Lebanon and Israel move to implement southern Lebanon pilot zones, with Lebanese army saying it never left
The US State Department confirmed on July 16 that Lebanon and Israel took steps to implement 'pilot zones' in southern Lebanon for an Israeli withdrawal, while the Lebanese army said it already patrols the area and a security source said Israel agreed to leave territory it 'never invaded'
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Summary
The US State Department confirmed on July 16 that Lebanon and Israel had taken concrete steps toward implementing "pilot zones" in southern Lebanon, an area from which Israeli forces would withdraw and hand control to the Lebanese army, following two days of US-mediated talks in Rome. The Lebanese army said it "never left" the pilot zone and had been patrolling it throughout the conflict. A Lebanese security source told [[The National]] that Israel had agreed to withdraw from territory it had, in that source's words, "never invaded," a framing that reinforces Beirut's insistence on presenting the arrangement as an Israeli exit rather than a negotiated concession.
Why it matters
The pilot-zone step is the first concrete implementation move after months of talks in Rome, and the Lebanese army's language suggests Beirut is managing the arrangement domestically as a victory rather than a compromise. Whether Israel follows through on withdrawal, and on what timetable, determines whether this agreement holds or joins the list of unimplemented Lebanon-Israel understandings.
What to watch
- Whether Israeli forces begin physical withdrawal from the named pilot zone and on what timeline
- How Hezbollah responds to the Lebanese army's assertion of sovereignty over the zone
- Whether the pilot zone success leads to expansion of the arrangement to other areas
- US monitoring mechanisms and how violations are defined and enforced