
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Correspondent
(Worthy News) – Israel has asked the U.S. for 30 more days to complete its troop withdrawal from southern Lebanon, just days before the 60-day ceasefire deadline with Hezbollah. While the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) will remain beyond day 60, the length of their stay is unclear. The situation was discussed by Israel’s defense officials and government on Thursday. This Sunday marks 60 days since the ceasefire began on November 27.
Under the current ceasefire agreement, the IDF must hand over all positions in southern Lebanon to the Lebanese Armed Forces by January 26. Meanwhile, Hezbollah is obligated to retreat north of the Litani River, about 30 kilometers (18 miles) from the Israeli border. Currently, Israel can respond to immediate threats from Hezbollah but must forward concerns about longer-term threats to an oversight committee made up of representatives from the U.S., France, Lebanon, and the UNIFIL international observer force.
Israel has requested more time from the committee to complete its withdrawal, but according to Lebanon’s Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Akhbar outlet, it will begin pulling out of northern and western areas over the next three days.
Lebanon’s new President, Joseph Aoun, has urged U.S. and French officials to ensure Israel withdraws on time. Lebanese sources said Israel’s failure to do so would hinder Lebanon’s army deployment, but the report did not address Hezbollah’s withdrawal.
In response to Israel’s request, Hezbollah called on “everyone, especially the political authority in Lebanon,” to pressure the countries overseeing the ceasefire agreement to ensure the IDF withdraws by the end of the 60-day truce on Sunday. Hezbollah added that if Israel remains in southern Lebanon beyond the 60 days, it would be “considered a flagrant violation of the agreement and an infringement on Lebanese sovereignty.”
However, Israel has determined that the Lebanese army’s slow deployment in the region has delayed the IDF’s withdrawal.
Israel’s security cabinet met on Thursday to discuss how long Israel should remain in southern Lebanon, given Lebanon’s failure to fully uphold its part of the agreement.
IDF soldiers continue to discover Hezbollah weapon caches in areas covered by the truce, and reports suggest that in some locations, Lebanon’s army is aiding the Iran-backed group.
Northern regional council chiefs have called for the IDF to remain in Lebanon to ensure the safe return of tens of thousands of residents who were evacuated due to Hezbollah attacks. Moshe Davidovich, head of the Mateh Asher Regional Council, told the Israel’s Kan public broadcaster that he supports the IDF staying in key locations “until we understand that Hezbollah will not return to the south of the country [Lebanon], until we understand that a weapons arsenal doesn’t again trickle to Israel’s northern border.”
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear Cambridge Christian School v. Florida High School Athletic Association, effectively letting stand a lower-court ruling that bars two Christian schools from offering a brief pre-game prayer over a stadium loudspeaker — even though both teams wanted the prayer and the event was between two private Christian schools.
President Donald Trump confirmed Monday that the United States will move forward with selling advanced F-35 stealth fighters to Saudi Arabia, announcing the decision just one day before Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman arrives at the White House for a high-profile visit aimed at deepening economic, technological, and defense cooperation.
The UN Security Council voted 13-0 on Monday to adopt a sweeping U.S.-drafted resolution that codifies President Donald Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza, endorses a new International Stabilization Force (ISF), and formally recognizes the establishment of a “Board of Peace” to be chaired by Trump himself. Russia and China abstained, allowing the measure to pass without a veto.
Questions have been raised about the future of one of Europe’s largest on-shore natural-gas reserves after parts of the Dutch province of Groningen were struck by one of the strongest earthquakes ever recorded there.
Gunmen abducted 25 students from a girls’ school in northwest Nigeria early Monday after killing at least one staff member, adding to fears among the nation’s Christian minority, police and other sources confirmed.
South Africa has launched an investigation after 153 Palestinians unexpectedly arrived on a chartered flight at Johannesburg’s O.R. Tambo International Airport last week, prompting questions over who organized the journey and whether any fleeing Hamas fighters or officials may have been among them.
A planned auction of more than 600 Holocaust-era artifacts was cancelled in Germany after an outcry from survivors, victims’ families, civil society groups, and top government officials.