Israel detonates tunnel, strikes south Lebanon

Israel detonates tunnel, strikes south Lebanon

BEIRUT

A view of destroyed houses in the southern Lebanese village of Meiss al-Jabal, as seen from the Israeli side of the border in the Upper Galilee, northern Israel, 28 June 2026, amid an Israel-Lebanon ceasefire. EPA

The Israeli army destroyed an extensive tunnel built by Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said Sunday, with Lebanese state media reporting strikes in the area.

The attacks came despite a trilateral framework agreement signed by Lebanon and Israel under U.S. sponsorship on Friday to pave the way for peace between the two countries and disarm Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Lebanon's state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported several strikes Sunday, including on the southern city of Nabatieh, with the Lebanese health ministry saying two people were wounded by an Israeli stun grenade in the south.

"The tunnel, stretching more than 200 metres and reaching a depth of over 25 metres, contained hundreds of weapons as well as several launch shafts intended to target the State of Israel and its civilians," Katz and Netanyahu said in a joint statement.

"Israel informed the United States and the U.S. representative in Lebanon in advance of the destruction of the infrastructure."

The incident, the first such detonation since the agreement, come a day after one person was killed in an Israeli strike on the south, according to Lebanon's health ministry.

The Israeli military said it had targeted Hezbollah members near its self-proclaimed "security zone", which reaches 10 kilometres (six miles) into Lebanon.

The Israeli army said one of its soldiers "fell in combat" in southern Lebanon, and later said it killed a "Hezbollah terrorist" who had clashed with its forces.

Hezbollah drew the country into the Middle East war in March with rocket fire aimed at Israel to avenge the killing of Iran's supreme leader in U.S.-Israeli strikes.

Israel responded with massive airstrikes and a ground invasion.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun told his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump on Saturday that his country "would assume its responsibilities" in implementing the agreement.

The deal makes any Israeli withdrawal from occupied Lebanese land conditional on Beirut disarming Hezbollah by creating "pilot zones" that the Lebanese military will take over.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the deal historic for his country and a blow to Tehran.

Israel's Defense Minister Israel Katz has insisted troops will stay in Lebanon so long as Hezbollah remains armed.

 

Hezbollah strongly opposed the talks with Israel from the start and rejects the agreement.

Leader Naim Qassem said on Saturday that the group would treat the deal as "null and void" and described it as "a surrender of sovereignty".

On Sunday, an AFP correspondent saw signs reading "Lebanon first" being burned along Beirut's airport road, which borders the city's southern suburbs, a Hezbollah stronghold, after previous billboards saying "thank you Iran" were removed.

Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah said Sunday that what "the authorities have done amounts to sedition aimed at pushing the country into chaos and shifting the conflict from one with the enemy to an internal conflict".

Lebanese Parliament Speaker and Hezbollah ally Nabih Berri said the deal would "not pass" in its current form, calling it a dictate that does not preserve "Lebanon's rights", vowing to confront it politically and warning against internal strife.

"It is ten times worse than the May 17, 1983 agreement," he added, referring to the last time Lebanon and Israel signed a peace deal, which was then cancelled after pressure from Syria and its Lebanese allies.

Hezbollah repeatedly asked Lebanese authorities to link themselves to Iran's negotiations to end its war with the U.S., while Tehran has insisted any ceasefire for the Middle East war should include Lebanon.

In a phone conversation with Berri, the Iranian parliament speaker and head of Tehran's negotiating delegation Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said "our goal is to end the war in Lebanon, return the refugees to their homes and remove the occupation and the withdrawal of the Zionist regime from the Lebanese territory".