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Israel Open To Truce Deal With Hezbollah, Wants US Troops Deployed As Peacekeepers

Despite daily exchanges of fire and deaths on both sides of the border, the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah has not yet spiralled into an unlimited war. At a moment when Israel’s military remains bogged down in its biggest counter-terror operation ever in Gaza, certainly Israeli leaders are hoping to avoid a major northern front battle.

Likely, this desire to contain the conflict is what is behind fresh remarks by Israel’s defence minister, Yoav Gallant, who on Monday told reporters that his country is open to inking a possible agreement with Iran-backed Hezbollah for ‘security guarantees’ to stabilise the Lebanese border.

“If Hezbollah will allow an agreement process, and I won’t go now into its details, clearly it cannot be that it does not include a situation in which there is a safe distance from our fence to forces that could shoot into Israeli territory or forces that could take action inside Israel. If this is possible, with the appropriate guarantee, we can talk about it,” Gallant told the press briefing. He wants the threat to Israel’s population to be removed.

Soon after October 7, Israel began evacuating dozens of towns and settlements near the border, to within 2km of it, after Hezbollah rockets began raining down. Gallant floated a deal that would allow Israeli residents to return.

Commenting on the defence minister’s words, Al Jazeera cited Israeli sources to say that the plan envisions American and French peacekeeping troops on either side of the border: 

He did not give any more details, but Israeli sources have been quoted as saying that this would involve the deployment of French troops on the Lebanese side of the border and American soldiers on the Israeli side of the border.

So France and America would give some sort of security guarantee.

The idea of the White House agreeing to put US boots on the ground related to the conflict remains highly unlikely, given the Pentagon’s past disastrous experiences in Lebanon, such as the 1982 Marine barracks bombing. To position US troops within kilometres of Hezbollah would, in effect, make them sit ducks.

A similar plan was floated by Israel related to the 2006 war, but it merely resulted in an enlargement of UN peacekeeping forces in the south, which had no mandate or capability to disarm Hezbollah.

Israeli retaliation in southern Lebanon has grown bigger and bigger…

Israel would like nothing more than to have US troops deployed on a large scale on its soil. Already, most of Israel’s military arsenal derives from the US, but an on-the-ground deployment would serve to draw Washington deeper in on Tel Aviv’s side than ever before.

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Zero Hedge

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