Michael Young Profile picture
Sep 18, 2020 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
I’m puzzled as to why everyone is saying the French initiative is dead. Yes it looks like blockages everywhere, but the strategic picture is fundamental here. First, whether a government is formed by Adib or not, Lebanon has to form a government anyway today.
So why would Hezbollah do so later and miss the political advantages of doing so under France’s plan? Second, a generalized financial collapse if no deal is struck harms Hezbollah’s strategic interests. It would destabilize Lebanon, weakening the party’s ability to defend Iran.
This is all the more urgent as Israel has just concluded peace deals with the UAE and Bahrain, which would facilitate any Israeli military operation against Iran. Hezbollah cannot afford to be neutralized domestically in such a volatile regional context.
It’s virtually certain that Hezbollah will get the Finance Ministry. The French approved of this. All that most Lebanese parties, including several Hezbollah allies, are asking for is its acceptance of the principle of a rotation of portfolios. Can the Shia parties reject this?
Can the Shia parties bring the Lebanese house down and create a domestic situation that would effectively be a boon to Israel, all to impose the idea that the Finance Ministry has to remain indefinitely in Shia hands? I don’t think so.
We’re still in the midst of a strategy of brinksmanship by Hezbollah and Amal. They want more. But the idea that the French plan is dead makes little sense to me, especially when Hezbollah and the French believe that U.S. sanctions were aimed at undermining the French initiative.
Internally, the Shia parties are isolated in their position. If Aoun were to accept Adib’s government and push it to parliament, a majority could probably vote for it. No one wants to approve of a government without Shia backing, but the numbers may be there.
But domestic isolation is not where Hezbollah wants to be at a time of major regional change that threatens Iran. It cannot afford a conflict with Israel if most Lebanese parties disagree with its position. That is why there may be movement on the government in the coming days.
This analysis may be mistaken. Some have cited Haniyeh’s presence in Lebanon as a sign of Iranian opposition to the French plan. Maybe, but if so Iran has created a new reality that will please Israel. Hezbollah will be isolated domestically and neutralized in a war with Israel.

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More from @BeirutCalling

Oct 26, 2023
What seems to be happening (I could be wrong) is that the U.S. is slow walking Israel away from a full Gaza invasion, because they don't feel it will work, its objectives are unclear, civilian deaths will turn opinion against the U.S. and Israel, and it may spur a regional war.
First, the Americans asked for a delay to negotiate hostage releases. That's still on, but Netanyahu yesterday added a second U.S. request: time to allow the U.S. to reinforce its positions in the Middle East in the event of a regional war.
Netanyahu is going along with this, which suggests to me he has second thoughts about an invasion, because he is uncertain it will succeed and mistrusts the military. That is the gist of Amos Harel's important article yesterday: haaretz.com/israel-news/20…
Read 5 tweets
Oct 20, 2023
I think the Biden adm. behaved brilliantly in the latest round of fighting in Gaza. While it was blamed in the Arab world for embracing Israel and arming it, something else was afoot. The tight embrace was a way of containing the Israeli response and avoiding a regional war.
It appears that from the start an indirect channel was opened to Iran, as per Jake Sullivan’s remarks, via the Omanis. The Iranians set entry into Gaza as a red line, which the U.S. likely used as leverage over Israel.
In parallel, the U.S. reassured Israel with the two aircraft carriers, in such a way as to contain any overreaction, by saying “We have your back.” This also served Biden for the elections next year, where he will surely win a significant share of votes from Israel’s supporters.
Read 9 tweets
Jun 9, 2023
The Saudi-Iran deal was a blow for Hezbollah, as it meant the party's role as an instrument in regional rivalries with the Arab world would be curbed. So, Hezbollah had to reinvent itself and refocus on another role, and this was, of course, Israel.
The first sign of this, though it was preceded by many months of contacts with Hamas and Islamic Jihad, was the rocket attack against Israel a few weeks ago, amid talk of a unification of the fronts between the Golan, Lebanon, and Gaza.
Meanwhile, in Lebanon, Hezbollah was looking for a president who would "defend" this resistance option, and decided that Franjieh was that man. The only problem, as always, is that Hezbollah was indifferent to the rules of Lebanon's sectarian reality.
Read 9 tweets
Dec 14, 2022
Gebran Bassil is in Qatar in what appears to be another step in reaching a presidential compromise over the army commander, Joseph Aoun. There are still things that must fall into place for a consensus to emerge, but if Bassil is in Qatar, negotiations have effectively started.
This leads me to think of an important outcome of the Michel Aoun-Bassil tandem, though both men have been disasters. Franjieh's prospects appear to be diminishing by the day, largely because he has little support in his community, a condition the tandem made possible.
Whatever one thinks of Michel Aoun, he reshaped perceptions of the presidency, against the way it was dealt with in the period between the end of the war and Aoun's election. Until 2016, the Christians had a relatively minor say in who became president. That's no longer true.
Read 14 tweets
May 16, 2022
Some preliminary thoughts on the election results in Lebanon. First, I think it’s useful to look at what happened in a regional context. The importance of the local results notwithstanding, what matters is how the elections might affect Hezbollah’s agenda in Lebanon.
Since 2006, the party had managed to impose a consensus around its priorities thanks to its alliance with Aoun and its ability to shoehorn Hariri into that consensus. Today, that has broken down. Yes, Lebanon is deeply divided, but that division is also an obstacle to Hezbollah.
This is bad news for a unified position on addressing the economic crisis, but it is also bad news for Iran’s ability to control Lebanon without pushback. It has also created a supposedly “sovereignist” pole around which Arab states can act in Lebanon, which Hariri failed to do.
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Mar 27, 2022
We are at a major new juncture in the Middle East, as the revival of the nuclear deal with Iran appears imminent. It’s in this context that we need to understand the UAE’s invitation to Bashar al-Assad and the Gulf states’ decision to send their ambassadors back to Beirut.
By embracing Assad, major Arab states—Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, and Jordan—appear to believe that Syria’s reintegration into the Arab fold is necessary to enhance Arab stakes in Syria and Lebanon, where Iran now dominates.
In the past, Arab states thought they could break Syria off from Iran, but this time the thinking is transactional. They realize that Assad cannot sever ties with Iran, nor does he want to, but he can pursue Syrian interests and regain ground lost to Iran.
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