Netanyahu faces Israeli fury after Trump announces Hezbollah ceasefire

Benjamin Netanyahu is facing domestic criticism after Donald Trump announced Israel would halt its plans to strike Hezbollah in Beirut.

The controversy highlights the significant pressure on the Israeli leader ahead of an election that he is currently projected to lose.

The U.S. president said on Monday that both Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to cease hostilities against each other.

The declaration came just hours after Netanyahu had ordered fresh strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, a move that prompted a warning from Iran that Israel was jeopardizing ongoing talks between Tehran and the United States.

Subsequently, the Lebanese government confirmed a new ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah, stipulating that Israel would halt its strikes on southern Beirut while Hezbollah would cease attacks on Israel.

Netanyahu’s challengers in the upcoming elections, which are due by October, accused the prime minister of having acquiesced to Trump on issues of national security.

“The location is different, the story is the same,” said Naftali Bennett, a right-wing security hawk and former premier who also criticizes Netanyahu over Hamas militants’ resurgence in Gaza.

“A government that has lost control of Israeli sovereignty,” Bennett said in an X post.

Bennett and his coalition partner in the upcoming election, centrist Yair Lapid, have pressed for strikes against Hezbollah.

“A full protectorate,” Lapid said in an X post, in effect accusing Netanyahu of allowing the U.S. to dictate Israeli military policy as if Israel was an American client state.

Israel and Hezbollah have continued to trade fire despite an April 16 U.S.-brokered ceasefire. The latest conflict began on March 2 with Hezbollah firing into Israel in support of Iran.

Israel has since deepened its invasion of southern Lebanon, displacing over a million people and killing more than 3,400 as it bombards areas with attacks it says are aimed at rooting out Hezbollah. Hezbollah has not released figures on its war dead.

Hezbollah has fired rockets and explosive drones at Israeli troops and northern Israeli towns. Israel says 26 soldiers and four civilians have been killed since March 2.

Netanyahu disputes criticism of Israel’s military operations in Lebanon, arguing that air strikes under his watch have dealt Hezbollah blows.

After Trump’s announcement on Monday of a new Israel-Hezbollah agreement, Netanyahu said Israel’s stance in the conflict “remains unchanged.”

“(If) Hezbollah does not cease attacking our cities and citizens — Israel will attack terror targets in Beirut,” Netanyahu said in a statement following Trump’s announcement.

Israel’s military has continued to carry out attacks on southern Lebanon since Trump’s declaration on Monday.

On Tuesday, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said that Israel had refrained from carrying out strikes on Beirut at the request of the U.S. But he warned that any new Hezbollah attacks on northern Israel would trigger strikes on southern Beirut suburbs, considered a stronghold of the militant group.

Gadi Eisenkot, a former chief of staff of the Israeli military who is also running for prime minister, said on Monday that Trump’s push for Israel to halt attacks was unreasonable.

“There has never been an Israeli prime minister who accepted such a humiliating demand,” Eisenkot wrote on X.

The criticism underscores growing tensions within Israel’s political system over the extent to which military decisions should be coordinated with its closest ally, the United States.

Netanyahu’s coalition partner Itamar Ben Gvir, the national security minister, said that Israel should tell Trump: “no”.

English-language Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post wrote that Israel had “found itself in the humiliating position of having to seek American approval to defend its own citizens.”

“The United States is now actively restraining Israel from taking decisive military action,” it said in an editorial.

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