party, tweeted on Monday afternoon that Israel should start “acting powerfully” against assets of the Lebanese state, since the national government “gives a free hand to Hezbollah.”

Earlier in the day, Gantz said that Israel must only agree to a ceasefire deal with Hezbollah if it grants the IDF freedom to act against the terror group should it violate the terms of the agreement.

In an address at the annual Ogen Conference, Gantz, a former defense minister who left the government amid disagreements with Netanyahu about the war in Gaza, said that the residents of northern Israel “must be protected only by the IDF. Not [international observers] UNIFIL, not the Lebanese army, and not a European force.”

“We must not return to the reality of October 6,” he said, referring to the period before the October 7, 2023, Hamas terror onslaught in southern Israel, which was followed a day later by the start of near-daily skirmishes with Hezbollah on the northern border. At the time, Hezbollah had already for years openly deployed its forces along the border in violation of a UN resolution it agreed to.

Gantz said that any ceasefire agreement must build upon UN Security Council Resolution 1559, which urged the Lebanese government to dismantle Hezbollah and establish full control over its territory, and Resolution 1701, which called for Hezbollah forces to retreat away from the Israeli border, north of the Litani River.

Leader of the National Unity Party MK Benny Gantz leads a faction meeting at the Knesset in Jerusalem, on November 11, 2024 (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

MK Gilad Kariv of the Labor Party, in contrast, backed the reported deal.

“If we can reach an agreement in Lebanon without ‘total victory’ and the complete destruction of Hezbollah we can do that also in Gaza,” Kariv said, using Netanyahu’s slogan for Israeli policy in the Gaza war, triggered by Hamas’s October 7, 2023, onslaught.

The attack killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and 251 were taken hostage to Gaza. Of those, 97 remain in captivity.

The following day, Hezbollah began its attacks on the north, forcing tens of thousands of residents of northern Israel to abandon their homes for fear the Shiite terror group would launch a similar invasion.

Israel stepped up its offensive on Hezbollah in Lebanon in late September, launching extensive strikes and operations that took out most of the group’s leadership, including its longtime leader Hassan Nasrallah.

Israel then launched a ground operation in southern Lebanon with the aim of clearing Hezbollah strongholds in the area and making it safe for evacuated residents of northern Israel to return to their homes.

Defense Minister Israel Katz (left) with Dan Shapiro, the Pentagon’s top official responsible for the Middle East, in Tel Aviv, November 25, 2024. (Defense Ministry)

Criticism of the emerging ceasefire deal also came from Avichai Stern, mayor of the northern border town Kiryat Shmona, which has been devastated by Hezbollah rocket fire since last year.

In a statement, Stern labeled the agreement a “surrender.”

He called on Israel’s leaders to “stop and think about the children of Kiryat Shmona. Look them right in the eyes and don’t seal their fate to be the next hostages.”

The Israeli ambassador to Washington said that a ceasefire deal to end fighting could be reached very soon.

Ambassador Mike Herzog told Army Radio that there remained “points to finalize” and that any deal required agreement from the government. But he said “we are close to a deal” and that “it can happen within days.”

Among the issues that remain is an Israeli demand to reserve the right to act should Hezbollah violate its obligations under the emerging deal.

Smoke rises from the site of Israeli airstrikes that targeted Beirut’s southern suburbs amid the ongoing war between Israel and terror group Hezbollah, on November 25, 2024. (IBRAHIM AMRO/AFP)

As talks continued over the ceasefire, there was no letup in Hezbollah attacks and in Israeli airstrikes against the terror group.

The Magen David Adom ambulance service said it provided medical treatment to a 60-year-old man in northern Israel who suffered a shrapnel wound to the head following a barrage of some 20 rockets fired from Lebanon at Nahariya.

Sirens were activated in Nahariya and surrounding areas after a 12-hour lull, which in turn was preceded by relentless fire as Hezbollah launched some 250 rockets at northern and central Israel the day before.

According to the IDF, some of the rockets launched in the barrage were intercepted.

The IDF also said that the Israeli Air Force intercepted a drone that crossed into Israel from Lebanon. Sirens were activated in communities close to the Lebanon border due to fear of falling shrapnel as a result of the interception.

Footage of the interception was published alongside the statement.

In the afternoon, a barrage of some 10 rockets was launched from Lebanon at the northern Golan Heights. The IDF said some of the rockets were intercepted and impacts were also identified.

Separately, a drone that entered Israeli airspace “from the east,” usually code for attacks originating in Iraq, crashed in an open area in the Golan Heights, the military added. There were no reports of injuries in the two incidents.

North of the border, the IDF said it carried out a series of airstrikes across Lebanon on Monday, against command rooms and other sites belonging to Hezbollah’s executive council, which oversees the terror group’s financial and administrative affairs.

Within a few hours, Israeli fighter jets struck 25 sites belonging to the Hezbollah executive council, in southern Lebanon’s Nabatieh, the northeastern city of Baalbek, the Beqaa Valley, Beirut’s southern suburbs, and the outskirts of the Lebanese capital, according to the military.

The IDF said the sites included command and control centers and intelligence-gathering centers, where members of the executive council were gathered.

The command centers were responsible for forming assessments for Hezbollah, for the terror group to “make operational and additional decisions,” according to the military.

The strikes “damaged the capabilities of the executive council to direct and assist Hezbollah terrorists in their attempts to carry out terror plots against the Israeli home front and IDF forces, as well as Hezbollah’s command and control, rehabilitation and information gathering capabilities,” the IDF said.

The executive council, according to the IDF, is tasked with “the restoration of [Hezbollah’s] military capabilities on the day after the war, and is a central support for the organization’s military activity.”

The former head of the executive council, Hashem Safieddine, who was due to replace Hassan Nasrallah as the leader of the terror group after his assassination, was killed in an airstrike last month.

Additional strikes were reported across Lebanon, after the Israeli military issued evacuation warnings for four buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs, a building in the south Lebanon city of Nabatieh, and an entire neighborhood of the coastal city of Tyre.

The IDF also called on Lebanese civilians in the southern village of Halta to evacuate north of the Awali River, ahead of pending IDF operations against Hezbollah forces and infrastructure in the area.

In an update, the IDF said that troops from the 91st Division found many weapons and destroyed a number of loaded rocket launchers in southern Lebanon that were ready to fire at the Galilee area.

Over the past day, the Air Force attacked dozens of Hezbollah targets in Lebanon including command centers, weapons storage sites, and rocket launchers. Some of the launchers that were used for Sunday’s attacks on the Haifa Bay area and the Sharon region, the IDF said.

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