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Politics
Politics Lebanon
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Lebanon’s Framework Agreement with Israel Faces Mounting Political Turbulence as Washington Prepares New Negotiation Round.

Lead:

Lebanon's recently signed framework agreement with Israel has become the defining fault line in domestic politics, drawing sharp divisions across the parliamentary and security establishments. With US Central Command Admiral Brad Cooper having visited Beirut fresh from Tel Aviv, and Washington reportedly preparing a new negotiation round for early July, Lebanese political forces are recalibrating their positions as questions over sovereignty, implementation, and foreign influence intensify.

Details:

Al-Markazia reports that Lebanon is being positioned within what sources describe as the correct "tripartite agreement framework," one that reasserts sovereignty and accelerates the establishment of so-called "model zones" in the south. The outlet also notes that international monetary oversight bodies are scrutinizing reports that a senior figure within the "resistance axis" received fifty million dollars from a foreign state — an allegation that adds a financial dimension to the broader political confrontation over the agreement.

Tayyar.org, citing informed journalistic sources, reports that the Washington framework agreement is currently considered unworkable in its existing form, and that discussions over the past two days have produced three practical amendments. The outlet also reports that Free Patriotic Movement deputy Salim Aoun stated that his party's position on the agreement, should it come before parliament, will be determined strictly by national interest. Speaker Nabih Birri received Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Gibran Bassil at Ain al-Tineh, with Bassil indicating afterward that both sides are aligned on rejecting sedition, protecting Lebanon, and preserving the army's standing.

Al-Diyar reports that Hezbollah and the Amal Movement held coordination meetings that produced a clear confrontation plan rooted in legal and constitutional principles, while firmly ruling out the use of street mobilization so as to protect the army from internal complications. The paper also notes that a security source confirmed the Lebanese Army is closely monitoring all developments, and that ministerial circles say President Joseph Aoun remains fully committed to seeing the agreement process through to completion. MP Hadi Abu al-Hassan, secretary-general of the Democratic Gathering, told reporters that President Walid Joumblatt's position on the framework agreement stems from national and sovereign considerations, stressing that imperfections in any agreement cannot simply be ignored.

An-Nahar highlights the renewed Gulf diplomatic opening, noting that the United Arab Emirates has lifted travel restrictions to Lebanon — a step the paper frames as a broader question of whether Gulf states are beginning to rediscover Lebanon or offering it a final opportunity to prove its stability. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu separately confirmed that a buffer zone will remain inside southern Lebanon rather than on Israeli territory, maintaining pressure on Beirut.

Watch For:

Whether the three practical amendments proposed following Admiral Brad Cooper's Beirut visit will be accepted by the American side before the scheduled July negotiation round.

The extent to which Hezbollah and Amal's legally framed opposition strategy translates into formal parliamentary blocking of the agreement or a negotiated compromise.

How swiftly the UAE travel restriction lift translates into concrete Gulf economic and diplomatic re-engagement, and whether other Gulf Cooperation Council states follow suit.

Lebanon Brief

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