State Department Publishes the Lebanon Compliance Text
X doubts paper ceasefires while MSM calls it diplomacy; the State text gives readers exact Lebanon checkpoints to audit.
The news. The narrative. The timeline.
X doubts paper ceasefires while MSM calls it diplomacy; the State text gives readers exact Lebanon checkpoints to audit.
MSM treats Kuwait as escalation; X sees video proof, but the passenger terminal now belongs inside the war-powers record.
MSM gives a damage ledger and X turns it into victory or humiliation; the authorization story now has site-level receipts.
MSM has deal descriptions and X has betrayal theories; readers still lack the returned draft that would make settlement claims testable.
MSM has a Lebanon text while X doubts the ground, but the map problem is whether pilot zones answer Beaufort at all.
The government text is real; X's strongest doubt is also real: Hezbollah is named by the deal but not signed to it.
The Lebanon text gives governments milestones, but it still leaves Tyre's civilian-harm account outside the signed record.
X has a legal-escalation claim; the paper has no fetched ICC filing, organizer legal document, or institutional page to print it as a result.