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Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say

Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say
Lebanese officials were drafting a response on Tuesday to U.S. demands for armed group Hezbollah to relinquish its weapons across the country by November in exchange for a halt to Israeli military operations, two sources briefed on the matter said. (AFP/File)
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Updated 01 July 2025

Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say

Lebanon drafts reply to US demand for Hezbollah to disarm, sources say
  • Barrack said full disarmament should be completed by November or by the end of the year at the latest
  • The proposal also refers to establishing a mechanism overseen by the United Nations to secure the release of Hezbollah-linked prisoners by Israel

BEIRUT: Lebanese officials were drafting a response on Tuesday to US demands for armed group Hezbollah to relinquish its weapons across the country by November in exchange for a halt to Israeli military operations, two sources briefed on the matter said.

The deadline has turned up the heat on Iran-backed Hezbollah, which was struck hard by Israel during last year’s war, is suffering a financial crunch and faces pressure in Lebanon to disarm.

Washington’s demands were conveyed by Thomas Barrack, US special envoy to Syria and ambassador to Turkiye, during a trip to Beirut on June 19.

The sources, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, told Reuters Barrack had shared a written roadmap with Lebanese officials and told them he expected to hear back by July 1 on any proposed amendments.

The six-page document centers on the disarmament of Hezbollah and other militant groups, and urges Lebanon to improve ties with neighboring Syria and implement financial reforms, they said.

It proposes a phased approach to disarmament, in which Hezbollah would hand in its arms throughout Lebanon in exchange for the withdrawal of Israeli troops occupying areas in south Lebanon, the sources said.

Barrack said full disarmament should be completed by November or by the end of the year at the latest, they said.

Disarmament would end Israeli strikes targeting Hezbollah members and unlock funds to rebuild parts of Lebanon destroyed by Israeli forces last year, they said.

The US has said Washington will not support reconstruction in Lebanon without Hezbollah laying down arms.

The proposal also refers to establishing a mechanism overseen by the United Nations to secure the release of Hezbollah-linked prisoners by Israel, the sources said.

They said Barrack had urged Lebanese officials to seize the opportunity laid out in the roadmap as it “may not come up again.” He is set to return to Lebanon next week.

Barrack had not yet gotten Israeli approval for the roadmap, the sources said. There was no immediate response from the US state department, Israel’s prime minister’s office or Israel’s foreign ministry to Reuters requests for comment.

’THE RIGHT TO SAY NO’
Lebanon has appointed a committee to formulate a preliminary response, comprised of delegates from the offices of Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, President Joseph Aoun and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a Hezbollah ally, the sources said.

It was not clear whether the initial reply would be ready by Tuesday. The US proposal includes a condition that the final deal be sealed with a unanimous decision by Lebanon’s government, the sources said.

The second source, and a third source briefed on the matter, said Berri was in close communication with Hezbollah to secure the group’s input.

“Hezbollah has not refused to cooperate with the committee and in fact began sending signals of cooperation — but has not committed to disarming,” the third source said.

The prospect of securing Hezbollah’s disarmament — unimaginable two years ago — underlines the big shifts in the Middle East power balance to the detriment of Iran’s allies across the region since the start of the war between Israel and Hezbollah ally Hamas in October 2023.

Some of Hezbollah’s arsenal was destroyed by Israeli airstrikes, and other depots in southern Lebanon were handed over to Lebanon’s army in accordance with the US-brokered ceasefire that ended that round of conflict.

That deal called for the disarmament of armed groups across Lebanon. Hezbollah has said it applies only to the group in Lebanon’s southernmost districts.

Hezbollah has not commented publicly on Barrack’s proposal. But in a televised address on Monday, its secretary general, Naim Qassem, reiterated Hezbollah’s resistance to US and Israeli pressure and urged other Lebanese to do the same.

“We have the right to say ‘no’ to them, ‘no’ to America, ‘no’ to Israel,” Qassem said. “We call on you in Lebanon: do not help Israel and America with their plans.”

Qassem said the US and Israel “want to exploit the moment to turn the equation in the entire region in their image.”


UN genocide adviser warns ‘threshold about to be crossed’ in Sudan’s El-Fasher atrocities

UN genocide adviser warns ‘threshold about to be crossed’ in Sudan’s El-Fasher atrocities
Updated 58 min 57 sec ago

UN genocide adviser warns ‘threshold about to be crossed’ in Sudan’s El-Fasher atrocities

UN genocide adviser warns ‘threshold about to be crossed’ in Sudan’s El-Fasher atrocities
  • ‘Direct attacks on civilians’ highlight need for urgent action, Chaloka Beyani says
  • UN warns of worsening conditions in North Darfur, with hundreds of thousands facing acute shortages of food, water, medical care

NEW YORK: The UN special adviser on the prevention of genocide on Friday said that Sudan may be nearing a tipping point for atrocities amid growing reports of widespread killings and attacks on civilians in El-Fasher.

Warning that “a threshold is about to be crossed,” Chaloka Beyani said that “once our office sounds the alarm, (it) rings over and beyond ordinary violations of human rights or of international humanitarian law.”

He said the scale of atrocities shows “there has to be early action taken.”

Beyani said there had been “massive violations of international human rights law” and “direct attacks on civilians” by warring parties in Darfur.

Graphic reports and videos that surfaced late last month appeared to show atrocities carried out by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces after they seized control of El-Fasher from government troops, ending a siege that had lasted more than 500 days.

UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher told the Security Council recently that “the horror is continuing” in Darfur, warning that civilians remain trapped amid widespread violence.

Beyani’s office said several risk indicators for atrocities were now present in Sudan, though only an international court could determine whether genocide had occurred.

The International Criminal Court also expressed “profound alarm” earlier this week, saying it was gathering evidence of mass killings, rapes, and other atrocities allegedly committed in El-Fasher.

Meanwhile, reports indicate that the RSF has agreed to a “humanitarian ceasefire” proposed by the US, ֱ, and the UAE.

The UN has warned of deteriorating conditions in North Darfur, where hundreds of thousands displaced from El-Fasher face acute shortages of food, water, and medical care. Aid agencies are setting up new camps in Tawila and other nearby areas, but more than 650,000 people remain in desperate need of assistance.