Search
Search

BORDER WITH ISRAEL

US envoy Hochstein in Lebanon next week with maritime deal to sign

The deal's text lays out that Lebanon and Israel independently inform Washington of their approval of the deal

US envoy Hochstein in Lebanon next week with maritime deal to sign

US envoy Amos Hochstein in Beirut. (Credit: Anwar Amro/AFP)

BEIRUT — US energy envoy Amos Hochstein will be in Beirut next week carrying a copy of the maritime agreement with Israel for Lebanese officials to sign, Lebanese negotiator Elias Bou Saab told Reuters on Wednesday.

The deal— hailed by all three parties as a historic achievement — marks a diplomatic departure from decades of war and hostility and once in force will open the door to offshore energy exploration.

"Hochstein will be in Beirut next week with the agreement that we will sign," Bou Saab said. He did not say when the deal would be signed.

Read also:

France, the other mediator in the maritime deal

The text, seen by Reuters, lays out that the two sides independently inform Washington of their approval of the deal. The United States will then send a notice to each that the deal has entered into force, and the signatories then send the coordinates for the new border to the United Nations. 

A traditional signing protocol with leaders from both countries present is unlikely given that Israel and Lebanon remain technically in a state of war.

Read also:

Looped in 'line by line': Hezbollah shows pragmatic side in Lebanon-Israel deal

US envoy Hochstein told a webinar hosted by the Middle East Institute on Tuesday he would be traveling to the region next week but did not give dates or destinations.

"The President of Lebanon and Prime Minister of Israel will decide on the signing. Stay tuned in the next few days," Hochstein said.

Reporting by Maya Gebeily; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel

BEIRUT — US energy envoy Amos Hochstein will be in Beirut next week carrying a copy of the maritime agreement with Israel for Lebanese officials to sign, Lebanese negotiator Elias Bou Saab told Reuters on Wednesday.The deal— hailed by all three parties as a historic achievement — marks a diplomatic departure from decades of war and hostility and once in force will open the door to offshore...