Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said on Monday that planned talks with Israel aim to end hostilities and the occupation in southern Lebanon, even as Hezbollah and its supporters rejected the negotiations.

Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah has sharply criticised the Lebanese government’s negotiations with Israel, which are set to enter a second round on Thursday.

After the first round of talks last week, US President Donald Trump announced a 10-day truce pausing more than six weeks of war between Hezbollah and Israel, an explosive front in the broader war in the Middle East.

Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah told Agence France-Presse it was in Aoun’s and Lebanon’s “interest” to withdraw from the talks, however adding that his group also wanted the ceasefire to last.

New talks between Lebanon’s and Israel’s US ambassadors will take place on Thursday in Washington, a US State Department official told Agence France-Presse, after the first direct talks between the two countries in decades were held on April 14.

But Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) reported an Israeli drone strike in Qaqaiyat al-Jisr in the country’s south on Monday and Israeli artillery shelling on the border town of Hula.

The Lebanese health ministry said six people were wounded in Qaqaiyat al-Jisr.

We negotiate for ourselves … we are no longer a pawn in anyone’s game, nor an arena for anyone’s wars, and we never will be again

Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun

Israel’s army said in a statement that soldiers “identified terrorists” in the Bint Jbeil and Litani areas of southern Lebanon “who violated the ceasefire understandings”, adding that the air force “eliminated” them.

The NNA also reported Israeli army “detonations … in parallel with extensive demolition” operations in Mais al-Jabal, decrying “the systematic destruction impacting homes and livelihoods, buildings and infrastructure” in the town and several other border villages.

Fadlallah told Agence France-Presse that “it is in the interest of Lebanon, the president of the republic and the government to move away from the path of direct negotiation and return to a national understanding about the best option for Lebanon”.

“Perhaps through indirect negotiations, even via the United States of America, we can achieve” Lebanon’s goals, Fadlallah said.

Aoun said the aim of negotiations was to “stop hostilities, end the Israeli occupation of southern regions and deploy the [Lebanese] army all the way to the internationally recognised southern borders”.

Fadlallah said regional powers including Iran, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have worked to build a US-Iran diplomatic track, creating “a regional umbrella that can provide a kind of guarantee for Lebanon. Going into direct bilateral negotiations, alone, amid deep Lebanese divisions and internal disagreements, constitutes a threat to internal consensus”.

Aoun on Friday had said “we negotiate for ourselves … we are no longer a pawn in anyone’s game, nor an arena for anyone’s wars, and we never will be again”.

Tehran had insisted that a Lebanon truce was among its conditions for a ceasefire with Washington in the Middle East war.

On the road to Beirut airport, in the southern suburbs where Hezbollah holds sway, Agence France-Presse images showed fresh graffiti attacking Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam following their endorsement of negotiations.

“Joseph is a traitor, Nawaf is a turncoat,” said one spray-painted sign.

“Dealing with Israel is forbidden … no to normalisation,” another read.

Hezbollah supporters also heaped scorn on Aoun on social media.

“After all our sacrifices this guy wants to speak for us?” another user posted, with their profile picture showing a photo of Aoun and Salam with the words “they do not represent me”.

Israeli attacks have killed more than 2,300 people in Lebanon and displaced more than one million.

“Any outcome of direct negotiations cannot be imposed on the people who made these sacrifices,” Fadlallah said.

Aoun on Monday named former Lebanese ambassador to Washington Simon Karam to head the negotiations with Israel.

Lebanon has no diplomatic relations with its southern neighbour.

In December, Karam became the first Lebanese civilian representative to directly speak to Israeli representatives in decades, as part of a committee to monitor a 2024 ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah.

Aoun said on Monday that Lebanon faced two options: continuing conflict “or negotiations to put an end to this war and achieve lasting stability”.

“I have chosen negotiations and I am full of hope that we will be able to save Lebanon,” he said.