In a move that has sent shockwaves through the Middle East, the United States and Iran have reportedly reached a preliminary agreement on nuclear enrichment caps and sanctions relief. But while Washington and Tehran celebrate diplomatic victory, the deal’s fine print leaves Lebanon in a precarious diplomatic no man’s land. UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy has now stepped into the fray, demanding concrete guarantees from both Israel and Hamas for a sustainable ceasefire in Gaza, warning that the regional power shift could ignite a new proxy war.
The US-Iran framework, still under wraps, is said to include a phased lifting of oil sanctions and frozen asset access in exchange for verifiable limits on Iran’s uranium stockpile. For Lebanon, however, the arrangement excludes Hezbollah entirely. The militant group, armed and financed by Iran, now finds itself isolated from the deal’s security umbrella. “Lebanon is being treated as a bargaining chip, not a partner,” said a senior Lebanese official who spoke on condition of anonymity. “The deal ties Iran’s hands regionally but leaves Hezbollah’s arsenal untouched. That’s a recipe for Israeli preemptive strikes.”
Meanwhile, the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza deepens. Over 35,000 Palestinians have been killed since October 7, according to local health authorities, and 1.9 million are internally displaced. Secretary Lammy, addressing the House of Commons this morning, drew a sharp line: “The UK will not normalise relations with any party that blocks humanitarian access or continues offensive operations. We need legally binding guarantees from both Israel and Hamas, not vague assurances.” His words targeted Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which has resisted calls for a permanent ceasefire, and Hamas, which has demanded complete Israeli withdrawal as a precondition.
Lammy’s statement is part of a broader UK push for a two-state solution, but his insistence on enforceable guarantees signals frustration. “The US has been acting as Israel’s lawyer, not an honest broker,” a Whitehall source told us. “We need a mechanism that allows verification, perhaps an independent commission or UN monitors.” The source acknowledged that without US backing, such a proposal has slim chances. “But we cannot wait for Washington to solve everything.”
The convergence of these two narratives is no coincidence. Iran’s deal could free up resources for its proxies, including Hezbollah and Hamas. Israeli intelligence estimates that Hezbollah now possesses over 150,000 rockets and missiles capable of striking any city in Israel. “If the US gives Tehran a financial lifeline, Hezbollah will buy precision-guided munitions within weeks,” warned a retired Israeli general. “A ceasefire in Gaza without addressing the northern front is a pause, not a solution.”
For the ordinary citizen in Beirut or Tel Aviv, the diplomatic activity feels like a distant fog. “I hear about deals and guarantees, but bombs keep falling on southern Lebanon,” said a shopkeeper in Sidon. “My son was killed by an Israeli drone last month. What guarantee brings him back?” In Gaza, a father digging through rubble after an overnight airstrike simply said, “Lammy’s words are for the cameras. We need someone who can stop the planes.”
What lies ahead is a high-stakes diplomatic game. The UK is pushing for a UN Security Council resolution that would embed ceasefire guarantees into international law, but Russia and China are likely to veto any text that does not also condemn Israel. Meanwhile, the US-Iran deal requires congressional approval, a near impossibility given Republican opposition. Lebanon watches nervously, its fragile institutions straining under the weight of refugees and economic collapse.
As one European diplomat put it, “The region is a powder keg, and the US-Iran deal is a match striking near the fuse. We can only hope the fire extinguisher is real.” For now, the world holds its breath as Lammy’s demands echo through the corridors of power, unanswered.










