US official says Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire agreed as Trump lashes out Iran deal critics – Middle East crisis live

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Israel and Hezbollah agree to ceasefire - Reuters

Reuters has issued an alert saying Israel and Hezbollah have agreed to a ceasefire starting today at 4pm local time, according to a senior US official.

The news agency reported the following:

double quotation mark“Hezbollah and ‌Israel have agreed ‌to a ceasefire,” the official said on background, adding that negotiators ‌for the US and Qataris worked ​out the deal with help from Iran.

“We understand ⁠that after the ​exchange of ​fire ​earlier today, Israel and ​Hezbollah ‌are ​now ​in a ceasefire.”

We will bring you more as we get it.

Key events

There has not been official confirmation of a ceasefire in Lebanon from either Israel or Hezbollah, but it reportedly came into effect at 4pm local time (it is now 4.45pm in Beirut).

Effie Defrin, a spokesperson for the Israeli military, said the IDF will remain in southern Lebanon and “carry on with its mission until ordered otherwise” to protect civilians in northern Israel.

Addressing the reported ceasefire during a press briefing, he said: “Our objective and mission are very clear. Anything concerning any agreements is a matter for the government.

“As long as we haven’t received different orders, we’ll act in accordance with the army’s chief of staff’s orders.”

In a post on social media, the IDF said it launched more than 150 strikes in Lebanon since midnight.

Hezbollah says ceasefire in Lebanon in effect - reports

Hezbollah has implemented the ceasefire with Israel that was due to take effect from 4pm today, two sources from the Iran-backed group told Reuters.

The news agency reported the sources saying: “As soon as we got word of the ceasefire we applied it from our end.”

Several other media outlets including AP, AFP and the Times of Israel have cited sources confirming the ceasefire in Lebanon, which was reportedly mediated by Qatar, Iran and the US.

Donald Trump has defended his deal to end the war with Iran as more details of the memorandum of understanding have been made public. So what does Iran get out of it, and can the US really claim this as a win? The Guardian’s global affairs correspondent, Andrew Roth, explains:

Is Trump’s Iran deal a failure? - video explainer

Trump lashes out at critics of Iran deal in Truth Social posts

Donald Trump has again defended his deal with Iran in a series of posts on Truth Social, hitting out at critics who believe the memorandum of understanding signed on Wednesday is more generous to Tehran than Barack Obama’s 2015 nuclear deal.

Trump wrote:

double quotation markThe War has diminished Iran! It doesn’t, any longer, have an Air Force, a Navy, Antiaircraft Equipment, Radar, or practically anything else, and yet the Dumocrats say that Iran is better off now than it was four months ago. Can you imagine getting away with that??? How stupid can some people be???”

He added:

double quotation markWe didn’t meet out of desperation, Iran did. They are FINISHED! We’ll play out the 60 days. They get no money, not ten cents!”

Israel and Hezbollah agree to ceasefire - Reuters

Reuters has issued an alert saying Israel and Hezbollah have agreed to a ceasefire starting today at 4pm local time, according to a senior US official.

The news agency reported the following:

double quotation mark“Hezbollah and ‌Israel have agreed ‌to a ceasefire,” the official said on background, adding that negotiators ‌for the US and Qataris worked ​out the deal with help from Iran.

“We understand ⁠that after the ​exchange of ​fire ​earlier today, Israel and ​Hezbollah ‌are ​now ​in a ceasefire.”

We will bring you more as we get it.

Lebanese president says Israel's attacks 'a dangerous and reprehensible escalation'

The president of Lebanon, Joseph Aoun, condemned Israel’s attacks in his country as “a dangerous and reprehensible escalation”.

In a statement issued by the Lebanese presidency, Aoun said the Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon “effectively undermine all ongoing attempts to consolidate the ceasefire and end the war”.

The statement said:

double quotation markWhat we are witnessing today in the south and the Bekaa – an escalation of Israeli attacks and further killing and destruction – constitutes a dangerous and reprehensible escalation, particularly as it has affected dozens of innocent people, including women and children, and effectively undermines all ongoing attempts to consolidate the ceasefire and end the war, particularly following the recent developments between the United States of America and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

However, this will not prevent us from working to achieve a comprehensive ceasefire as soon as possible; this is what I have recommended to the Lebanese negotiating delegation for the forthcoming round of talks in Washington. There can be no compromise on this issue, as a comprehensive ceasefire is the prerequisite for discussing other matters, the most important of which are the Israeli withdrawal, the deployment of the army and the return of prisoners.”

Two children sat in the back of a van with their belongings.
A displaced family rides with their belongings in the back of a van as they leave southern Lebanon on the Tyre-Sidon highway following Israeli strikes. Photograph: Hassan Ammar/AP

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Meanwhile, a new transatlantic drama is emerging in Italy, after US president Donald Trump told an Italian broadcaster that prime minister Giorgia Meloni “begged” him for a picture on the sidelines of the G7 summit earlier this week.

US president Donald Trump speaking to Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni.
US president Donald Trump speaks to Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, on Wednesday. Photograph: Italian Prime Ministry Handout/Reuters

Talking to the La7 broadcaster, Trump reportedly said:

double quotation markShe begged me to take a picture with her! She wanted a picture with me so badly. I wouldn’t have taken it, but I felt sorry for her.”

Extraordinarily, Meloni immediately took to social media to respond, posting a short video clip and saying “neither I nor Italy ever beg” anyone for anything.

The Italian PM said she was “astonished” by “completely made up” claims by Trump.

double quotation markI don’t know why the president of the United States behaves like this towards his allies: it is not the first time. I can only say it is disappointing that he does not show the same determination with the enemies of the ⁠West and of the United States, whose leaders he instead treats with far ​greater indulgence.”

Italy’s foreign minister Antonio Tajani also cancelled his planned trip to the US in response.

“The serious and offensive words of president Trump towards prime minister Giorgia Meloni offend all of Italy. For this reason, I have decided to cancel my visit to the United States scheduled for the next 21 and 22 June,” he said on X.

Read more on our Europe live blog here:

According to CNN, the US has “relayed” to Iran that Israel will not further escalate attacks in Lebanon – according to sources who are close to the situation.

The unnamed source told the outlet: “Hezbollah violated the ceasefire. Israel has agreed to let it be, which was relayed to the Iranians, and it’s up to Hezbollah to stop.”

This comes after Israel carried out a wave of deadly strikes in Lebanon on Friday in response to Hezbollah attack that killed four soldiers in southern Lebanon.

Smoke rises from the town of Kfar Tebnit and the Ali al-Tahir hill area in the Nabatieh Governorate of southern Lebanon following Israeli airstrikes on Friday. The attacks were carried out despite the US and Iran agreement.
Smoke rises from the town of Kfar Tebnit and the Ali al-Tahir hill area in the Nabatieh Governorate of southern Lebanon following Israeli airstrikes on Friday. The attacks were carried out despite the US and Iran agreement. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Hezbollah has said it will “defend” Lebanon’s territory and people against Israeli attacks, and has accused Israel of violating the ceasefire agreement which came into place in April.

“The Islamic Resistance will remain vigilant against any aggression. Its fighters will defend their land and people,” the group said in a statement. It then said “the enemy has never complied with any ceasefire agreement”, after rejecting Israel’s claims that they had been the ones to violate the truce.

This comes after earlier this morning Lebanon’s state-run National news agency has said at least 16 people have been killed in the Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon, which Israel’s military said were ongoing, while Hezbollah said there was intense fighting in the area.

Here are some of the latest images from the Middle East on the newswires:

Over a dozen men stand stood near heavy machinery at the site of a bombing.
Security forces and emergency workers inspect the site of an Israeli strike on the village of Al-Jamaliyah, near Baalbek, in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa valley. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
An elderly woman sits on top of rubble of a destroyed house.
A woman sits among the rubble of a house which was damaged by an Israeli strike in Qlaileh in the Tyre district, southern Lebanon. Photograph: Zohra Bensemra/Reuters
A column of cars heading in one direction on a major road.
Thousands of people flee Sidon in southern Lebanon amid intensified fighting between Hezbollah and the Israeli army. Photograph: Adri Salido/Getty Images
A crowd of Palestinians stand on a road in a face-off with Israeli soldiers.
Israeli soldiers block the road as Palestinians protest against a settlement near Hebron in the occupied West Bank. Photograph: Mussa Qawasma/Reuters
A man in Tehran, Iran, reads a copy of the Iranian daily newspaper Hamshahri bearing an image of Donald Trump and a headline that reads ‘Gone with the wind’.
A man in Tehran, Iran, reads a copy of the Iranian daily newspaper Hamshahri bearing an image of Donald Trump and a headline that reads ‘Gone with the wind’. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Netanyahu says Israeli military will remain in Lebanon 'as long as necessary' after four IDF soldiers killed

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, issued a message of condolence following the deaths of four Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon, as he vowed revenge against Hezbollah.

In a statement on social media, he confirmed one of the soldiers killed as Lt Col Dor Gadliah Ben Simhon, while the names of the other three have yet to be released.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaking at a news conference.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a news conference in Jerusalem on Monday. Photograph: Ronen Zvulun/UPI/Shutterstock

“May their blood be avenged, and I wish a full recovery to the wounded in yesterday’s exchange of fire,” he said.

“Following the heinous attack by Hezbollah, which was a blatant violation of the ceasefire, I instructed the IDF last night to strike Hezbollah with full force.”

He added:

double quotation markMy directive is clear: Israel will not tolerate attacks on our soldiers or our territory, and it will exact a very heavy price from Hezbollah for these attacks.

The IDF will act to thwart any threat to our forces and our territory.

As I made unequivocally clear, including yesterday: Israel will remain in the security zone in southern Lebanon for as long as necessary to protect the settlements in the north.”

The IDF’s so-called “security zone” stretches 10km (more than 6 miles) into Lebanese territory from the northern Israeli border, where it has forced thousands of people to flee their homes in mass “evacuation” orders.

Trump: 'If it weren’t for me, Israel would not exist today'

Donald Trump has repeated his view that if it weren’t for him “Israel would not exist today”.

He made the remarks to American news outlet Axios, which has released snippets of a 45-minute interview with the US president that has yet to be broadcast.

“If it weren’t for me, Israel would not exist today,” Trump said, adding that his relationship with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is “good, but we have to keep him a little bit sane”.

He made a similar statement earlier this week at the G7 summit in France. “Without me, there would be no Israel, because no other president was willing to do what I did,” he said in pointed remarks aimed at the country amid its ongoing attacks on Lebanon.

Speaking to Axios, Trump also named China’s Xi Jinping and India’s Narendra Modi as the world leaders he most admires, describing them as “all business” and “a very tough cookie”, respectively.

US president Donald Trump points his finger towards Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu as they shake hands.
US president Donald Trump points his finger towards Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a press conference at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, in December. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

The IDF said it struck more than 80 Hezbollah targets in southern Israel and killed “dozens” of its fighters.

The Israeli military said the overnight strikes centred on the southern city of Nabatiyeh, which falls within its recently expanded so-called “security zone” in Lebanon where its troops are operating in, about six miles from the northern Israeli border.

Images on the newswires show Israel’s air defence systems intercepting projectiles launched from Lebanon:

A white line in a clear sky from a projectile being intercepted.
Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA
A white line in a clear sky from a projectile being intercepted.
Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA
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