Israeli Cabinet to Vote on Ceasefire with Hezbollah

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The Israeli Cabinet is expected to vote Tuesday on a proposed ceasefire agreement with Iran’s Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah.

An Israeli official told JewishPress.com on Tuesday morning the cabinet is expected to meet at 5:30 pm to review and vote on the agreement. If approved, the full coalition government will then meet to finalize – or oppose – the deal.

Such a vote could be taken within hours through a telephone meeting of the government – or it could take up to 24 hours, if the government meets in person to discuss the proposal.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has approved the plan “in principle,” according to an Israeli source quoted by CNN. However, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has called the impending ceasefire a “big mistake” and called it “an historic missed opportunity to eradicate Hezbollah.”

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has reportedly given Hezbollah a green light to accept the deal, which calls for a 60-day ceasefire, according to information leaked to media.

Under the agreement, Hezbollah, its arsenal and allies will withdraw from southern Lebanon and remain north of the Litani River, a condition listed in the 2006 Second Lebanon War ceasefire deal, enshrined in United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701 but immediately ignored by Hezbollah and the Lebanese government.

The Lebanese Army will deploy in southern Lebanon as the IDF simultaneously withdraws from the region. The Lebanese military will also deploy to the various border crossings, including seaports, airports and land crossings with Syria.

Hezbollah members taken captive by the IDF during the war will not be released.

A “supervision committee” led by the United States will be established to oversee implementation of the agreement. France will reportedly be involved in the “committee” but Israel has objected to Paris having any substantial role, given its recent commercial bans against Israeli defense contractors and its support of International Criminal Court arrest warrants issued for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

Israel retains the right to respond to violations that constitute immediate violations to its security, and will notify the “committee” of violations not considered “immediate threats.” If the threats are not removed following a process involving the US and Lebanon, Israel has the right to attack.

Residents of southern Lebanon will have the right to return to their villages (or whatever is left of them, given the destruction of multiple homes that were used as cover by Hezbollah).

The same should hold true for residents of northern Israel — but many of those Israelis are not yet willing to return, until their safety can be 100 percent assured.

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