Lübnan Cumhurbaşkanı Aoun: İsrail'le Savaşı Bitirmek İçin İmkansızı Yapacağım
Lübnan Cumhurbaşkanı Joseph Aoun, İsrail ile devam eden savaşı sona erdirmek için "imkansızı" yapacağını açıkladı. Ateşkes yürürlükte olmasına rağmen İsrail saldırılarının sürdüğü bir ortamda yapılan açıklamada, müzakere çerçevesinin İsrail'in çekilmesi, ateşkesin tam uygulanması ve Lübnan ordusunun sınıra konuşlandırılması üzerine kurulu olduğu belirtildi. İki taraf arasındaki doğrudan görüşmeler eşliğinde yürütülen diplomatik çabalar, bölgedeki kırılgan dengeleri koruma amacı taşıyor. Savaşın ekonomik yansımaları giderek ağırlaşıyor. Maliye Bakanı Yassine Jaber, 2026 yılında ekonominin yüzde 7 ila 10 arasında daralabileceğini ve çatışmaların ülkeye maliyetinin 20 milyar dolara ulaşabileceğini öngörüyor. Dünya Bankası'na göre 2024'teki savaş en az 8 milyar dolarlık hasara yol açarken, Beyrut'un bağımsız diplomasisi Suriye ile ilişkileri de test ediyor. Esad sonrası yeni yönetimle kurulan temaslar, başkent Şam'da Lübnan'ın müstakil adımlarının bölgesel koordinasyonu zedeleyebileceği endişesi yaratıyor. Öte yandan, ABD Temsilcisi Rashida Tlaib'in Washington'un savaştaki rolünün sonlandırılması için oylama çağrısı ve 2 Mart'tan bu yana 3 binden fazla kişinin hayatını kaybettiği saldırılara "katliam" nitelendirmesi, uluslararası boyuttaki baskıyı ortaya koyuyor.
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en güncel: 23 May- Güvenlik18 May 13:28
Lebanon’s president says he will do ‘impossible’ to end war with Israel
Lebanon’s president says he will do ‘impossible’ to end war with Israel Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said on Monday he would do the “impossible” to stop Israel’s war on Lebanon, as Israeli strikes continued despite a ceasefire and direct talks between the two sides. Aoun said Lebanon’s negotiating framework rests on Israeli withdrawal, a ceasefire, the deployment of the Lebanese army along the border, the return of displaced residents, and economic assistance. “My duty… is to do the impossible, and to choose what is least costly, in order to stop the war against Lebanon and its people,” he said. His comments came as Israel launched new strikes across southern Lebanon and issued evacuation warnings for three towns, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency. Hezbollah said it had fired a drone at an Iron Dome platform in northern Israel in response to Israeli “violations” of the ceasefire. The truce, which began on 17 April, was extended last week for 45 days after talks in Washington, opposed by Hezbollah. Lebanese authorities say Israeli attacks have killed more than 2,900 people since the war began, including over 400 since the ceasefire took effect.
- Güvenlik20 May 09:22
Israel considered installing Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as ruler during war
Israel considered installing Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as ruler during war Israel considered installing former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as ruler during the early days of the US-Israeli war on the country. US officials told the New York Times that the former president, previously known for his staunchly anti-US and anti-Israel views, was directly consulted on the issue. They said Ahmadinejad was injured on the war’s first day by an Israeli strike at his home in Tehran that had been designed to free him from house arrest. According to an associate, he became became disillusioned with the regime change plan after the strike.
- Ekonomik21 May 18:09
Lebanon economy could shrink by up to 10% amid war
Lebanon economy could shrink by up to 10% amid war Lebanon’s ongoing war is expected to shrink the country’s economy by at least seven percent this year and could cost the country an estimated $20bn. Finance Minister Yassine Jaber told Reuters he expects the war to trigger an economic contraction of between seven and 10 percent in 2026. According to the World Bank, the 2024 war caused at least $8.5bn in physical damage and economic losses, while Lebanon’s real GDP contracted by 7.1 percent in 2024, bringing the country’s cumulative economic decline since 2019 to nearly 40 percent. In January, the World Bank projected Lebanon’s economy could grow by four percent in 2026 if stability returned, reconstruction aid arrived and financial reforms continued. Jaber said the government had initially hoped to achieve a budget surplus this year, but instead allocated $50m in public funds to support more than one million people displaced by the war.
- Diplomatik22 May 11:44
Lebanon’s talks with Israel test fragile relationship with Syria
Lebanon’s talks with Israel test fragile relationship with Syria MEE correspondent on Fri, 05/22/2026 - 09:26 Beirut’s independent diplomacy raises Syrian concerns over precedent and regional coordination Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa (R) shakes hands with Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam at the People's Palace in Damascus, 9 May 2026 (Sana/AFP) Off Since the fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the relationship between Lebanon and Syria has moved carefully, almost nervously, between necessity and mistrust. The two countries are bound together by geography, history, security, and a long list of unresolved issues. But neither side has fully escaped the weight of the past. Lebanon remains wary of any return to Syrian tutelage, while Syria’s new leadership is alert to the possibility that unilateral Lebanese decisions could spill across the border and weaken Damascus at a sensitive moment. That tension is now resurfacing around one of the region’s most delicate files: direct negotiations with Israel. According to a senior Lebanese official familiar with recent discussions between Beirut and Damascus, Syria has voiced concern that Lebanon’s fast-moving negotiation track with Israel is unfolding without sufficient coordination with Damascus, at a time when its own contacts with Tel Aviv have stalled. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); The message, according to the official, was raised during Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam’s recent visit to Syria, where he met President Ahmed al-Sharaa. “The Syrian leader spoke in a diplomatic and non-confrontational tone, but made clear that coordination between the two countries on vital issues was essential to strengthen the positions of both sides,” the official said. The concern in Damascus is not only that Lebanon is negotiating separately, but that Beirut’s approach could set a precedent Syria may later be pressured to follow. High stakes For months, US officials have reportedly pointed to the Syrian-Israeli talks to encourage Lebanon to enter its own direct negotiations with Israel. But with the Syrian track now largely stalled, partly because Damascus sees Israel as unwilling to offer meaningful concessions, the dynamic may now be shifting. A process once used to pressure Lebanon to follow Syria’s path may now become a means of pressuring Syria to follow Lebanon’s. How Lebanon's leaders are enabling Israel's war on their own country Read More » Lebanon’s path has been especially sensitive because of the conditions under which it has unfolded. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun had previously said Beirut would not negotiate before a ceasefire was reached. Yet contacts have continued while Israeli attacks in Lebanon have persisted despite the ceasefire agreed in mid-April. For Damascus, this raises a strategic concern: if Lebanon moves forward with negotiations while violence continues, and with concessions appearing to be offered early in the process, Syria could face growing pressure from Washington and other international actors to accept a similar framework. The issue comes on top of an already fragile relationship between the two neighbours. Lebanon and Syria are still dealing with several unresolved files: Syrian detainees in Lebanese prisons; land and maritime border demarcation; the future of relations with Hezbollah; the presence of former Assad government figures in Lebanon; and the broader question of how the two states manage their security relationship after decades of domination, hostility and mutual suspicion. Syrian unease over Lebanon has already surfaced in several of these issues. In December, Damascus raised concerns about Assad-linked officers residing in Lebanon. Syrian security officials reportedly handed Lebanese authorities lists of names, warning that some of those figures could use Lebanese territory to threaten Syria’s new leadership. Damascus has also treated the issue of Syrian detainees in Lebanese prisons as central to any improvement in bilateral relations. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); The negotiations file has now become the latest layer in this complex relationship. For Syria, the issue is not simply one of diplomatic protocol, but of leverage. Beirut's unilateral moves Damascus believes that Lebanon and Syria, despite their difficult history, share overlapping vulnerabilities. Any Lebanese concession to Israel, particularly on security arrangements, border issues or the shape of post-war guarantees, could indirectly impact Syria’s own negotiating position. “This is why Sharaa stressed that coordination on vital issues was not an optional courtesy, but a strategic necessity,” the Lebanese official said. “If Syria takes one step in favour of Lebanon, Lebanon should understand that its own vital interests require it to take many steps in favour of Syria.” The remark reflects the asymmetry in how Damascus views the relationship: while Lebanon may fear a return of Syrian dominance, Syria believes Lebanon’s decisions can still expose it to serious risks. 'If Syria takes one step in favour of Lebanon, Lebanon should understand that its own vital interests require it to take many steps in favour of Syria' - Lebanese official The maritime file adds another layer of complexity. Turkey's unease over Lebanon’s 2025 exclusive economic zone agreement with Cyprus – reached without sufficient consideration of Syrian and Turkish interests in the eastern Mediterranean – has also fuelled a regional perception that Beirut tends to move ahead on sensitive issues without adequate coordination with neighbouring stakeholders. In this context, Lebanon’s direct talks with Israel are not viewed in Damascus as an isolated Lebanese decision. Rather, they are seen as part of a broader pattern of Beirut moving unilaterally on issues that extend beyond Lebanon itself. A senior Syrian official said Damascus has repeatedly stressed in meetings with Arab states the need for coordination and the importance of avoiding separate negotiation tracks that could weaken the broader Arab position. “There is a positive atmosphere, but there are realities on the ground that cannot be ignored,” the official said. “Cooperation with Lebanon is growing, but it has not yet reached the required level. The issue is less about disagreement and more about poor coordination.” The official added that Syria has a clear interest in a stable neighbour. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); “The Syrian state wants Lebanon to be strong and capable of standing on its own feet,” the official said, adding that Sharaa had stressed in his meetings that Lebanon was in a sensitive position and required more than the traditional solutions it had relied on in the past. Damascus believes Lebanon needs “precise tools” to navigate the current phase, and that Syria’s role should be to support Lebanon rather than add to the pressure on it, the official added. A familiar dilemma The risk for Lebanon is that it may believe it is creating room for manoeuvre while, in practice, narrowing its own options. A unilateral track with Israel could deepen Syrian mistrust, unsettle Turkey, complicate relations with Hezbollah, and expose Lebanon to pressure from international actors seeking quick arrangements rather than durable settlements. Smart borders, military gates and land seizures: How Israel is encroaching in southern Syria Read More » The danger for Syria is different. Having inherited a fractured state, a weakened regional position and difficult negotiations with Israel, Damascus fears that Lebanon could inadvertently weaken its hand by accepting a framework that Israel and the US could later present as a regional model. This does not mean Syria and Lebanon are moving towards open confrontation. By most accounts, the tone remains cautious. Both sides still need each other: Syria needs Lebanon to prevent its territory from becoming a platform for hostile activity, while Lebanon relies on Syria for border control, detainees, refugee returns, smuggling oversight, security coordination and any serious regional settlement. For Lebanon, the question is whether it can negotiate with Israel while maintaining a coherent regional posture. For Syria, the question is whether it can prevent Lebanon’s decisions from becoming precedents used against it. But the latest developments suggest the post-Assad relationship has not yet become institutional, strategic or trust-based. It remains largely transactional, reactive and shaped by old suspicions. Between the two lies a familiar dilemma: Lebanon and Syria may no longer be bound by the old order, but neither can afford to act as though the other does not matter. Israel's war on Lebanon Beirut News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0
- Güvenlik23 May 04:46
US lawmaker calls for vote to end US role in Lebanon war
US lawmaker calls for vote to end US role in Lebanon war US Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib called for an end to US involvement in the war in Lebanon after reports that more than 3,100 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since 2 March. In a post on X, Tlaib described the deaths as “mass murder” and said the violence must end. Tlaib argued that the United States was “an active participant” in the Israeli military campaign and pledged to force a vote in Congress aimed at ending US involvement in the conflict. Her comments came after Lebanon’s Health Ministry said the death toll from Israeli attacks since 2 March had reached 3,111.