Miami Herald (Sunday)

Even as he threatens Israel, Nasrallah gestures at future border talks

- BY SARAH DADOUCH The Washington Post

After a week that featured a suspected Israeli assassinat­ion in the heart of Beirut and a U.S. airstrike in central Baghdad — sparking fears of a wider regional war — many were apprehensi­ve about Hasan Nasrallah’s latest speech.

But the leader of Hezbollah, Lebanon’s powerful militant group and political party, had a new message to Israel and the United States Friday, hinting that Lebanon could be open to negotiatio­ns on border demarcatio­n with Israel — but only after a cease-fire in Gaza.

The border area between the historic foes has seen near-daily exchanges of shelling since Oct. 7, when Hamas militants stormed into Israel, killing 1,200 people and kidnapping some 240 others. The attack elicited a swift and brutal response from Israel, whose intensive bombardmen­t of the Gaza Strip killed more than 20,000 Palestinia­ns in less than three months, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

Hezbollah was one of several Iran-aligned militant groups in the region to throw its support behind Hamas, launching strikes into border towns in northern Israel. More than 120 Hezbollah fighters and a dozen Israeli soldiers have been killed in the skirmishes; tens of thousands of civilians have been displaced on both sides.

The fighting raised alarms in Washington, where officials worried that a miscalcula­tion could open a dangerous new front — one that would embroil Israel in a different kind of war, against a more skilled and profession­al military than Hamas.

To address the mounting tensions, President Biden’s senior energy adviser Amos Hochstein visited Lebanon in November and was dispatched to Israel this week. In the months preceding Oct. 7, Hochstein had been exploring the possibilit­y of resolving the countries’ decades-long border dispute.

Reaching a deal was not as far-fetched as it sounded for the U.S. envoy, who in 2022 mediated an agreement between Israel and Lebanon to demarcate their

maritime border, putting an end to 11 years of glacial negotiatio­ns.

Hochstein sought to revive the border talks during his visit to Lebanon, according to a report last week in the Hezbollaha­ligned newspaper al-Akhbar. Officials in Lebanon confirmed to The Post that Hochstein had broached the topic.

Nasrallah, always a cryptic and circuitous speaker, did not mention border demarcatio­n by name Friday, but analysts said his meaning was clear.

“We are now faced with a historic opportunit­y to completely liberate every inch of our Lebanese land,” he said in his live television address, adding that Lebanon now had the “real opportunit­y” to put in place an equation that thwarts any Israeli breach of Lebanon’s airspace and seas. In a complaint filed to the U.N. Security Council on Friday, Lebanon accused Israel of using its airspace to launch attacks on Syria.

“But of course,” Nasrallah continued, “any talks on this level, any negotiatio­n, any discussion, will not take place or reach a result until after the cessation of hostilitie­s in Gaza.”

Mohaned Hage Ali of the Carnegie Middle East Center said the leader was signaling, at a moment of high tension, that Hezbollah is ready to pull back from the brink and, eventually, negotiate a border deal with Israel.

The process may take years, Hage Ali said — and would require real concession­s from Hezbollah in exchange for Israeli withdrawal­s from contested areas — but Nasrallah was “trying to show some sort of good faith in terms of his readiness to engage in a long-term process.”

Nasrallah was quick to clarify that Hezbollah, which dubs itself “The Resistance” to Israel, was in no way making peace with its historic enemy. He pointed to the more than 90 days of fighting in the south and praised the soldiers who have been killed in the conflict.

He also repeated a promise from his speech Wednesday, vowing to retaliate for the suspected Israeli strike Tuesday on a building in Dahieh, a neighborho­od on the edge of Beirut, killing senior Hamas leader Saleh Arouri along with six other Palestinia­n militants.

While Nasrallah tends to be vague about how and when Hezbollah will strike back at Israel — “at the right place and the right time” is a favorite phrase — he said Friday that the response to Arouri’s killing was already in motion.

“We cannot stay silent on a threat that’s dangerous, because that would mean that all of Lebanon would be exposed,” he told his supporters.

Yet beneath the bluster, analysts detected a shift in messaging.

For all the hints of deescalati­on, Nasrallah warned again that if Israel were to wage war on Lebanon, the group would fight “until the end, with no restraint.”

The message to Washington, Saad said, is that the longer the war drags on, the more the U.S. has to lose in the Middle East — “not just anything relating to Israel, but also its wider regional role which has also suffered a blow. That blow is irreversib­le.”

 ?? ISMAEL MOHAMAD UPI ?? The World Health Organizati­on reported Friday that since the Hamas attack Oct. 7 on Israel that triggered the Gaza war, nearly 600 attacks on medical facilities in Gaza and the West Bank have occurred.
ISMAEL MOHAMAD UPI The World Health Organizati­on reported Friday that since the Hamas attack Oct. 7 on Israel that triggered the Gaza war, nearly 600 attacks on medical facilities in Gaza and the West Bank have occurred.

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