World

Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire Extended by Three Weeks

U.S. President Donald Trump announced the extension after meeting representatives from both countries in Washington, even as strikes continued in Lebanon

By The Veritas Bureau | 25 April 2026 at 10:13 pm
Courtesy– Tawseef Ahmad

Synopsis

The Israel-Lebanon ceasefire was extended for three weeks by U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday after talks in Washington with Israeli and Lebanese officials. Hezbollah called the extension a "joke", Israel launched new air strikes on Deir Aames, and Iran's Foreign Minister flew to Pakistan for a second round of U.S.-Iran discussions about a ceasefire.

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Trump Extends Ceasefire Between Israel and Lebanon as Violence Continues

On Friday, U.S. President Donald Trump declared a three-week extension of the shaky ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, after meeting with officials from both countries in the Oval Office.

"The Meeting went very well! The U.S. will be working with Lebanon to assist them in defending against Hezbollah. The Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire will be expanded by three weeks," Mr. Trump tweeted.

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Vice President J.D. Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee and Ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa took part in the meeting.

Background: War Since March

The current Israel-Hezbollah war (the Lebanese Shia political and militant group) began on March 2, three days after the US and Israel attacked Iran, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. While Israel at first refused to include Lebanon in the ceasefire agreement, it eventually accepted a 10-day-long truce last week.

But limited Israeli strikes continued to be carried out inside Lebanon during this time. Mr. Trump then declared Israel "prohibited" from further airstrikes.

Hezbollah Snubs Extension; IDF Hits Deir Aames

The reaction from Hezbollah to the extension was firm. One of Hezbollah's lawmakers said the extension was "meaningless" as long as Israel did not stop its "hostile actions". Al Manar TV, quoting a Hezbollah official, said the extension "imposes no obligations, not even minimal ones, on the Israeli side," and the group was intent on "confronting it".

Lebanon's National News Agency reported on Friday that the Israel Defence Forces had fired three air strikes at the town of Deir Aames after ordering an evacuation, after it was targeted by Hezbollah rocket fire.

Israel has said it was following the ceasefire although it would not withdraw from southern Lebanon it has occupied since it began its ground offensive in mid-March. Hezbollah, meanwhile, has called for Israel to withdraw.

Diplomatic Circuit and the Iran Dimension

The extension of the ceasefire comes at a time of diplomatic activity on the U.S.-Iran front. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was in Pakistan on a tour of Islamabad, Muscat and Moscow to help broker a second round of ceasefire talks between the U.S. and Iran.

Last week Mr Trump indefinitely extended his ceasefire with Iran, but kept a U.S. ban on Iran's shipping. On Friday he said he was "not in a hurry" to end the war, but "the clock is ticking" for Iran.

With Israeli bombing continuing despite announced truces and diplomacy failing to secure any agreements, the Lebanon-Israel border is a place where the gap between a ceasefire and peace is being measured in the blood shed each day.