Ceasefire and Talks: Israel, Lebanon and a Three-Week Pause
Key Vocabulary
Listening
Ceasefire and Talks: Israel, Lebanon and a Three-Week Pause
U.S. President Donald Trump announced on April 23, 2026 that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to extend a temporary ceasefire by three weeks, a decision he revealed after hosting both countries' ambassadors in the Oval Office and posting the news on his social platform. The extension, which follows an initial 10-day truce that began on April 16, was presented as a diplomatic step meant to create breathing space for direct, face-to-face negotiations between Jerusalem and Beirut.
Diplomats have argued that the pause could permit talks on border demarcation and broader security arrangements, and the United States has said it will work with Lebanon to help protect civilians and strengthen security in the south. Israel has maintained that it reserves the right to act in self‑defense during the pause, and since the truce began there have been multiple reports of incidents near the frontier that complicate the negotiation calculus. Although Lebanon's government has taken part in the talks, Hezbollah — the Iran‑aligned armed group that operates independently inside Lebanon — has publicly rejected direct negotiations and may challenge any agreement imposed without its consent.
Negotiators have been meeting in Washington to formalize steps and discuss how the ceasefire can be enforced, but deep doubts remain about whether a lasting settlement can be reached while armed groups continue to operate outside state control. If the pause holds long enough, officials hope that momentum toward a broader peace process with Iran and its allies could be revived; if it breaks, negotiators warn that progress will likely stall.
Quiz
Reading Practice
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Discussion
Do you believe short diplomatic pauses can change long wars? How would you explain your view?
Have you ever seen or heard about peace talks that included local communities? What do you remember?
What do you think is hardest about negotiating borders with long disputes?
Would you like to follow international news about peace processes more closely? Why or why not?
How do you feel when you read that civilians are still at risk near a ceasefire line?