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BackLebanese President Ready to 'Do the Impossible' Amid Ongoing Israel Strikes
Lebanese President Ready to 'Do the Impossible' Amid Ongoing Israel Strikes
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Euronews News5/18/2026World2 min read

Lebanese President Ready to 'Do the Impossible' Amid Ongoing Israel Strikes

Quick Look

  • Lebanese President Joseph Aoun stated his readiness to "do the impossible" to halt the conflict with Israel, as strikes persist despite a ceasefire.
  • The truce, extended recently, has failed to stop cross-border violence, with both sides accusing each other of violations.
  • Aoun outlined Lebanon's negotiation framework, including Israeli withdrawal and army deployment.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

A ceasefire announced on April 17 between Israel and Hezbollah has failed to halt the ongoing violence. The truce was recently extended for 45 days following talks in Washington, though Hezbollah was not a party to these discussions and opposes them. Both sides accuse each other of violating the agreement.

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Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said Monday he was ready to "do the impossible" to stop the war with Israel, as strikes continued to batter the country despite a ceasefire.

Aoun's comments came as the Israeli army carried out another series of strikes in south Lebanon, while Hezbollah said it had struck a military target in northern Israel.

While a ceasefire was announced on 17 April, it has failed to stop the violence between Israel and Hezbollah, which have continued to launch strikes as they accuse each other of violating the agreement.

Last week the truce was extended for 45 days following a third round of talks between Lebanese and Israeli representatives in Washington, discussions to which Hezbollah is not a party, and is opposed to.

"The framework that Lebanon has set for the negotiations consists of an Israeli withdrawal, a ceasefire, the deployment of the army along the border, the return of the displaced, and economic aid," Aoun said in a statement Monday.

"My duty, based on my position and my responsibility, is to do the impossible, and to choose what is least costly, in order to stop the war against Lebanon and its people," he added.

Ceasefire fails to stop violence

Hezbollah said it had fired a drone targeting "an Iron Dome platform belonging to the Israeli enemy army" based in a military encampment in northern Israel.

The attack was a response to Israeli violations of the ceasefire, it added.

Lebanon's state-run National News Agency reported a series of Israeli strikes across the south.

Israel has also continued to carry out demolitions and issue evacuation orders in villages along Lebanon's southern border.

On Monday, it issued fresh evacuation warnings to three southern villages, and later repeated its warning to one on the outskirts of the coastal city of Tyre.

Israeli soldiers have invaded and occupied part of south Lebanon, operating inside an Israeli-declared "yellow line" that runs around 10 kilometres north of the border. They have carried out large-scale demolitions in the area, but claim they have no territorial ambitions there.

The attacks came a day after Israeli strikes killed seven people in Lebanon, including a member of the group Palestinian Islamic Jihad in the country's northeast, far from the Israel-Lebanon border.

On Monday, the health ministry said the death toll from Israeli strikes since the start of the war on March 2 had reached 3,020, with 211 people 18 and under and 116 healthcare workers among those killed.

Open Questions

  • Will the ceasefire eventually hold?
  • What are the specific terms being discussed in Washington?
  • What is the long-term strategy of Hezbollah and Israel?
  • What is the international community's role in mediating this conflict?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Euronews News.

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