
Lebanon Says Hezbollah Will Be Disarmed South Of The Litani Within Three Months
Beirut’s foreign minister said the Lebanese Army has begun a phased plan to restore state control in areas long dominated by Hezbollah, pledging that the removal of weapons south of the Litani River will be completed within roughly three months. The announcement followed a devastating year of fighting and growing domestic pressure on the Iran-backed group after heavy losses, alongside international calls to enforce border commitments. Officials framed the effort as a step toward reasserting sovereignty and creating conditions for stability along the frontier.
Lebanese authorities cautioned that capacity limits and political resistance could slow implementation, even as they described units already working to collect caches and prevent violations. Hezbollah-aligned voices criticized the plan as unrealistic or externally driven, while other factions said it was overdue, given the economic and security burdens borne by civilians in the south. The army highlighted coordination with UN forces and the need for sustained political cover to make progress.
Israel, for its part, linked any changes to tangible demilitarization and durable security guarantees, saying that only the end of rearmament and cross-border fire will allow a full return to quiet. Analysts noted that effective enforcement would require persistent patrolling, credible penalties for breaches, and a credible mechanism to address disputes. Whether the timeline holds will depend on the balance between internal Lebanese consensus and the willingness of armed actors to pull back.
(TOI/VFI News)
“He makes wars cease to the ends of the earth.” — Psalm 46:9