Still no word from Israel on ceasefirepublished at 02:41 BST
Daniel De Simone
Reporting from Jerusalem
There has been no official response yet from Israel to the ceasefire announcement by the US and Iran.
It is unclear how involved Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in the decision-making by Donald Trump.
Pakistan's prime minister Shehbaz Sharif, who has been negotiating between the US and Iran, has said the ceasefire includes Lebanon, where Israel has a ground force.
Israel’s leadership has been stating they will not leave Lebanon until the threat from Hezbollah has been removed.
There is no indication from Israel that it has agreed to halt its operations in Lebanon, or elsewhere.
It is unlikely that Netanyahu will be able to claim victory in the same way the US and Iran have.
In a speech announcing the war on 28 February, he said: "The goal of the operation is to put an end to the threat from the Ayatollah regime in Iran" and that "this operation will continue as long as necessary".
As things stand, the Iranian military is still able to pose a threat and the government is very much in place.
Even as I write, there have been missile alerts and the sound of explosions here in Jerusalem, with the Israel Defense Forces saying multiple missiles were fired from Iran.
Netanyahu seems to have overestimated the ability of Israel and US to defeat the Iranian military and bring about a change of system.
An end to the war, if it is based on the "10-point proposal from Iran" that Trump referenced today, will be widely seen as a strategic success for Tehran.
It is possible that far-right members of Netanyahu's cabinet will reject any ceasefire agreement or end to the war, particularly if it does include Lebanon, creating a political challenge for him in an election year.









