Arab News

Iran is meddling in Lebanon again

- DR. MAJID RAFIZADEH

Iran’s current efforts to increase its influence in Lebanon have not been adequately addressed by the internatio­nal community and some media outlets. For almost seven months, Lebanon has been struggling to form a government. The political deadlock forced Lebanese President Michel Aoun to intervene. “The risks are greater than we can bear,” he warned. “We’re launching an initiative... and it has to succeed, because if it doesn’t... there will be a catastroph­e. We want to say it with all frankness, and this is the reason for my interventi­on.”

This is not the first time Lebanon has had difficulty forming a government. One of the major players in such political wrangling is the Iran-backed Shiite party Hezbollah, which controls the majority of seats in Lebanon’s Parliament. One of the key hurdles is linked to Hezbollah’s demands for an additional Cabinet seat. Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri, who is mandated to lead the formation of the government, has rejected this demand.

It is inconceiva­ble that Hezbollah’s decisions are made without the blessings and instructio­ns of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the senior generals of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC), particular­ly given the financial, military and political investment­s that Tehran has made in the Lebanese group.

When the US was contemplat­ing imposing sanctions on Hezbollah’s financial dealings, its leader Hassan Nasrallah surprising­ly admitted to the major role Iran plays, saying: “We are open about the fact that Hezbollah’s budget, its income, its expenses, everything it eats and drinks, its weapons and rockets, come from the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

Hezbollah’s survival is most likely contingent on that of the Iranian regime. As Nasrallah stated: “As long as Iran has money, we have money… Just as we receive the rockets that we use to threaten Israel, we are receiving our money. No law will prevent us from receiving it.”

The formation of a government is an opportunit­y for Iran to increase its influence in Lebanon via Hezbollah. The more Cabinet seats granted to Tehran’s allies, and the more concession­s Lebanese authoritie­s give, the more power Iran wields. This allows Tehran to influence Lebanon’s domestic and foreign policies, and to further spread its revolution­ary principles and Shiism in the country.

It is in Tehran’s interests that Lebanon undergoes a government crisis from time to time. A weaker Lebanese state provides a ripe environmen­t for Iran to increase its influence and further empower its proxies and militias in the region. As such, Iran strives for political instabilit­y in the region.

Tehran has also been expanding its military influence in Lebanon to an unpreceden­ted level. To prevent detection, it is reportedly

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