Israel’s Iran Deal Nightmare: Facing Hezbollah Alone

by Rachel Morgan News Editor

A proposed Geneva framework for a permanent ceasefire in Lebanon is drawing sharp criticism from military analysts, who argue it would leave Hezbollah’s military infrastructure intact while shackling Israeli security efforts. According to Col. (ret.) Jacques Neriah, who was formerly the Foreign Policy Adviser to prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and the deputy head for assessment of Israeli Military Intelligence, the agreement risks freezing a conflict Israel has sought to resolve through the neutralization of Hezbollah, potentially undermining the long-standing US-Israel security alliance.

How the ceasefire impacts Israeli military doctrine

For months, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have maintained an offensive in southern Lebanon to secure a buffer zone intended to facilitate the return of displaced northern residents. According to Neriah, the current diplomatic framework forces an “unwanted, premature” end to these operations. By imposing strict limits on military activity, the agreement effectively preserves the core of Hezbollah’s fighting capabilities. Furthermore, leaked drafts suggest that Iranian ballistic missile inventories and support for regional militant groups may be entirely excluded from the negotiations, a move that Neriah describes as a significant strategic shift that leaves Israel’s primary existential threat shielded by international decree.

How the ceasefire impacts Israeli military doctrine

Why the agreement creates a political shift in Lebanon

The ceasefire is expected to provide a major domestic political lifeline for Hezbollah. According to Neriah, the group is likely to frame the Geneva framework as a victory for the “Axis of Resistance,” signaling its survival against both Western and Israeli military pressure. This narrative threatens to further weaken the Lebanese caretaker government in Beirut. While some factions previously hoped for the enforcement of UN Resolution 1701 to disarm the militia, the current deal may instead solidify Hezbollah’s role as a parallel state. With Iran securing sanctions relief and non-interference clauses, the group is positioned to maintain a veto over Lebanon’s political future, effectively using the state as a diplomatic shield.

Why the agreement creates a political shift in Lebanon

What happens next for the US-Israel alliance

The framework puts significant strain on the relationship between Washington and Jerusalem. Neriah notes that if the US pushes Israel to withdraw from its security buffer to preserve wider regional deals with Iran, it could lead to a scenario where the US withholds diplomatic cover at the UN or slows the delivery of precision-guided munitions. Should this occur, Israel’s defense doctrine would inevitably shift to a strategy of survivalism. In this state, Israel would potentially rely on maximum strategic deterrence, including highly disproportionate preemptive strikes to prevent a multi-front invasion.

Dr. Jacques Neriah (JCFA) on i24NEWS: The Lebanese Army Will Dismantle Hezbollah? It's a Masquerade

The potential for future conflict

Should a vacuum of American support emerge, Neriah warns that Hezbollah’s next moves would likely be calculated and predatory. A possible first phase involves a visible, triumphalist return to the border to claim vacated territory. Under the cover of the ceasefire, the group could rebuild subterranean attack infrastructure along the Blue Line. Eventually, Neriah suggests, Hezbollah might wait for a moment of Israeli internal political vulnerability to launch saturation strikes—firing thousands of missiles daily to overwhelm air defenses—coupled with cross-border ground incursions. By treating Lebanon as a secondary theater to global energy markets, the Geneva accord may inadvertently heighten the risk of the very war it aims to prevent.

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