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Why Lebanon can’t be saved A full-scale evacuation might be the only option

A billboard in Beirut shows the faces of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani, and Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr (JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images)

A billboard in Beirut shows the faces of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani, and Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr (JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images)


September 27, 2024   5 mins

In 2018, Henry Kissinger observed that Donald Trump was one of those historical characters who “appears from time to time to mark the end of an era and to force it to give up its old pretences”. The same could be said about last year’s October 7 attacks, the full impact of which we are only now beginning to comprehend.

Before that act of appalling barbarism, the world was strangely optimistic about the future of the Middle East — despite the catastrophic scale of human suffering, millenarian fanaticism and economic collapse that was already evident across the region. The root of the hopefulness could be found in the Abraham Accords, that potentially transformative set of Trump initiatives, the aim of which was — somewhat euphemistically — to “normalise” relations between Israel and some of its Arab enemies. Last September, the great glittering prize of Middle East peace seemed to be in touching distance: Saudi rapprochement with Israel.

The radical idea at the heart of Trump’s plan was that regional peace did not need to wait for “the Palestinian question” to be solved. Instead, that could be put to one side while other grand strategic moves played out. As Mohammed bin Salman “modernised” Saudi with his combination of political repression and social liberalisation, the two great anti-Iranian powers in the region could finally be brought together. A similar assessment was made about Lebanon, a country without a functioning state or economy and at the mercy of Iran’s colonial army, Hezbollah. This, also, was a situation that was thought to be containable — even as Iran exploited the anarchic chaos of Iraq and Syria to supply its proxy with enough weapons to devastate Israel.

The central conceit of the Abraham Accords was that, irrespective of Hamas, Hezbollah and the occupation of the West Bank, once the Israel-Saudi axis was formed, Iran could be pushed back and contained without direct American involvement. But, then, the depth of Hamas’s murderous brutality on 7 October shattered that assumption, leaving not only a traumatised and vulnerable Israel, but also a traumatised and vulnerable Western order forced to confront the stark realities of the Middle East.

Today, Lebanon is a dead state, eaten alive by Hezbollah’s parasitic power. The scale of the catastrophe in the country is hard to comprehend, much of it caused by the disruptive nature of Syria’s civil war. Since its neighbour’s descent into anarchic hell, some 1.5 million Syrians have sought refuge in Lebanon — a tiny country with a population of just 5 million. But, more fundamentally, with Hezbollah fighting to protect Bashar al Assad, the opposing countries — led by Saudi Arabia — began withdrawing funds from Lebanese banks. This sparked a financial crisis that left Lebanon with no money for fuel. 

By spring 2020, the country had defaulted on its debts, sending it into a downward spiral which the World Bank in 2021 described as among “the top 10, possibly top three, most severe crises globally since the mid-nineteenth century”. Lebanon’s GDP plummeted by around a third, with poverty doubling from 42% to 82% in two years. At the same time, the country’s capital, Beirut, was hit by an extraordinary explosion at its port, leaving more than 300,000 homeless. By 2023 the IMF described the situation as “very dangerous” and the US was warning that the collapse of the Lebanese state was “a real possibility”.

With Iranian support, however, Hezbollah created a shadow economy almost entirely separate from this wider collapse. It could escape the energy shortages, while creating its own banks, supermarkets and electricity network. Hezbollah isn’t just a terrorist group. It is a state within a state, complete with a far more advanced army. “They may have plunged Lebanon into complete chaos, but they themselves are not chaotic at all,” as Carmit Valensi, from the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University, told the Jerusalem Post.

Then came 7 October, after which Hezbollah tied its fate to that of the Palestinians, promising to bombard Israel with rockets until the war in Gaza was brought to a close. We have witnessed the frightening scale of its power over the past year, its bombardment forcing some 100,000 Israelis from their homes in Galilee to the safety of the Israeli heartlands around Tel Aviv. For the first time since modern Israel’s creation, the land where Jews are able to live in their own state has shrunk; the rockets are a daily reminder of the country’s extraordinary vulnerability, threatened on all sides by states who actively want it removed from the map — even from history itself. The pretence that the Palestinian and Lebanese questions could be contained, ignored or bypassed as part of a wider grand strategy to contain Iran has been shattered. 

“The pretence that the Palestinian and Lebanese questions could be contained, ignored or bypassed as part of a wider grand strategy to contain Iran has been shattered.”

Israel, of course, has not let Hezbollah’s missile attacks go unpunished, replying with raids on Southern Lebanon which have forced 100,000 to flee their homes for the apparent safety of Beirut and its surroundings. But as Israel escalates the war, the Lebanese population — already impoverished and abandoned — are having to flee again. This fight to the death leaves the 5 million people of Lebanon with nowhere to go, trapped on all sides by anarchy and war. The only escape is by sea — which is controlled by the West.

Any worries that Western forces are once again being “drawn in” are moot — we are already involved. In the days following 7 October, Washington redeployed an aircraft carrier into the Mediterranean to cover Israel’s northern flank which would allow Netenyahu to wage his war in Gaza. Since then, Iran itself has launched a direct rocket attack at Israel, prompting an armada of Western forces to intervene. And in the event of a humanitarian disaster, prompted by an Israeli ground invasion of southern Lebanon, it would fall to Britain, France and the United States to organise the mass evacuation of Lebanese civilians that would be required to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe.

Such is the scale of that impending catastrophe that I am told that David Lammy, our new Foreign Secretary, has spent around a third of his time dealing with an operation so complex that it resembles a full-scale war plan. Because Lebanon borders Syria to its north and east and Israel to its south, the only option for a mass evacuation would be by sea. And the only powers capable of delivering such a mission are the United States, France and Britain — each of whom is currently distracted by its own domestic political dramas. And in each case, the rise of the nationalist Right makes any mass refugee scheme a political nightmare. 

The French government is locked in a particularly acute fiscal crisis; the Biden administration is limping towards its end; and our Starmer government is only just coming to terms with the anti-refugee riots which gripped the country over the summer. No country could easily cope with a mass influx from another war-torn country in the Middle East.

Hence the extraordinary diplomatic push now underway to avert a full scale war. Yesterday, a joint declaration from Britain, France, the United States and Saudi Arabia called for a 21-day ceasefire in Lebanon. Israel, though, quickly rejected its terms: a ceasefire would only leave Hezbollah in place, free to continue growing in strength, armed by Iran, capable of making much of northern Israel uninhabitable. With Gaza lying in ruins and Hamas devastated but not defeated, Israel has concluded that it is now strong enough to wage war on Hezbollah, and that any delay only serves the interests of its enemies, principally Iran. 

The stakes today are far higher for Israel than the war it has been waging in Gaza for the past 12 months. This war against Hezbollah is one that must reestablish the ability of Israel to be able to shelter its citizens within its own borders. It is, then, a battle for the very purpose Israel was founded.

In its ignorance and arrogance, the West believed it could contain the appalling disorder of the Middle East. But it has simply allowed Iran to grow in strength. Not only did 7 October shatter the failing assumptions of Benjamin Netenyahu’s grand strategy, it also revealed the Western world’s myopic passivity too. Today, the world is reaping the whirlwind.


Tom McTague is UnHerd’s Political Editor. He is the author of Betting The House: The Inside Story of the 2017 Election.

TomMcTague

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Billy Bob
Billy Bob
5 hours ago

Why is it up to Britain or France to do anything? If two groups of savages want to have a fight in the Middle East why should Britain or France have to choose a side or deal with the fallout of refugees?
Leave the quagmire alone, it’s none of our interest which animals emerge victorious, they’re all as bad as each other

Last edited 3 hours ago by Billy Bob
Michael Cazaly
Michael Cazaly
3 hours ago

“anti refugee” riots? An interesting choice of words. I understood that the last true refugees from France were Protestants after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes…
And weren’t the riots really an expression of general anger, with mass immigration being a major strand in that anger?
As for the Middle East, the West’s interventions are the major cause of the trouble all the way back to the (desired) collapse of the Ottoman Empire. But the most recent follies were the Iraq War and the attempt to overthrow the Assad government (previously fawned upon until he wouldn’t do as he was told…)

Alan F
Alan F
1 hour ago

An evacuation to where? And why is it always the fault of the West? Do the local actors and malefactors have no responsibility?

Martin M
Martin M
1 hour ago

Hard to believe that Lebanon was once a beautiful place where the wealthy of Europe took their holidays. They made (probably still do) good wine too (try Chateau Musar if you ever get the chance).

Last edited 26 minutes ago by Martin M
UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
37 minutes ago

Thank you for an interesting article. It offers an interesting view on the region. The negative comments surprise me a little. One may not fully agree with an analysis but still read it with interest.

Edwin Blake
Edwin Blake
3 hours ago

What a nasty piece of propaganda for ethnic cleansing. Israel has been taken to the ICJ for that crime. You might not like that fact in your little bubble. Most of the world condemns Israel. It is undeniable. Now you propose the same final solution for Lebanon!

Last edited 3 hours ago by Edwin Blake
Brett H
Brett H
2 hours ago
Reply to  Edwin Blake

Most of the world condemns Israel. 
This has come up a few times. What do you mean by “most”?

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
1 hour ago
Reply to  Brett H

A majority

Brett H
Brett H
1 hour ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

Governments, voting population of all countries, the EU, the UN. Who exactly?

Edwin Blake
Edwin Blake
30 minutes ago
Reply to  Brett H

All of the above. A little bit of searching will reveal all. Try “countries backing Israel”, “countries against Israel” (my linking could irritate censorbots). There is even a Times article, Wikipedia page, etc.
Not to mention that most of the judges at the ICJ thought Israel had a case to answer.

Last edited 29 minutes ago by Edwin Blake
Billy Bob
Billy Bob
2 minutes ago
Reply to  Brett H

Voting populations. Governments are much more pro Israeli than their citizens in my opinion