US opposes inclusion of Hezbollah in Lebanese govt

Published February 8, 2025
A Hezbollah supporter waves the group’s flag in front of Lebanese army troops, as protesters burn tyres to block the road leading to Beirut’s international airport, following the visit of US Deputy Special Envoy for the Middle East Morgan Ortagus, during which she met with the country’s president, on February 7, 2025. — AFP
A Hezbollah supporter waves the group’s flag in front of Lebanese army troops, as protesters burn tyres to block the road leading to Beirut’s international airport, following the visit of US Deputy Special Envoy for the Middle East Morgan Ortagus, during which she met with the country’s president, on February 7, 2025. — AFP

BEIRUT: A senior US official visiting Beirut on Friday opposed any Hezbollah presence in Lebanon’s new government.

Hezbollah slammed the remarks by deputy special envoy for the Middle East Morgan Ortagus as “blatant interference”.

Lebanon’s prime minister-designate is struggling to form a government amid political pressure from the allegedly Iran-backed group.

“We have set clear red lines in the United States that they (Hezbollah) won’t be able to terrorise the Lebanese people, and that includes by being a part of the government,” Ortagus said after meeting President Joseph Aoun.

More than a year of hostilities severely weakened Hezbollah, allowing Lebanon’s divided parliament to elect Aoun — seen as Washington’s preferred candidate — as president and approve Nawaf Salam as premier after more than two years of political deadlock.

Ortagus declared “the end of Hezbollah’s reign of terror in Lebanon and around the world”.

Aoun later distanced himself from her comments, with his office saying some of what she said “represents her own point of view and is not the concern of the presidency”.

The head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, Moham­med Raad, said Ortagus’s remarks were “full of malice and irresponsibility” and attacked a component of “Lebanese political life”, branding them “blatant interference in Lebanon’s sovereignty”.

‘End corruption’

Ortagus was in Lebanon for her first official visit abroad after being appointed by President Trump last week.

Hezbollah has played a major role in the country’s politics for decades, flexing its power in government institutions while its fighters battled Israel.

Published in Dawn, February 8th, 2025

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