{"id":483,"date":"2026-04-25T11:15:12","date_gmt":"2026-04-25T11:15:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/2026\/04\/25\/the-rest-of-the-world-report-special-report\/"},"modified":"2026-04-25T11:15:12","modified_gmt":"2026-04-25T11:15:12","slug":"the-rest-of-the-world-report-special-report","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/2026\/04\/25\/the-rest-of-the-world-report-special-report\/","title":{"rendered":"The Rest of the World Report | Special Report"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3>April 25, 2026<\/h3>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>THE CEASEFIRE CLAUSE<\/h3>\n<h3>Self-Defense Carve-Outs, Ceasefire Violations, and Who Gets to Decide<\/h3>\n<hr \/>\n<p>On the morning of November 27, 2024, a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon went into effect at 4 a.m. local time. Hours later, Israeli forces fired on civilians returning to their homes in the southern Lebanese town of Khiam. The Israeli military said the ceasefire had not been broken. The action was not offensive, it said \u2014 it was a defensive response to a threat. It was enforcement of the agreement\u2019s terms.<\/p>\n<p>That framing \u2014 defensive rather than offensive, enforcement rather than violation \u2014 has been Israel\u2019s consistent position across three successive ceasefire agreements spanning Gaza, Lebanon, and the current Iran war theater. In each case, the agreements contained language reserving the right to act in self-defense. In each case, independent tracking bodies documented Israeli military operations continuing from the first hours of each ceasefire. In each case, the Israeli military maintained that its actions fell within the terms it had agreed to.<\/p>\n<p>The question this report examines is not whether Israel has a right to self-defense. Under international law, it does \u2014 subject to the conditions of necessity and proportionality. The question is structural: how self-defense carve-out language has functioned in practice across these agreements, who determines what qualifies as a threat requiring a response, what accountability mechanisms exist when that determination is contested, and how the conduct of all parties \u2014 Israel, Hamas, and Hezbollah \u2014 compares when assessed against the same analytical standard.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>AGREEMENT ONE: GAZA, JANUARY 2025<\/h3>\n<p>The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that took effect on January 19, 2025 was, on paper, a genuine bilateral agreement. Hamas accepted the framework on May 5, 2024, after months of indirect negotiations mediated by Qatar, Egypt, and the United States. The deal was structured in three phases: a six-week initial ceasefire with hostage and prisoner exchanges, followed by negotiations on a permanent end to the war and full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.<\/p>\n<div><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images.unsplash.com\/photo-1448964899744-8929e9d992d7?crop=entropy&amp;cs=tinysrgb&amp;fit=max&amp;fm=jpg&amp;ixid=M3wzMDAzMzh8MHwxfHNlYXJjaHw3fHxnYXphfGVufDB8fHx8MTc3NzA1ODI2N3ww&amp;ixlib=rb-4.1.0&amp;q=80&amp;w=1080\" \/><\/div>\n<p>Hamas was a full party to this agreement. That matters for what follows. When either side failed to meet its obligations, that failure was a real violation \u2014 not a question of standing.<\/p>\n<p>The agreement\u2019s critical structural feature was an expiry mechanism. Hamas had sought language guaranteeing that Phase 1 would automatically extend into Phase 2 negotiations regardless of whether terms were agreed. Israel proposed instead that mediators would make \u201cevery effort\u201d to continue talks, but that if those talks did not progress, the ceasefire would automatically expire after six weeks. Hamas accepted these terms through Qatari and Egyptian mediators, and the final text reflected Israel\u2019s proposed structure.<\/p>\n<p>Israel\u2019s stated rationale for continued military operations during the ceasefire was that Hamas retained armed capacity and administrative control in Gaza, and that the ceasefire did not require Israel to halt all activity \u2014 only to observe the hostage exchange framework and allow humanitarian access. Israeli officials argued that targeted operations against Hamas military infrastructure fell within the agreement\u2019s terms. UN human rights experts documented a different picture: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/en\/press-releases\/2025\/03\/gaza-experts-condemn-israeli-decision-re-open-gates-hell-and-unilaterally\" target=\"_blank\">in the period from January 19 to mid-March, Israeli forces killed at least 100 Palestinians<\/a>, bringing the total killed since October 7, 2023 to at least 48,400. Israel maintained these actions were within the ceasefire terms.<\/p>\n<p>Hamas\u2019s documented violations in Phase 1 were of a different character. On February 10, Hamas announced a suspension of hostage releases, citing Israel\u2019s failure to allow sufficient humanitarian aid into Gaza \u2014 specifically, the agreed 600 trucks per day. The mediation mechanism convened. Egyptian and Qatari mediators assessed the situation and pledged to remove obstacles to humanitarian deliveries. Hamas revoked the suspension two days later, and hostage releases continued. The monitoring process functioned as intended: a dispute was raised, assessed by mediators, and resolved. Hamas\u2019s non-compliance was coercive \u2014 using hostage timing as leverage \u2014 rather than military in character.<\/p>\n<p>The ceasefire formally entered what one analysis described as a \u201ctwilight zone\u201d on March 1, when the first phase ended without Phase 2 negotiations having begun. Israel declined to enter those talks on the grounds that Hamas remained in control of Gaza \u2014 a condition not specified in the written agreement. Hamas, for its part, had not released all living hostages and continued to hold out on terms for the remaining captives. On March 18, Israeli forces launched airstrikes on Gaza, killing more than 400 people in one night. Mediators were holding ceasefire talks with Hamas when the strikes began.<\/p>\n<p>Netanyahu\u2019s office said the strikes were carried out in response to Hamas\u2019s refusal to release hostages and its rejection of proposals to extend the ceasefire. Not all senior Israeli voices accepted that framing. Haaretz defense columnist Amos Harel, one of Israel\u2019s most respected military analysts, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2025\/03\/19\/nx-s1-5332204\/israel-breaks-ceasefire-as-it-strikes-gaza-killing-hundreds\" target=\"_blank\">wrote<\/a>: \u201cThere\u2019s no other way to explain it: Israel knowingly violated the cease-fire agreement with Hamas \u2014 with American approval \u2014 because it didn\u2019t want to fully meet the terms it had committed to two months ago.\u201d NPR reported that the agreement required Israel to enter permanent ceasefire talks on the 16th day of Phase 1 \u2014 February 3. Those talks did not take place.<\/p>\n<p>More than half of the living Israeli hostages freed under the ceasefire \u2014 14 of 25 \u2014 publicly said the resumption of strikes endangered the lives of the remaining hostages still in Gaza.<\/p>\n<p>The Gaza ceasefire architecture contained no explicit \u201cimminent threat\u201d language of the kind that would appear in the Lebanon agreements. Its expiry mechanism served a related structural function: it provided a legal basis for resuming operations without requiring either party to formally declare a violation, while leaving the question of who bore responsibility for the collapse contested and unresolved.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>AGREEMENT TWO: LEBANON, NOVEMBER 2024<\/h3>\n<p>The November 27, 2024 ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon is where the self-defense carve-out language appears explicitly, in the primary text of the agreement.<\/p>\n<p>Clause 4 of the cessation of hostilities document reads: \u201cThese commitments do not preclude either Israel or Lebanon from exercising their inherent right of self-defense, consistent with international law.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A US side letter \u2014 not formally published but reported by Israel\u2019s Channel 12, confirmed by multiple outlets \u2014 went further. It reportedly <a href=\"https:\/\/www.timesofisrael.com\/full-text-the-israel-hezbollah-ceasefire-deal\/\" target=\"_blank\">committed that Israel has the right to act in response to threats from inside Lebanon \u201cin accordance with international law,\u201d<\/a> and that should the terms of the agreement be broken in southern Lebanon, Israel reserves the right to act at any time. The letter was described as giving Israel operational latitude that the public ceasefire text itself did not spell out.<\/p>\n<p>On the question of Hezbollah\u2019s standing: Hezbollah did not sign the agreement. The formal parties were Israel and the Lebanese state. But the record shows Hezbollah was consulted throughout. US envoy Amos Hochstein negotiated in Lebanon with Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who had Hezbollah\u2019s explicit backing. On November 20, Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem approved the deal. Hezbollah was not excluded from this agreement \u2014 it chose not to be a named signatory, while endorsing the terms through the Lebanese state structure. The obligation to prevent Hezbollah from operating south of the Litani River fell on the Lebanese government, not Hezbollah directly, which is the legal architecture a non-state actor agreement typically requires.<\/p>\n<p>Independent monitoring bodies documented the following in the months after the ceasefire took effect.<\/p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nrc.no\/news\/2025\/november\/lebanon-israels-attacks-continue-one-year-into-ceasefire\/\" target=\"_blank\">Norwegian Refugee Council reported<\/a> that UNIFIL documented more than 7,500 Israeli airspace violations and nearly 2,500 ground violations since November 2024 \u2014 what the UN Special Rapporteur called \u201ca total disregard for the ceasefire agreement.\u201d Lebanese authorities reported 331 people killed and 945 injured. More than 13 children were killed. Israel continued to occupy five positions within Lebanese territory in clear breach of the withdrawal terms.<\/p>\n<p>Against that: UNIFIL and OHCHR documented four incidents of projectiles fired from Lebanon toward Israel during the entire ceasefire period \u2014 <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/en\/press-releases\/2025\/10\/un-experts-warn-against-continued-violations-ceasefire-lebanon-and-urge\" target=\"_blank\">none of which resulted in casualties<\/a>. The first documented Hezbollah fire \u2014 two mortar rounds on December 2, 2024 \u2014 was explicitly characterized by Hezbollah as a defensive response to repeated Israeli ceasefire violations by the IDF.<\/p>\n<p>The IDF\u2019s standard framing for each strike was consistent: it was targeting Hezbollah military infrastructure, weapons storage, or personnel that violated the prohibition on armed groups south of the Litani River. Each strike was categorized as enforcement, not aggression. Each was justified by reference to the self-defense carve-out.<\/p>\n<p>An analyst cited by NPR in the first days of the ceasefire identified the core problem precisely. Nicolas Noe observed that <a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2024\/11\/28\/g-s1-36146\/israel-hezbollah-lebanon-ceasefire-middle-east-crisis\" target=\"_blank\">the Israelis would be able to define an \u201coffensive\u201d action on their own terms<\/a>. \u201cIt seems as if we\u2019re just going to continue to see sort of Israeli military strikes in Lebanon in the coming period,\u201d he said, \u201cas they see fit.\u201d That prediction proved accurate. The self-defense clause, with no independent arbitration mechanism for individual strikes, functioned in practice as an open authorization for operational continuity.<\/p>\n<p>In January 2026, Lebanon filed a formal complaint with the UN Security Council, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/1\/26\/lebanon-files-un-complaint-against-israels-daily-ceasefire-violations\" target=\"_blank\">documenting 2,036 Israeli violations of Lebanese sovereignty<\/a> across the final three months of 2025 alone \u2014 542 in October, 691 in November, 803 in December. The Lebanese government called on the Security Council to compel Israeli withdrawal and an end to strikes. Israel has not fully withdrawn. The strikes have not stopped.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>AGREEMENT THREE: THE CURRENT CEASEFIRES, 2026<\/h3>\n<p>The current Lebanon ceasefire \u2014 brokered in April 2026 as part of the broader Iran war diplomacy \u2014 contains the same structural DNA.<\/p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/2026_Israel%E2%80%93Lebanon_ceasefire\" target=\"_blank\">2026 Israel-Lebanon ceasefire text<\/a>, which took effect April 16 for an initial ten-day period since extended by three weeks, reads: \u201cIsrael retains the right to act in self-defense against imminent or ongoing threats, while refraining from offensive military operations in Lebanon.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The language is almost identical to the 2024 agreement\u2019s Clause 4 \u2014 with one addition: the word \u201cimminent.\u201d That word does real legal work. Under international law, imminent threat is one of the narrow conditions that justifies anticipatory self-defense, meaning a state can act before an attack occurs if the threat is genuine, specific, and immediate. What the agreement does not specify is who determines whether a threat meets that threshold, by what evidence, with what review mechanism, and within what timeframe.<\/p>\n<p>The pattern from previous agreements predicts how this will function. The IDF will make that determination unilaterally, in real time, and report it as a defensive action. The monitoring mechanism will receive the report. Lebanon will dispute it. The Security Council will be unable to act.<\/p>\n<p>The Iran ceasefire declared on April 8 introduced an additional complication that illustrates the problem in real time. When Pakistan\u2019s Prime Minister Sharif announced the ceasefire, he said it included \u201cLebanon and elsewhere.\u201d Netanyahu immediately said it did not include Lebanon. The morning after the announcement, the Israeli army continued strikes in Lebanon, issuing a new forced evacuation order near Tyre. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/4\/8\/us-iran-ceasefire-deal-what-are-the-terms-and-whats-next\" target=\"_blank\">King\u2019s College analyst Andreas Krieg<\/a> was blunt: \u201cThe greatest threat to any ceasefire in the region remains Israel,\u201d adding that Israel prefers \u201cambiguous ceasefire\u201d deals that allow it to return to fighting \u201cwhen it feels the situation favours the Israeli army.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>On April 23, Trump announced a three-week extension of the Lebanon ceasefire following Oval Office talks with Israeli and Lebanese envoys \u2014 Hezbollah was not present. The following morning, Israeli forces struck multiple sites across southern Lebanon, killing at least six people. Netanyahu\u2019s statement the same day removed any ambiguity about how Israel interprets the self-defense carve-out in the extended agreement. <a href=\"https:\/\/edition.cnn.com\/2026\/04\/24\/world\/live-news\/iran-war-trump-israel-lebanon\" target=\"_blank\">He said<\/a>: \u201cWe are maintaining full freedom of action against any threat, including emerging ones. We struck yesterday and we struck today.\u201d The ceasefire had been extended less than twenty-four hours earlier. The strikes continued regardless. CNN confirmed the operative language in the extended agreement: Israel is permitted to take \u201call necessary measures in self-defense.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The same language appeared in a different context that same week. When Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil was killed in an Israeli airstrike on April 22 while reporting in southern Lebanon, the Israeli military said it had been responding to an <a href=\"https:\/\/www.opb.org\/article\/2026\/04\/24\/israel-lebanon-ceasefire-extended-amid-tensions-in-hormuz-strait\/\" target=\"_blank\">\u201cimminent threat\u201d<\/a> \u2014 the precise carve-out terminology \u2014 and was reviewing the incident. Press freedom organizations called for an international investigation.<\/p>\n<p>Hezbollah\u2019s documented violations under the current 2026 agreement are more substantial than under the 2024 ceasefire. PBS NewsHour, reporting from southern Lebanon on April 24, confirmed that <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/show\/southern-lebanon-weighs-losses-from-israeli-strikes-as-ceasefire-hangs-by-a-thread\" target=\"_blank\">Hezbollah has claimed responsibility for ten attacks on Israeli troops<\/a> \u2014 both inside Lebanon and in northern Israel \u2014 characterizing each as a response to repeated Israeli violations. The April 21 incident, in which Hezbollah launched rockets and a drone toward northern Israel, is illustrative: Hezbollah said it fired toward a site that had been shelling a Lebanese town, and characterized its action as retaliation for Israeli ceasefire violations. Hezbollah has expressed conditional acceptance of the current ceasefire \u2014 conditioning continued compliance on Israeli military withdrawal from Lebanese territory and cessation of strikes. That conditionality mirrors its posture under the 2024 agreement: willingness to observe terms that Israel is also observing, resistance to a framework in which Israel strikes while Hezbollah is bound.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>THE LEGAL ARCHITECTURE AND ITS LIMITS<\/h3>\n<p>The self-defense right codified in these agreements is grounded in Article 51 of the UN Charter and customary international law. That right is real. No serious legal analysis disputes that states \u2014 and in some interpretations, parties acting in state-like capacities \u2014 may use force to defend against armed attack or its imminent threat.<\/p>\n<p>What international law also requires, and what these agreements do not enforce, is that the exercise of self-defense be subject to necessity and proportionality \u2014 and that it not be used as cover for offensive operations framed defensively. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.lawfaremedia.org\/article\/israel-s-excessive-destruction-in-gaza-violates-international-law\" target=\"_blank\">Scholars writing in Lawfare<\/a> have documented that Israel\u2019s use of force has, in their assessment, gone beyond what is permitted under jus ad bellum proportionality \u2014 not because a self-defense right does not exist, but because the scale and objectives of the operations exceed what the right authorizes.<\/p>\n<p>The monitoring mechanisms in each of these agreements share a structural defect: they require reporting to a committee, which develops procedures, which reports to the Security Council. At no stage does any mechanism have authority to halt a specific strike in real time, or to make a binding ruling that a given operation exceeds the self-defense carve-out. The architecture places self-restraint obligations on Israel with no enforcement lever beyond diplomatic pressure \u2014 which the United States has, in the case of the Gaza ceasefire collapse, explicitly declined to apply.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/en\/press-releases\/2025\/03\/gaza-experts-condemn-israeli-decision-re-open-gates-hell-and-unilaterally\" target=\"_blank\">OHCHR human rights experts<\/a> were direct: \u201cWe are particularly dismayed by the swift endorsement by some States and regional organisations of Israel\u2019s justification to cut off aid to Gaza as a reaction to Hamas\u2019 alleged violations of the ceasefire, while Israel\u2019s numerous infringements of the ceasefire went largely unreported.\u201d<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>APPLYING THE SAME STANDARD<\/h3>\n<p>Equitable analysis requires applying the same framework to each party. When that is done, the picture across three agreements is as follows.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Hamas<\/strong> was a full signatory to the January 2025 Gaza ceasefire. Its documented violations were real. They were coercive \u2014 using hostage timing as leverage \u2014 rather than military. The primary documented violation, the suspension of hostage releases on February 10, was triggered by Israeli humanitarian aid shortfalls that the mediation mechanism subsequently assessed as legitimate grievances. Hamas revoked the suspension after mediators intervened. Its overall conduct during Phase 1 operated within the agreement\u2019s dispute resolution process. Hamas also bore responsibility for the conditions that made the ceasefire\u2019s collapse plausible \u2014 it had not released all living hostages, continued to hold out on Phase 2 terms, and remained an armed governing force in Gaza, which Israel cited as its central justification for declining to enter permanent ceasefire talks.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Hezbollah<\/strong> was not a signatory to either Lebanon agreement, but endorsed both through the Lebanese state structure and was consulted on terms in both cases. Its documented military violations under the November 2024 ceasefire consisted of four projectile incidents over more than a year, none fatal. The first was explicitly characterized by Hezbollah as a response to Israeli violations. Under the current 2026 agreement, Hezbollah has claimed responsibility for ten attacks on Israeli troops \u2014 a more significant record, but one Hezbollah has consistently characterized as reactive. PBS NewsHour\u2019s on-the-ground reporting from southern Lebanon on April 24 corroborated that framing, describing Hezbollah\u2019s attacks as responses to continued Israeli strikes. Hezbollah\u2019s conditional acceptance of both agreements \u2014 compliance contingent on mutual observance \u2014 means its commitment was qualified from the outset, which is itself a form of non-compliance with the unconditional cessation both agreements required.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Israel<\/strong> has been the party with the most documented violations across all three agreements, as measured by independent tracking bodies \u2014 UNIFIL, OHCHR, and Lebanon\u2019s own government complaint filings. Israel\u2019s stated rationale across all three agreements has been consistent: it faces genuine security threats that did not cease when ceasefires were signed, and the self-defense language it negotiated into each agreement permits responses to those threats. That rationale is not invented \u2014 Israel operates in a threat environment that includes armed groups with documented intent and capability to attack Israeli territory and personnel. The documented record shows, however, that Israel has determined unilaterally what qualifies as a threat warranting a response, without reference to the monitoring committees each agreement established. In Gaza, its own senior defense analysts described the March 2025 resumption of strikes as a knowing violation. In Lebanon, UNIFIL documented violations in the thousands while Hezbollah\u2019s documented fire remained in the single digits.<\/p>\n<p>None of this is equivalent to saying that Hamas\u2019s October 7 attacks were justified, that Hezbollah rocket fire is acceptable, or that Israel has no legitimate security interests at stake. The factual record does not require any of those conclusions. It shows that across three agreements, a structural gap \u2014 self-defense rights with no real-time enforcement mechanism \u2014 has produced documented violations by all parties, at scales that differ significantly, under a system that each party has used instrumentally.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<h3>\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW<\/h3>\n<p>The United States helped write, negotiate, or broker all three of these agreements. The side letter accompanying the November 2024 Lebanon ceasefire \u2014 which reportedly confirmed Israel\u2019s right to strike at any time if it determined the terms were being violated \u2014 was a US commitment. The Gaza ceasefire framework was presented to the world by President Biden as the deal he had proposed in May 2024. American officials publicly blamed Hamas for the March 2025 collapse, in language that echoed Israeli government statements, despite the Haaretz account of what the Israeli government had actually decided.<\/p>\n<p>The self-defense carve-out is not an Israeli invention. It reflects genuine international law. But the agreements negotiated with US involvement have consistently failed to include mechanisms capable of adjudicating in real time whether a given strike qualifies \u2014 who has the authority to make that call, by what evidence, and within what timeframe. That absence is not an accident of drafting. It is the architecture. And it is an architecture the United States has helped build across three successive agreements, without resolving the central question each one leaves open: when a party invokes self-defense to continue military operations during a ceasefire, who decides whether that invocation is legitimate \u2014 and what happens if no one can.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><em>Sources: <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.timesofisrael.com\/full-text-the-israel-hezbollah-ceasefire-deal\/\" target=\"_blank\">Times of Israel<\/a><\/em><em> (primary text \u2014 November 2024 Lebanon ceasefire agreement and US side letter reporting, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/peaceagreements.org\" target=\"_blank\">peaceagreements.org<\/a><\/em><em> (primary document \u2014 November 2024 Lebanon ceasefire full text, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.state.gov\/releases\/office-of-the-spokesperson\/2026\/04\/ten-day-cessation-of-hostilities-to-enable-peace-negotiations-between-israel-and-lebanon\" target=\"_blank\">US Department of State<\/a><\/em><em> (primary document \u2014 2026 Israel-Lebanon ceasefire text, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/2026_Israel-Lebanon_ceasefire\" target=\"_blank\">Wikipedia, 2026 Israel-Lebanon ceasefire<\/a><\/em><em> (secondary summary of current agreement terms, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2025\/03\/19\/nx-s1-5332204\/israel-breaks-ceasefire-as-it-strikes-gaza-killing-hundreds\" target=\"_blank\">NPR<\/a><\/em><em> (US \u2014 Gaza ceasefire collapse reporting, Harel quote, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2024\/11\/28\/g-s1-36146\/israel-hezbollah-lebanon-ceasefire-middle-east-crisis\" target=\"_blank\">NPR<\/a><\/em><em> (US \u2014 Lebanon ceasefire analysis and Nicolas Noe quote, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/en\/press-releases\/2025\/03\/gaza-experts-condemn-israeli-decision-re-open-gates-hell-and-unilaterally\" target=\"_blank\">OHCHR<\/a><\/em><em> (UN human rights office \u2014 Gaza ceasefire violation statement, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/en\/press-releases\/2025\/10\/un-experts-warn-against-continued-violations-ceasefire-lebanon-and-urge\" target=\"_blank\">OHCHR<\/a><\/em><em> (UN human rights office \u2014 Lebanon ceasefire violation statement, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nrc.no\/news\/2025\/november\/lebanon-israels-attacks-continue-one-year-into-ceasefire\/\" target=\"_blank\">Norwegian Refugee Council<\/a><\/em><em> (Lebanon \u2014 UNIFIL violation figures, casualty counts, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/1\/26\/lebanon-files-un-complaint-against-israels-daily-ceasefire-violations\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera<\/a><\/em><em> (Qatar, state-funded\/editorially independent \u2014 Lebanon UN complaint filing, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/4\/8\/us-iran-ceasefire-deal-what-are-the-terms-and-whats-next\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera<\/a><\/em><em> (Qatar, state-funded\/editorially independent \u2014 2026 ceasefire terms, Krieg quote, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/edition.cnn.com\/2026\/04\/24\/world\/live-news\/iran-war-trump-israel-lebanon\" target=\"_blank\">CNN<\/a><\/em><em> (US confirmation \u2014 Netanyahu April 24 quote, ceasefire extension terms, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/show\/southern-lebanon-weighs-losses-from-israeli-strikes-as-ceasefire-hangs-by-a-thread\" target=\"_blank\">PBS NewsHour<\/a><\/em><em> (US confirmation \u2014 Hezbollah ten attacks, southern Lebanon ground reporting April 24, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.opb.org\/article\/2026\/04\/24\/israel-lebanon-ceasefire-extended-amid-tensions-in-hormuz-strait\/\" target=\"_blank\">OPB\/AP<\/a><\/em><em> (US \u2014 Amal Khalil killing, IDF imminent threat invocation, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.lawfaremedia.org\/article\/israel-s-excessive-destruction-in-gaza-violates-international-law\" target=\"_blank\">Lawfare<\/a><\/em><em> (legal analysis \u2014 jus ad bellum proportionality, confirmed this session)<\/em><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><em>\u201cWhenever the people are well informed, they can be trusted with their own government.\u201d \u2014 Thomas Jefferson, 1789<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>April 25, 2026 THE CEASEFIRE CLAUSE Self-Defense Carve-Outs, Ceasefire Violations, and Who Gets to Decide On the morning of November 27, 2024, a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon went into effect at 4 a.m. local time. Hours later, Israeli forces fired on civilians returning to their homes in the southern Lebanese town of Khiam. The [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_oxygen_hide_in_design_set":false,"_oxygen_tags":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[143],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-483","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-patreon"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/483","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=483"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/483\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=483"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=483"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=483"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}