US ‘pressuring’ Lebanese leadership to isolate Hezbollah, Amal Movement & allies

The US has been hindering efforts aimed at the formation of a new government in Lebanon by “pressuring” the country’s top echelons to restrict the influence of the popular resistance movement Hezbollah and its allies in the upcoming cabinet, according to a report.

Five unnamed sources, quoted by Reuters, said US officials have passed on messages to Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Nawaf Salam and to President Joseph Aoun to limit Hezbollah’s sway over the country’s sectarian politics.

“Washington is pressuring top Lebanese officials not to allow Hezbollah or its allies to nominate the country’s next finance minister,” they said.

“US officials have passed on messages to Salam and to Lebanese President Joseph Aoun that Hezbollah should not be included in the next cabinet.”

According to the report, US-Lebanese businessman Massaad Boulos, appointed by US President Donald Trump as an advisor on affairs in the West Asia region, is one of those who have been conveying the messages.

Three other sources said that Salam allowing Hezbollah or its ally, the Amal Movement, to nominate a finance minister will “hurt Lebanon’s chances of accessing foreign funds” for efforts to rebuild areas of the country ravaged by Israel’s indiscriminate and destructive war.

Amal Movement MP confirmed the US pressure on Beirut-based Al-Akhbar daily newspaper and called it “extremely impudent.”

Recent reports said that Lebanese Parliament Speaker and Amal Movement leader Nabih Berri had decided to nominate Yassin Jaber, a former minister close to his party, as finance minister.

The tug-of-war over the finance minister and some other cabinet members has sparked political tensions in Lebanon, with the Christian Lebanese Forces Party – a staunch opponent of Hezbollah – threatening to boycott the government if Hezbollah and Amal name that minister and other key positions.

The process of forming a government often takes considerable time due to Lebanon’s political and social complexities as Lebanon’s power-sharing system designates state positions on a sectarian basis, with the presidency going to a Maronite Christian, the premiership to a Sunni Muslim and the speaker of parliament to a Shia Muslim.

Army Commander General Joseph Aoun was elected by the Lebanese parliament last month as head of state ending over two years of political vacuum since President Michel Aoun left office in October 2022.

His election has raised hopes of lifting the war-battered eastern Mediterranean country out of the economic crisis.

PressTV report

The Western-backed fractions openly discrimate against Hezbollah & Amal, and with this, the entire Shiite hemisphere.

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea on the new government formation:


• “Under the current circumstances, we would exceptionally accept appointing a Shiite figure to the Finance Ministry—provided they are not affiliated with the Shiite duo.”

• “Yassin Jaber is an honorable, transparent friend, but who proposed him? Will he have the freedom to act? Are there no other qualified names in the Shiite community?”

The Amal Movement and Hezbollah bid farewell to the martyrs of the Deir Qanoun Ras al-Ain massacre in a mass funeral in the city of Tyre. In total, fourteen people were killed in an Israeli attack in Deir Qanoun; seven of them were paramedics. Targeting medical staff and rescue teams is a war crime.
Threads.net  AA report