Current sectionMiddle East NewsThe U.S. vice president also announced a new mechanism involving Israel, Hezbollah and Lebanon aimed at preventing renewed fighting along the northern borderShare to FacebookShare to XArticle printing is available to subscribers onlyPrint in a simple, ad-free formatSubscribeComments: Zen reading is available to subscribers onlyAd-free and in a comfortable reading formatSubscribe04:04 PM • June 22 2026 IDTBÜRGENSTOCK – U.S. Vice President JD Vance said on Monday that Israel, Hezbollah, Lebanon and other regional actors will participate in a newly established deconfliction mechanism aimed at preventing renewed escalation along Israel's northern border. He also revealed that Iran had agreed to allow international nuclear inspectors back into the country.CommentsIn the NewsAlan Greenspan, Longtime U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman, Dies Aged 100Qatar, Pakistan Announce Lebanon 'Deconfliction Cell', With No Mention of IsraelRecognizing Palestine, Sanctioning Settlers: Keir Starmer's Legacy on IsraelIsrael Lifts All Restrictions in North, May Discuss Limited Lebanon WithdrawalHaaretz CartoonRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIIsrael Is Conducting a Systematic Campaign of Ethnic Cleansing in the West BankNetanyahu's Mouthpieces Turn on Trump, Revealing a Deeper Israeli IngratitudeIsrael Is Bleeding Support in U.S. and Pouring Tens of Millions to Change ThatWhere Does Andy Burnham Stand on Israel and Palestine?Report: Netanyahu 'Likely' to Sabotage Iran Deal, U.S. Officials Tell TrumpTrump's Iran Deal Castrates Netanyahu, but It's Still Catastrophic for Israel
JD Vance: Tehran agreed to allow UN nuclear inspectors back into Iran
The U.S. vice president also announced a new mechanism involving Israel, Hezbollah and Lebanon aimed at preventing renewed fighting along the northern border
Iran agrees to UN nuclear inspectors; Israel-Hezbollah deconfliction mechanism aims to prevent northern border escalation. Geopolitical de-escalation lowers risk on Middle East tech infrastructure and AI projects; nuclear diplomacy reset may ease tech partnerships.













