Iran ‘may WITHDRAW from ceasefire’ as Israel is accused of violating phrases of the deal by finishing up large assault throughout Lebanon
Iran could pull out of its fragile ceasefire with the United States after accusing Israel of breaching the deal with a massive wave of strikes across Lebanon.
Foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said Israel had committed ‘ceasefire violations’ in Iran and Lebanon, while officials warned Tehran could withdraw from the agreement and retaliate if the attacks continue.
Reports from Iranian media and Al Jazeera citing Iranian officials and well-informed sources said Tehran was prepared to withdraw from the ceasefire and retaliate over Israel’s bombardments of Lebanon.
‘Iran will withdraw from the agreement if Israel continues to violate the ceasefire in its attack on Lebanon,’ Iran’s Tasnim news agency reported, citing a well-informed source.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards vowed on Telegram to ‘punish Israel for the atrocities it has committed in Lebanon and violating ceasefire conditions’.
The Al Jazeera telelvision channel also quoted an unnamed Iranian official saying ‘the ceasefire includes the region, and Israel is known for breaking promises and will only be deterred by bullets.’
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the ceasefire applied ‘everywhere’ including Lebanon, as he announced Islamabad would host delegations from the United States and Iran for talks later this week.
However, Israel has insisted that Lebanon is not included in the ceasefire, and the Israeli military said it carried out its ‘largest coordinated strike across Lebanon’ on Wednesday.
Emergency responders work at the site of an Israeli strike, in Al-Mazraa in Beirut, Lebanon, April 8, 2026
Firefighters extinguish burned cars at the site of an Israeli airstrike in central Beirut, Lebanon
A fireball rises from a building hit by an Israeli airstrike in the area of Abbasiyeh, on the outskirts of the southern Lebanese city of Tyr
Sharif said on Wednesday that ceasefire violations between the United States and Iran ‘have been reported’ and he pressed countries to respect the truce.
Lebanon’s government said Israeli strikes killed dozens and wounded hundreds across the country, with the capital Beirut hit by the most violent bombardment since the start of the war with militant group Hezbollah.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned the attacks could amount to a breach of the fragile US-Iran ceasefire, raising what he called Israeli ‘violations’ in Iran and Lebanon and fuelling fears the truce could collapse.
But the White House sought to play down those concerns, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying Lebanon is not covered by the ceasefire agreement between Washington and Tehran.
Iranian state-linked outlet Tasnim claimed the truce was meant to halt fighting ‘on all fronts including Lebanon’ and said Tehran’s armed forces were already identifying targets to respond to the latest Israeli strikes.
The agency also warned that Iran has said it will withdraw from the ceasefire if Israel continues to strike Lebanon.
Footage showed plumes of smoke rising over Beirut and the suburbs, while journalists saw panic in the streets before the Lebanese health ministry issued an emergency call for the capital’s roads to be cleared for ambulances.
‘In a very serious escalation, Israeli warplanes launched a wave of simultaneous airstrikes on several Lebanese areas, resulting in, in an initial count, dozens of martyrs and hundreds of wounded,’ the ministry said in a statement.
Israel‘s Defence Minister Israel Katz said the military had carried out a surprise attack on Wednesday targeting hundreds of Hezbollah members across Lebanon, calling it the largest blow against the group since a 2024 operation involving pager bombs.
It came despite a deal for a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Hezbollah’s backer Iran.
A rescuer stands amid rubble while working at the site of an Israeli strike in Tyre, Lebanon
Burned cars at the scene of an Israeli airstrike in the Corniche el-Mazraa neighborhood of Beirut
Simultaneous strikes on Beirut came without warning, prompting people on the street to start running and motorists to honk their horns in an effort to clear the way, according to journalists.
‘I saw the blast, it was very strong, and there were children killed, some with their hands cut off,’ Yasser Abdallah, who works in an appliance store in central Beirut, told reporters.
One of the strikes hit Corniche al-Mazraa, one of the main roads in the capital.
A photographer saw widespread damage, buildings ablaze and destroyed cars.
The strikes came as Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah, which drew Lebanon into the Middle East war by attacking Israel on March 2, claimed it was close to a ‘historic victory’.
Hezbollah however did not claim any operations against Israel since 1:00 am (Tuesday 2200 GMT), around the time the ceasefire took hold.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said earlier that the truce excluded his country’s fight with Hezbollah.
Israel renewed an evacuation order for an area more than 40 kilometres (25 miles) inside Lebanon, saying ‘the battle in Lebanon is ongoing’, before also reiterating its call for residents of Beirut’s southern suburbs to leave.
It also issued a warning for a building in the coastal city of Tyre, after striking another one near it.
The state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported several strikes across the south.
Israel’s attacks in recent weeks have killed more than 1,500 people and displaced over a million, according to Lebanese authorities, especially in the country’s south, east and Beirut’s southern suburbs, areas where Hezbollah holds sway.
On Wednesday a correspondent in southern Lebanon saw small numbers of people heading south, some in cars and others carrying their children on motorcycles.
But Lebanon’s military warned displaced people against returning south ‘since they may be exposing themselves to the ongoing Israeli attacks’.
Hezbollah meanwhile said displaced people must ‘not head to the targeted villages, towns, and areas in the south, the Bekaa, and the southern suburbs of Beirut before the official and final ceasefire declaration in Lebanon is issued’.
A rescue worker extinguishes burning cars at the site of an Israeli airstrike in central Beirut
Emergency teams work at the scene where smoke rises from targeted locations following simultaneous Israeli attacks across Lebanon
Firefighters spray smoldering debris at the site of an Israeli airstrike that struck a building in Beirut
A picture shows a damaged building at the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted Beirut’s Ain al-Mreisseh neighbourhood
Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, April 8, 2026
Smoke rises following several Israeli airstrikes in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday
Rescue workers stand amid rubble at the site of an Israeli strike in Tyre, Lebanon, April 8, 2026
Staying in a tent near Beirut’s southern suburbs, 50-year-old delivery worker Ali Youssef said he was ‘waiting for Hezbollah to issue an official statement’.
Youssef said he was confident that ‘Iran will not let us down’ if Israel keeps attacking Lebanon.
In a statement, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun welcomed the two-week truce between Tehran and Washington, and said his government ‘continued efforts to ensure that the regional peace includes Lebanon in a stable and lasting manner’.
Aoun noted that ‘the decision regarding war and peace … rests solely with the Lebanese state’.
Prime Minister Nawaf Salam also welcomed the truce but called on the country’s friends to help put an end to Israeli attacks following the series of deadly strikes across the country.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who has acted as a mediator in the regional conflict, said the two-week ceasefire between Iran and the United States applied ‘everywhere including Lebanon’.
But Netanyahu later said the country was excluded, and a Lebanese official said that authorities ‘have not been informed’ of Lebanon being included in the truce.
