THE April 8 ceasefire that halted hostilities between Israel and Iran has encountered its most serious test yet. Israeli strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs prompted Iranian missile attacks and retaliatory Israeli strikes, raising fears that the region was sliding back towards a wider conflict. While the exchange has ended for now, the issues that produced it remain unresolved. The latest confrontation is significant not only in the military actions themselves but also in what they reveal about the limitations of the current arrangement. The April 8 truce succeeded in halting direct hostilities between Washington and Tehran after weeks of dangerous escalation. Yet it did not resolve the broader disputes that continue to drive instability across the region. Talks between the US and Iran remain stalled over sanctions, Iran’s enrichment programme and wider security concerns. Meanwhile, developments in Lebanon have become increasingly intertwined with the fate of the ceasefire itself.
The latest violence followed Israeli attacks on Beirut despite recent efforts to reinforce ceasefire understandings in Lebanon. Tehran responded by targeting Israel and later warned that further attacks, particularly in Lebanon, could provoke a much stronger reaction. Israel, meanwhile, has maintained that it retains the right to act against Hezbollah and other perceived threats regardless of broader diplomatic considerations. These competing positions expose a fundamental disagreement. Iran views Israeli operations in Lebanon as a challenge to the wider ceasefire framework, while Israel does not accept that its actions there should be constrained by understandings reached elsewhere. Lebanese officials say Israel carried out nearly 3,500 air strikes between mid-April and early June despite ceasefire understandings, while tensions and military operations have persisted in the south. Such developments have reinforced concerns that the ceasefire has reduced hostilities without resolving the conditions that produced them. A truce can suspend fighting, but it cannot by itself settle disputes over security arrangements and the role of armed groups.
Even though both sides have stepped back from immediate confrontation, neither appears ready to moderate its position. Iranian officials have coupled their suspension of attacks with warnings of harsher retaliation should Israel’s operations continue. Israel has likewise signalled that military action remains an option if it perceives a threat to its national security. Such statements may be intended as deterrence, but they also reveal how deep the mutual mistrust is. In this context, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s appeal to “give peace a little more chance” deserves support. Pakistan has continued to advocate restraint, arguing that the region cannot afford another cycle of escalation. A ceasefire can pause hostilities, but it cannot substitute for a political settlement. Unless diplomacy addresses the disputes, the ‘calm’ that has returned will may prove temporary.
Published in Dawn, June 9th, 2026




























