YES. The current Israeli-Lebanese border (as of 2016) was the border that was operative in the 1980s. However, from 1982-2000 Israel maintained a military occupation of the southernmost parts of Lebanon. These regions were never annexed to Israel, Israeli settlers were not permitted to settle there, and Lebanese inhabitants were never evicted.
(It is worthwhile to note that there is a slight difference in the location of Israeli-Lebanese border as concerns the town of Ghajar, but aside from this, it is the same border today as in 1980.)
Yes.
No countries share a border with Israel except Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt.
Yes
Syria and Israel theoretically share a border, but they are separated by the UNDOF forces which occupy a no-man's land between them. However, Syria and Israel both border Jordan and Lebanon. In the case of Lebanon, there is no land border with any nation other than Syria or Israel.
YES. The Israeli-Lebanese border is a specific border that has been charted by the United Nations as the BLUE LINE.
Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt share a land border with Israel. Also the Mediterranean Sea, the earth's atmosphere, and the Palestinian territories, although none of these are countries.
Israel is bordered by the countries of Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan, and by the Gaza Strip ... originally part of Egypt and now run by Hamas ... and the West Bank ... originally a part of Jordan and now run by the PLO.
no
The countries that share international boundaries with Israel are Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt.
Jordan does not border the Mediterranean, as it is east of Israel. It has a short coastline on the Gulf of Aqaba, which is an inlet of the Red Sea.
Nope - but it does share a border with Jordan.
Lebanon and Palestine
The countries that share international boundaries with Israel are Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Egypt.