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How Lebanon's ruling elite is navigating Nasrallah's absence

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ā€œWe have regained our strength in the field and replaced our cadres. Not one position is vacant,ā€ said former Hezbollah deputy secretary-general Naim Qassem in his third televised address since an Israeli airstrike killed veteran leader Hassan Nasrallah in southern Beirut.

Last Tuesday, Hezbollahā€™s main decision-making body, the Shura Council, appointed Qassem as its new secretary-general as the group seeks to reorganise after a month-long leadership void.

Israel, however, quickly challenged the appointment, calling Qassemā€™s tenure ā€œtemporaryā€ and hinting at further action after assassinating both Nasrallah and his heir apparent, Hashem Saifieddine, within weeks.

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ā€œTemporary appointment. Not for longā€, Israelā€™s then Defence Minister Yoav Gallant , alongside a photo of Qassem.

By targeting Nasrallah and much of Hezbollahā€™s first-generation leadership, Israelā€™s decapitation strikes have created space for other actors to manoeuvre within Lebanonā€™s governing structure.

Nabih Berri's interest in brokered solutions

Nabih Berri, leader of Amal, Hezbollahā€™s political ally and smaller member of the countryā€™s so-called ā€˜Shia duoā€™, also serves as Lebanonā€™s Speaker of Parliament - the last fully functioning governing institution in the state, given the countryā€™s vacant presidency and the cabinetā€™s caretaker role.

Without Nasrallah, Berri - whom Qassem recently referred to as Hezbollahā€™s ā€˜big brotherā€™ - has gained ā€œunprecedented room for manoeuvreā€, according to Lorenzo Trombetta, a Middle East correspondent for ANSA and the Italian geopolitical magazine Limes.

ā€œThe weight of Nasrallah is no longer pressing down on him,ā€ Trombetta told °®Āžµŗ.

Reports indicate the Biden administration is urging Lebanonā€™s political class to elect a new president, a process dependent on Berri, who holds the authority to convene parliamentary sessions and oversee rounds of voting until a candidate emerges victorious.

ā€œBerri now sees himself more than ever as Lebanonā€™s kingmaker,ā€ Trombetta explains, ā€œcontrolling the pace and timing of parliamentary sessions almost at his discretionā€.

Nabih Berri
Without Nasrallah, Nabih Berri has gained unprecedented room for manoeuvre, analysts say. [Getty]

Yet Berri has delayed holding an election, insisting on broad consensus. He knows Hezbollah may see a forced election as an attempt by the US and Israel to exploit its vulnerabilities by imposing an undesirable candidate.

The likely candidates are General Joseph Aoun, Lebanonā€™s army chief and a reported US favourite, and Suleiman Frangieh, leader of the Christian Marada party and Hezbollahā€™s endorsed candidate.

Trombetta notes that Berriā€™s influence will be crucial, either to advance a candidate or broker a compromise. A Joseph Aoun presidency, with backing from the US but ties to other alliances, could allow Berri to maintain his ā€˜dominantā€™ position while keeping dialogue open with various political factions, adds Trombetta.

Berriā€™s influence spans numerous state assets and sectors, from tobacco and agriculture in South Lebanon to civilian and logistical at Beirut International Airport. The ongoing war has severely impacted these areas, especially agriculture, intensifying Berriā€™s need to protect his networks.

War-related damage, explains Trombetta, likely motivates Berri to limit large-scale military activity to preserve these grassroots connections and safeguard his clientele. He has a vested interest in reaching compromises that prevent further destruction. With Joseph Aoun as president, Berri could retain his unchallenged grip while maintaining dialogue and negotiation avenues with other Lebanese actors.

However, Berri must tread carefully not to alienate his community by aligning too closely with US objectives.

ā€œBerri, right now, faces a very challenging position given the anger and devastation within the Shia communities. He needs to be very careful about opportunism. It was Nasrallah that was killed in battle or plotting,ā€ notes Nicholas Noe, co-founder of Mideastwire.com and editor of Voice of Hezbollah: The Statements of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.

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Mikati's window: Diplomacy and business deals

With Hezbollahā€™s first-generation leadership in disarray, Lebanonā€™s billionaire businessman and caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati also sees an opportunity to operate more freely.

Three weeks after Nasrallahā€™s assassination, Mikati issued a , calling for Tehranā€™s envoy to be summoned over reported comments from a senior Iranian official offering to help ā€œnegotiateā€ to implement a UN resolution in Lebanon. Mikati denounced the remarks as ā€œa blatant interference in Lebanese affairsā€.

ā€œMikati, perhaps even more than Berri, has acted somewhat more unscrupulously in recent weeks,ā€ Trombetta notes. Public criticism of Iran by Lebanonā€™s top officials is unusual, especially as Tehran supports and funds Hezbollah, which is currently locked in battle against Israeli troops along Lebanonā€™s southern border.

In his caretaker role, Mikati has also intensified his diplomatic outreach. After Israel escalated attacks on Lebanon on 23 September, he met with several foreign leaders, including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and French Foreign Minister Jean-NoeĢˆl Barrot.

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati
With Hezbollah's leadership still reeling from Israeli attacks, Lebanon's billionaire businessman and caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati sees an opportunity to operate more freely. [Getty]

During these meetings, Mikati emphasised Lebanonā€™s commitment to UN Security Council resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 Hezbollah-Israel war and requires Hezbollahā€™s fighters and weapons to remain north of the Litani River.

By doing so, he distanced himself from what Michael Young, senior editor at the Carnegie Middle East Center, calls the ā€˜ - a stance that endorses Hezbollahā€™s military presence in South Lebanon under the Unity of Arenas strategy.

Ever the businessman, Mikati has also sought Franceā€™s bonne graĢ‚ce since Nasrallahā€™s death, though he knows "real power" to shift Lebanonā€™s balance of forces does not lie in Paris, as Joseph Daher, author of Hezbollah: The Political Economy of Lebanonā€™s Party of God, told °®Āžµŗ.

In 2021, Mikati handed control of the Tripoli to the French shipping giant CMA CGM, owned by the SaadeĢ family, who are close to President Macron. Following the 2020 Beirut Port explosion, Mikati announced a government plan to rebuild the port.

Just a week later, however, CMA CGM secured a 10-year contract to operate Beirutā€™s container terminal, consolidating its hold over Lebanonā€™s main import-export hubs. The government awarded the contract without completing the new master plan or drafting the port-related legislation Mikati had previously proposed, leading to speculation of a backroom deal between Mikati and the SaadeĢ family.

²Ń¾±°ģ²¹³Ł¾±ā€™s recent overtures to France are hardly altruistic, Trombetta suggests, describing them as "an opening of the comptoir". Mikati appears to be signalling, ā€œI am here in the West, and any reputable actor interested in business with me is welcomeā€.

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Hariri's relaunch of Future TV

As Berri and Mikati seize new opportunities, Saad Hariri, the historic leader of Lebanonā€™s Sunni community, is also making a comeback.

Future TV, the media arm of former prime minister Hariri and his Future Movement, recently announced its Ģżafter a five-year suspension. In 2022, Hariri withdrew from politics and suspended the Future Movementā€™s operations after his primary backer, Saudi Arabia, expressed dissatisfaction over his support for General Michel Aoun and his Hezbollah-allied Christian party.

ā€œItā€™s hard to know what Saad Hariri is thinking, but he definitely seizes the moment, or he has enough money to restart Future TV,ā€ says Joe Macaron, Global Fellow with the Wilson Centerā€™s Middle East Program.

To mount a serious comeback, Macaron suggests, Hariri will need to reconcile with a major outside stakeholder: Saudi Arabia. ā€œClearly, he sees an opportunity; otherwise, he wouldnā€™t invest money in a project that has already suffered a lot of losses, mismanagement, and firing of employees,ā€ he adds.

On 14 February, Hariri visited Beirut to commemorate the anniversary of his fatherā€™s assassination, making a rare public appearance.

Karim Bitar, associate professor of international relations at Lebanonā€™s UniversiteĢ Saint-Joseph, Hariri may be taking the long view. With next year marking the 20th anniversary of his fatherā€™s death, Bitar notes, Hariri likely wants to signal that he remains a presence in Lebanese politics.

Vittorio Maresca di Serracapriola is a researcher and analyst specialising in political economy. He has worked at Triangle, a Beirut-based think tank, and was previously an economics reporter at Reuters. He holds an MSc in Economic History from the University of Oxford

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