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Israel continued to strike southern Lebanon on Tuesday as Iran-backed Hezbollah attacked its troops there despite an apparent Washington-brokered de-escalation deal and a fourth round of US-hosted talks between Lebanon and Israel.

US President Donald Trump had announced an agreement to halt some attacks on Monday, but neither side has publicly accepted it, and Israel’s defence minister said the Lebanese capital’s southern suburbs remained potential targets.

The deal, according to a statement from the Lebanese embassy in Washington, would, at first, stop Israeli attacks on Beirut and Hezbollah attacks on Israeli territory.

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A photograph shows the damage at the entrance of a hospital near the site where an Israeli airstrike struck a building the previous day in the southern port city of Tyre on June 2, 2026.

 

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported several Israeli strikes across the south on Tuesday.

Hezbollah, meanwhile, said it attacked Israeli troops in southern Lebanese lands they occupy, but has not claimed attacks in Israel.

The Israeli military said it intercepted two projectiles from Lebanon, without reporting any injuries.

Near Sidon, in the south, rescuers recovered the bodies of six members of the same family, including two children and a woman, following an Israeli strike.

Further south in the historic city of Tyre, the Jabal Amel hospital, severely damaged by an Israeli attack nearby on Monday that wounded 39 staffers, resumed operations.

Lebanon’s health ministry said on Tuesday that Israeli attacks had killed at least 3,468 people since March 2 — an increase of 35 compared to Monday.

At least 26 Israeli soldiers and one civilian contractor have been killed over the same time frame.

 

‘Crazy’

First responders inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli strike that hit near a hospital in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre on June 1, 2026. Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP

 

Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the Middle East war on March 2 by firing rockets at Israel in retaliation for the killing of Iran’s supreme leader, and Tehran has insisted that Lebanon be included in any peace deal with Washington.

Recent days have seen a dramatic escalation in fighting and bombardment as Israeli troops staged their deepest ground offensive into Lebanon in two decades.

Citing what he called Hezbollah’s “repeated violations” of a ceasefire officially in place since April 17 but never respected by either side, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had ordered strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, a densely populated Hezbollah stronghold.

According to Axios, however, Trump called Netanyahu “fucking crazy” and accused him of putting peace talks with Iran at risk.

A photograph shows damage in the parking lot of a hospital near where an Israeli airstrike struck a building the previous day in the southern port city of Tyre on June 2, 2026.

 

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Washington “endorsed this principle” that his country would hit the suburbs if Hezbollah continued firing at Israel.

“If Israeli towns continue to be attacked, we will evacuate and strike the Shiite Dahiyeh quarter in Beirut, Hezbollah’s stronghold,” Katz said.

In the southern suburbs, which many residents had fled the day before, many shops were closed on Tuesday, while a military drone flew over the area at low altitude, according to an AFP journalist.

Resident Layla Shehab, 35, decided to return as “we found the situation has calmed down a bit”.

 

‘Consolidate the ceasefire’

First responders gather at the site of an Israeli strike that hit near a hospital in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre on June 1, 2026. Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP

 

According to Lebanese authorities, Hezbollah would no longer fire into Israel under the agreement revealed by Trump, while the Israeli military would spare Beirut’s southern suburbs.

An adviser to Lebanese speaker of parliament Nabih Berri, a Hezbollah ally, told AFP that he would guarantee that the group would respect a “global ceasefire”, if one were agreed.

Lebanese and Israeli delegations meanwhile began a new round of talks in Washington, the fourth between the two countries, who have no diplomatic relations, since the start of the war.

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said it was “necessary to consolidate the ceasefire” during the negotiations.

“Negotiations are the least costly choice for Lebanon,” he reiterated.

Hezbollah is vehemently opposed to the talks, while Israel wants the group disarmed.

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