Middle East crisis live: Doubts cast over Trump’s claim that Lebanese-Israel meeting to take place today | US-Israel war on Iran

Lebanese officials ‘unaware’ of meeting with Israel – reports

Some news outlets have reported Lebanese officials as saying they were unaware of any contact or meeting with Israel, after Donald Trump said on social media that Israeli and Lebanese leaders would speak to each other today.

AFP news agency reported an official source in Lebanon saying: “We are not aware of any planned contact with the Israeli side, and we have not been informed of any through official channels.”

Al Jazeera also reported an official source in Lebanon saying “there is no information” about a possible phone conversation between Lebanese and Israeli leaders or a second meeting between their ambassadors in Washington following Tuesday’s talks.

In a Truth Social post, the US president said Israeli and Lebanese leaders will hold talks, but he did not provide any other details and it was not clear if he meant the countries’ heads of state or other officials. There has been no official confirmation of a meeting from Israel or Lebanon.

This morning the Israeli military issued another order telling people in southern Lebanon to flee the area due to “ongoing” airstrikes against what it described as Hezbollah targets, in its second such warning in 24 hours.

Avichay Adraee, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Arabic language spokesperson, have told people south of the Zahrani river to flee their homes, saying: The airstrikes are ongoing as the IDF operates with great force in the area.”

Share

Key events

Military adviser to Iran supreme leader threatens to sink US ships

The military adviser to Iran’s supreme leader warned that Tehran would sink American ships in the strait of Hormuz if the US decided to “police” the narrow waterway.

Mohsen Rezaei, a former commander-in-chief of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) who was named as a military adviser by Mojtaba Khamenei last month, also threatened to take American soldiers hostage if they came ashore and “demand one billion dollars for each captive”.

“[Donald] Trump wants to become the police of the strait of Hormuz, but we will under no circumstances back down from our ten conditions in the short negotiations over a maritime blockade,” he told state tv last night, according to the semi-official Tasnim news agency.

“Extending the ceasefire is not in our favour at all; this is my personal opinion. The pressures must be intensified, Our launchers are now locked onto the ships and we will sink them all.

“A ceasefire will only have meaning when all our agreements and rights have been met and a statement has been submitted to the security council [of Iran].”

Read More:  UK’s Starmer under fire over report Mandelson failed security vetting | Politics News

The US blockade of ships using Iranian ports in the Gulf came into effect on Monday evening as a counter to Iran’s near-total closure of the strait of Hormuz since the start of the war. The US Central Command (Centcom) said it stopped 10 vessels from sailing out of Iranian ports during the first 48 hours of the blockade, but ship tracking data indicated at least three ships sailing from Iranian ports crossed the strait of Hormuz, though some vessels later turned back.

Share

Updated at 

Facebook Comments Box