The ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel, brokered after weeks of intense diplomacy, is hanging by a thread. For the people of southern Lebanon and northern Israel, the silence of the guns is a relief, but a nervous one. They have seen such truces before, only for them to collapse under the weight of unresolved grievances. The question now is whether this deal, propped up by British diplomatic efforts, can last.
David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, has been shuttling between Beirut and Tel Aviv, leaning on all sides to uphold their commitments. Britain's role is not new - it has long been a player in this region, but its influence has waned in recent years. This ceasefire, however, presents a chance to prove that quiet diplomacy can still work where grand gestures have failed.
The deal itself is simple on paper: a cessation of hostilities, a withdrawal of forces, and a commitment to talks. But the reality is messy. Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia that dominates southern Lebanon, has not disarmed. Israel, meanwhile, continues to strike targets it claims are terrorist infrastructure. The ceasefire is more a pause than a peace.
For ordinary families, the cost of this conflict is measured in shattered homes and broken lives. In the border villages of Lebanon, farmers tend fields that have been cratered by Israeli shelling. In Kiryat Shmona, an Israeli town, parents send children to school with the sound of drones overhead. They all ask the same question: when will it end?
British diplomats are working on the details that matter: monitoring mechanisms, humanitarian corridors, and economic incentives for both sides. But the real work lies in addressing the root causes of the conflict - the occupation, the struggle for water resources, the political marginalisation of communities. These are problems that no ceasefire can solve alone.
The international community is watching. The United States is preoccupied with its own elections. The European Union is distracted by the war in Ukraine. Britain, by stepping up, is filling a void, but it cannot carry the burden forever. The success of this ceasefire will depend on whether the parties themselves want peace more than they want victory.
For now, the truce holds. But the fragility of it is a reminder that in the Middle East, peace is never a given. It is a choice that must be made every day. And for the people caught in the middle, that choice cannot come soon enough.








