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David Daoud

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David Daoud,

David Daoud

Analysis

A resignation that threatens Lebanese unity

The final straw came after Lebanese president Michel Aoun refused to respond to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani boasting of Iran’s control over Lebanon.

November 17, 2017 12:39
A poster of Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri in the northern city of Tripoli
2 min read

Two weeks on, Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s surprise resignation is still sending shockwaves far beyond his native Lebanon.

Mr Hariri said he intended to create a shock to highlight Hezbollah’s increasing control over Lebanon’s foreign policy and Iranian interference in Beirut’s domestic affairs. The Shia group — backed by Iranian leadership — moved quickly to deflect the negative attention, attempting to focus on the admittedly unusual circumstances of the resignation.

In hindsight, Mr Hariri’s departure is no surprise. He re-entered office in December 2016 having secured the election of Lebanese president Michel Aoun. The two men enjoyed a good personal relationship despite Mr Aoun being a decade-long ally of Hezbollah.

Mr Hariri was willing to make the compromise of a cabinet dominated by Hezbollah allies to end Lebanon’s two-year presidential vacuum; it resulted in political stagnation and delegitimized the republic to Hezbollah’s advantage.