The officials called on Israel to exercise "utmost restraint" and deplored
the destruction of infrastructure in the country.
A new multinational force for southern Lebanon would be far tougher than the
existing, three-decade-old UNIFIL operation which has lacked a mandate to
prevent hostilities.
"What we agreed upon is that there should be an international force under a
U.N. mandate that will have a strong and robust capability to help bring about
peace, to help provide the ability for humanitarian efforts to go forward and to
bring an end to the violence," Rice told reporters.
There was no immediate response from Israel, which did not attend. Israeli
officials have expressed support in principle for the deployment of an
international force, recognizing that the weak Lebanese government could not
likely subdue the Iranian- and Syrian-backed Hezbollah without assistance.
Rice said the force's mandate would be discussed "over the next ... several
days." She added: "We also have asked that those meetings be held urgently so
that force can be put together."
"We all committed to dedicated and urgent action to try to bring about an end
to violence that would be sustainable" and leave the Lebanese government in full
control of its territory, Rice told reporters. She also pointed the finger at
Iran for stoking the violence.
The foreign ministers and other senior officials from 15 nations, as well as
Annan and representatives from the European Union and the World Bank, agreed on
a declaration that expressed "deep concern" for the high number of civilian
casualties in Lebanon, where government officials say hundreds of people have
been killed.
They called on Israel to exercise "utmost restraint," deplored the
destruction of infrastructure in the country, and agreed on a donors' conference
to provide humanitarian aid.
Saniora said the violence has brought his country - still rebuilding
from its 1975-90 civil war - "to its knees."
He recognized that Israel's offensive had been sparked by Hezbollah's
incursion across the "blue line" - the border recognized by the United Nations ¡ª
two weeks ago when it killed eight soldiers and kidnapped two, but added that
the resultant offensive was "disproportionate."
The Western-leaning moderate also appealed to Israel to enter a peace process
with all of its Arab neighbors - striking a markedly different tone from
many previous Lebanese leaders.
In Brussels, European Union officials said a meeting of foreign ministers
would be held Aug. 1 to discuss the violence.