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6JUL

Lebanon bans all Hezbollah military ops

3 min read
09:52UTC

Lebanon's prime minister declared all Hezbollah military activities illegal and ordered the group's weapons surrendered — the first time a Lebanese head of government has directly challenged the armed faction that has operated as the country's dominant military force for over two decades.

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Key takeaway

Salam's declaration is diplomatically transformative but operationally unenforceable without external military backing, and every prior attempt to assert Lebanese state sovereignty over Hezbollah has ended with the government retreating.

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam announced an immediate ban on all Hezbollah security and military activities, declaring them illegal under Lebanese law. He ordered Hezbollah to surrender its weapons and directed security services to prevent further missile or drone launches from Lebanese territory and to detain those responsible.

No Lebanese leader has gone this far since the 1989 Taif Agreement, which ended the fifteen-year civil war and called for the disarmament of all militias. Every government since has either accommodated Hezbollah's arsenal — justified as "resistance" against Israeli occupation — or proved too weak to challenge it. UN Security Council Resolution 1559, passed in 2004, explicitly demanded the disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias. It was never enforced. In May 2008, when the government moved to shut down Hezbollah's private telecommunications network, the group seized west Beirut in a matter of hours — a demonstration that no Lebanese faction could match.

The enforcement gap is immediate. The Lebanese Armed Forces field roughly 80,000 troops with limited heavy armour and no combat air capability. Hezbollah maintains an estimated 30,000-plus fighters with extensive combat experience from Syria, an independent signals network, and a missile arsenal Israel has spent months trying to degrade. The LAF has never attempted direct confrontation with Hezbollah. Salam's order asks the army to do what it has avoided for a generation.

The political calculation may not depend on immediate enforcement. Israel has declared Hezbollah's attacks an "official declaration of war" and struck Beirut's southern suburbs, killing 31 and wounding 149 . Mohammad Raad, head of Hezbollah's parliamentary bloc, was reportedly killed in those strikes . Hezbollah is absorbing sustained Israeli military pressure while its political infrastructure is being dismantled.

Salam's declaration positions Lebanon's government on the opposite side of the conflict from Hezbollah at the moment of the group's greatest vulnerability. If Hezbollah emerges from this war weakened — as it did not after 2006 — the declaration provides the legal framework for a post-war order that excludes it as an armed actor. If Hezbollah survives intact, the declaration is a document with no army behind it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Lebanon's prime minister has done something legally bold but practically very difficult: he has told Hezbollah — a heavily armed group with more fighters and firepower than the Lebanese army — that it must stop military operations and hand over its weapons. The Lebanese government has never successfully forced Hezbollah to disarm, and two decades of UN resolutions demanding the same have sat unenforced. The declaration matters as a political signal — especially to international donors and Arab states — but the Lebanese Armed Forces almost certainly cannot physically enforce it, and attempting to do so risks triggering the kind of domestic armed confrontation that paralysed Lebanon in 2008.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The declaration's primary strategic function may be external rather than domestic: it provides a legal basis for foreign partners to directly assist Lebanese security forces against Hezbollah, potentially unlocks suspended Saudi and Gulf financial transfers conditioned on Hezbollah restraint, and strips the diplomatic ambiguity that previously complicated Israeli operations in southern Lebanon by reframing those strikes as enforcement of Lebanese sovereign authority.

Root Causes

The Ta'if Agreement's confessional power-sharing formula institutionalised Hezbollah as a legitimate political actor with effective veto power over security decisions, making disarmament contingent on Hezbollah's own consent. Lebanon's post-2019 economic collapse has cut Lebanese Armed Forces salaries to near-subsistence levels, degrading unit cohesion and the institutional will required to enforce orders against a well-funded adversary with deeper local legitimacy in the south.

Escalation

The declaration creates a binary that structurally favours escalation: Hezbollah compliance would be historically unprecedented, while open defiance — the more probable response — hands Israel and the US a narrative framing Israeli operations in Lebanon as support for Lebanese sovereign authority, reducing diplomatic costs for intensified strikes.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If Hezbollah publicly defies the ban, Lebanon acquires a legal and political basis to request direct foreign military assistance — fundamentally changing the international legal framing of any future Lebanese-Israeli operational coordination.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Hezbollah could respond with enforcement actions against Lebanese state institutions, political figures, or LAF units perceived as compliant with Salam's order, triggering a domestic armed confrontation that opens an internal front alongside the external one.

    Immediate · Suggested
  • Precedent

    This is the first formal Lebanese government declaration that Hezbollah's military activities are illegal — a threshold that, once crossed, permanently redefines the constitutional basis for any future Lebanese government's relationship with the group.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    The declaration creates a credible trigger for resumed Gulf state financial support for Lebanon contingent on enforcement progress, offering Beirut economic leverage it has lacked since the 2020 default.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

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Lebanon bans all Hezbollah military ops
Salam's declaration breaks 35 years of Lebanese governmental accommodation toward Hezbollah's armed wing. Whether the Lebanese Armed Forces can enforce the ban against a force that seized west Beirut in hours in 2008 is an open question, but the declaration's strategic value may lie in positioning Lebanon for a post-war political order rather than in immediate disarmament.
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