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European Tech Sovereignty
13APR

US: ban Hezbollah or Lebanon faces alone

3 min read
17:09UTC

The United States declared the November 2024 ceasefire over and told Lebanon it will make no distinction between Hezbollah and the Lebanese state unless Beirut designates the group a terrorist organisation — a demand that requires Lebanon to confront a force its army cannot defeat.

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Key takeaway

The ultimatum reframes Hezbollah's attacks as Lebanese state aggression, creating US political cover for Israeli strikes on Lebanese government infrastructure regardless of how far Beirut goes to comply.

The United States informed Lebanon that the November 2024 ceasefire is formally over and that Washington will not intervene to prevent Israeli military operations unless Beirut designates Hezbollah a terrorist organisation. The ultimatum's terms are binary: comply, or the US treats Hezbollah and the Lebanese state as indistinguishable.

Lebanon's government has moved further against Hezbollah than any of its predecessors. Prime Minister Nawaf Salam declared an immediate ban on all Hezbollah security and military activities and publicly called Hezbollah's attack on Israel "irresponsible and suspicious" — breaking with decades of deliberate ambiguity. The Justice Minister ordered the public prosecutor to arrest those who fired at Israel. These are unprecedented steps in Lebanon's post-civil-war politics, where successive governments maintained the fiction that Hezbollah's arsenal was a legitimate extension of national defence.

The question is whether Lebanon's security forces can execute what its politicians have ordered. The Lebanese Armed Forces have approximately 80,000 active personnel. Hezbollah's fighting strength is estimated at 30,000 to 50,000, with years of combat experience in Syria, an independent command structure, and an arsenal that includes precision-guided missiles. When Hezbollah last faced a domestic challenge — in May 2008, after the Siniora government attempted to shut down its telecommunications network — the group seized West Beirut in hours. The Lebanese Army stood aside.

The American demand arrives as Israel escalates. Israel declared "no immunity" for Hezbollah political figures and civilian supporters , named Secretary-General Naim Qassem as an elimination target , and mobilised reservists for an offensive campaign . Mohammad Raad, head of Hezbollah's parliamentary bloc, was reportedly killed in strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs that left 31 dead and 149 wounded , .

Washington is asking Beirut to designate as a terrorist organisation a group that Israel is simultaneously attempting to destroy — while offering no security guarantees for a Lebanese state that would, by complying, make itself Hezbollah's primary domestic adversary.

The 1989 Taif Agreement that ended Lebanon's civil war required all militias to disarm. Every group did except Hezbollah, which maintained its arsenal under the justification of resistance against Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon. Thirty-seven years later, the US is demanding Lebanon enforce a disarmament the international community brokered but never implemented — with no new resources, no security umbrella, and a military imbalance that favours the group it is being told to confront.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US is telling Lebanon's government: Hezbollah has been firing on Israel from your territory, and if you do not formally declare them terrorists and arrest those responsible, we will treat it as if Lebanon itself attacked Israel — meaning Israel could bomb Lebanese army bases, government ministries, and ports, not just Hezbollah strongholds, and Washington will not try to stop it. The problem is that Lebanon's government may genuinely want to comply but physically cannot arrest thousands of heavily armed Hezbollah fighters without starting a civil war, so the ultimatum places Lebanon in a trap it cannot escape through political will alone.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The ultimatum effectively outsources the Israeli–Hezbollah conflict to Lebanon's domestic political system, using existential military threat as the lever that eighteen years of UN resolutions and national dialogue could not provide. The structural problem — identical to Washington's post-2001 demand that Islamabad choose sides against the Taliban — is that the coerced state may lack capacity to deliver, meaning compliance theatre substitutes for actual disarmament and the justification for continued strikes remains permanently available to Israel.

Root Causes

UNSC Resolution 1701 (2006) required Hezbollah's disarmament south of the Litani river but was never enforced by UNIFIL or the Lebanese Armed Forces, allowing Hezbollah to rearm to a capacity that now exceeds the state's ability to challenge. Lebanon's Taif Agreement power-sharing architecture requires cross-confessional consensus for major security decisions, making unilateral action against the Shiite armed bloc politically suicidal for any coalition government without the cover of irresistible external pressure — which is precisely the pressure the US ultimatum now provides.

Escalation

The ultimatum's binary structure — full compliance or undifferentiated targeting — eliminates graduated response options. Because Lebanon demonstrably cannot achieve full disarmament, Israel retains permanent residual justification for strikes on state targets regardless of Beirut's good-faith efforts. This locks in escalation unless Washington explicitly accepts symbolic compliance as sufficient, which the ultimatum's wording does not permit.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The formal voiding of the November 2024 ceasefire removes the last diplomatic guardrail on Israeli operations in Lebanon, granting de facto US endorsement for strikes on Lebanese state infrastructure.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Lebanon's structural inability to achieve full disarmament creates a permanent residual justification for Israeli escalation that no Lebanese government action can fully extinguish.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    If Israel strikes Lebanese state targets under US cover, Iran's calculation about escalating against additional Gulf or regional actors is altered — Lebanon becomes a new front reinforcing Iran's multi-theatre strategy.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Washington has publicly conditioned ceasefire protection on counter-terrorism compliance — a template potentially applicable to other US partners hosting armed groups in future conflicts.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #11 · Qatar's LNG dark; Trump eyes ground troops

NBC News· 2 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
US: ban Hezbollah or Lebanon faces alone
The ultimatum collapses the diplomatic framework that ended the 2024 Lebanon war and demands Lebanon take an enforcement action — designating and confronting Hezbollah — that its 80,000-strong army has never been able to execute against a 30,000–50,000-strong militia with combat experience and an independent arsenal.
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