FIUGGI, Italy — Foreign ministers from the world's leading industrialized nations expressed cautious optimism Monday about possible progress on a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah.
The top diplomats met for the final time before a new U.S. administration takes office with wars raging in the Mideast and Ukraine.
''Knock on wood,'' Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said as he opened the Group of Seven meeting outside Rome. ''We are perhaps close to a ceasefire in Lebanon," he said. "Let's hope it's true and that there's no backing down at the last-minute.''
A ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon was foremost on the agenda of the G7 meeting in Fiuggi, outside Rome, that gathered ministers from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States, in the last G7 encounter of the Biden administration.
For the first time, the G7 ministers were joined by their counterparts from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, the so-called ''Arab Quintet,'' as well as the Secretary General of the Arab League.
''Everyone favors a ceasefire in both scenarios,'' Tajani told reporters, adding that Italy had offered to take on an even greater peacekeeping role in Lebanon to oversee any ceasefire deal.
As the ministers arrived in Italy, Israel's ambassador to the U.S., Mike Herzog, told Israeli Army Radio on Monday a ceasefire deal to end fighting between Israel and the Lebanon-based Hezbollah could be reached ''within days.''
Several Arab ministers reiterated calls for a ceasefire in both Lebanon and Gaza during a G7-affiliated conference in Rome.