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EU wants Israel to halt Lebanon strikes. But what’s the plan?

EU Ambassador to Israel Michael Mann urges restraint, rejects sanctions and backs training 3,000 Palestinians for Gaza policing despite Israeli concerns.

Ambassador Michael Mann. Photo credit: Delegation of the European Union to the State of Israel.
Ambassador Michael Mann. Photo credit: Delegation of the European Union to the State of Israel.

(JNS) The European Union has condemned Israel’s strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon in recent weeks, suggesting they were violations of the ceasefire agreement reached last year.

The calls by EU foreign affairs spokesman Anouar el Anouni and others for Israel to stop its strikes—which Jerusalem calls “enforcement” of the ceasefire due to Hezbollah violations—followed threats that the terrorist group would end the armistice.

The United States, which has not condemned Israel’s strikes, appears to be leading a firmer policy on Lebanon than the European Union. Following last week’s posting of Michel Issa, a Christian Lebanese-American businessman, as US ambassador to Lebanon, Washington officials reportedly cancelled all meetings with Lebanese Army Commander Rodolph Haykal during his visit to Washington, in an apparent signal of discontent over the pace of his army’s takeover of southern Lebanon to edge out Hezbollah.

Yet, if Israel doesn’t strike Hezbollah, what does the EU expect or propose that it do about Hezbollah’s well-documented attempts to rebuild its arsenal for targeting and killing Israeli civilians?

To answer this question and others, JNS sat down for a Q&A with the EU’s new ambassador to Israel, Michael Mann, a dual citizen of the United Kingdom and Germany, who assumed the post in September.

Q: Ambassador Mann, we know what the EU does not want Israel to do. What would the EU propose Israel do, as we see Hezbollah replenish its arsenal to kill as many of us as possible?

A: What happened in Lebanon last year—the damage done to Hezbollah by Israel—opened up the path to hopefully reinforcing the institutions of the Lebanese state and its territorial integrity. So we want all sides to respect the ceasefire and deal with any security concerns through the monitoring mechanism set up for that purpose. We urge all parties to not take up arms.

Q: You mentioned hope, but Hezbollah is taking up arms and violating the ceasefire. So is there any game plan that the EU has in mind that would meet Israelis’ security concerns? Should they just accept that?

A: The Lebanese government has said it will assert full state control over all arms and restore the presence of the Lebanese Armed Forces throughout Lebanon. The EU’s basic starting position is to prefer a diplomatic path and mediation rather than military options. We are against any violation of the agreement from any party. And we do recognize Israel’s security concerns in this context. Israel’s security is non-negotiable to us. But any security concerns should be addressed by making full use of the monitoring mechanism established in the framework of the ceasefire agreement.

Destroyed homes in Southern Lebanon, as it seen from the Israeli side of the border, on Oct. 29, 2025. Photo by Ayal Margolin/Flash90.

Q: OK, and if the situation continues? Does the EU envisage any sanctions if the violations and the strikes continue?

A: No sanctions are being discussed in the Lebanese context. Not against Israel, not against Lebanon. In terms of Hezbollah, its military wing is already designated under the EU sanctions regime to combat terrorism, so we already apply sanctions to Hezbollah.

Q: To its military wing.

A: Yes, to its military wing. Measures we took back in 2013 comprise the freezing of assets and also prohibit making economic and financial resources directly or indirectly available to the military wing of Hezbollah. Also, the EU is not party to the ceasefire agreement in Lebanon, so naturally, it’s not something the EU would impose sanctions over.

Q: In recent days we’ve heard reports of an EU plan to train police officers to serve in Gaza. Can you elaborate on this subject?

A: Yes, the plan to train 3,000 police officers for Gaza exists. We already have this program for training police in the West Bank, as part of justice reform in the Palestinian Authority, but we’re now suggesting to train some 3,000 Palestinian officers from and for Gaza.

Palestinians walk past buildings destroyed in the recent war, in the Jorat al-Luth area, located between Rafah and Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 10, 2025. Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90.

Q: How will they be vetted?

A: We wouldn’t be vetting them. Potential police officers have to be vetted by Israel and the US, potentially in one of the countries of the region, and only those vetted and deemed suitable would be working in Gaza.

Q: Finally, we have at least two EU member states, Spain and Ireland, that have joined the genocide allegations against Israel at the International Court of Justice. How does the EU view this fact?

A: It is not an EU position; there is no EU position on this. The EU has 27 member states; they have sovereignty and individual views. The EU supports the international legal system and leaves this issue to the court.

Q: So these two EU member states accused Israel of genocide, and the EU doesn’t have a position about the allegation or the fact they made it?

A: The EU doesn’t have a view on this. Individual states may, but the EU does not. Establishing whether international crimes, including genocide, have been committed is the competence of national courts and international tribunals.

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About the author

Patrick Callahan

This is an example of author bio/description. Beard fashion axe trust fund, post-ironic listicle scenester. Uniquely mesh maintainable users rather than plug-and-play testing procedures.

One response to “EU wants Israel to halt Lebanon strikes. But what’s the plan?”

  1. David Adeola says:

    How come they never learn from History?? I hope Israel doesn’t listen to these fools who have absolutely no clue about the Middle East. Israel must finish the job in Lebanon and Gaza to have at least a bit of respite for security.

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