A US envoy conducting truce talks between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon said that an agreement to end the war between the pair was “within our grasp” on Tuesday, Euronews reports.
Hezbollah’s allies in the Lebanese government reported the militant group responded positively to a proposal that both its fighters and Israel ground forces withdraw from a UN buffer zone in southern Lebanon, according to Amos Hochstein, a representative from the Biden administration.
In such a scenario, the buffer zone would be policed by thousands of additional UN peacekeepers and Lebanese troops.
Hochstein said he and Lebanon’s parliament speaker, who is mediating for the group, held “constructive talks”.
“It’s ultimately the decisions of the parties to reach a conclusion to this conflict. … It is now within our grasp” Hochstein said, adding that the Lebanese side was now waiting to hear the outcome of Hochstein’s talks with Israeli officials.
Despite his positivity, Hochstein admitted that technical details of a potential truce are still unresolved.
Israel is likely to call for more enforcement along the buffer zone which demarcates the two countries, including the ability to conduct military operations against threats from Hezbollah.
The buffer zone, known as the “blue line”, was first established by the United Nations in 2000 for the purposes of seeing if Israel had fully withdrawn from Lebanon.
It is patrolled by the peacekeeping soldiers from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) which was set up to create an area in the south of the country free of armed forces other than those of the Lebanese army.