Israel's defense minister says military operations in Lebanon will continue despite ceasefire

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Israel's military will continue to carry out operations in Lebanon for the time being and will not be withdrawing from the country despite the announcement ​of a new ceasefire, Reuters reported citing Defense Minister Israel Katz.  

Israel and Lebanon on Wednesday agreed to a new ceasefire following talks mediated by the ‌United States.

In a statement, Katz said that Israel's military would remain in swathes of southern ​Lebanon it is occupying as part of what Israel's government describes as a buffer zone meant to protect northern ​Israeli communities from Hezbollah attacks.

Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese residents, forced from their homes in the south ⁠by Israel's military since fighting began in March, would also not be allowed to return, he said.

Israel would also continue to "dismantle ​terrorist infrastructure in the area" while Israel had "freedom of action, backed by the United States, to strike in Beirut in response to ​attacks on Israeli communities and territory," Katz said, according to Reuters.

Israel invaded Lebanon in March in pursuit of Hezbollah after the Iran-backed group fired across the border in support of Tehran.

Fighting in Lebanon, which has killed thousands of people and driven more than a million Lebanese from their homes, has become a sticking point ​in negotiations to end the wider Iran war, with Tehran refusing to agree any peace deal with Washington unless a ceasefire ​also covers Lebanon.

Under the new agreement announced on Wednesday, the Lebanese military is meant to take exclusive control over territory.

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