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Project Syndicate - US Escalation Is the Most Likely Scenario in Iran - Mar 28, 2026 Nouriel Roubini

 Project Syndicate

US Escalation Is the Most Likely Scenario in Iran

Mar 28, 2026

Nouriel Roubini


If Donald Trump walks away from the war with Iran now, the threat to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz will remain, risk premia on oil prices will stay permanently higher, and Trump’s own popularity will sink even further ahead of this year’s midterm elections. Despite the obvious risks, he has every reason to try to “finish the job.”


NEW YORK – The financial and economic implications of the US-Israeli war with Iran will depend on the war’s duration. The longer it goes on, the longer we can expect oil, gas, fertilizer, helium, and other prices to remain elevated. The greater the damage done to the Gulf’s oil production and export facilities, the greater the stagflationary pressure, which will have a major impact on global equity markets, bond yields, and credit spreads.


The economic damage from higher inflation and lower growth would be most severe in Asia, which is suffering both an energy-price and -quantity shock. Europe is facing negative terms-of-trade pressure and serious inflation risks, but its energy-supply shock will be more limited than in Asia. The United States, by contrast, is looking at a positive terms-of-trade shock, because it is a net energy exporter. Nonetheless, US inflation will be higher and its growth lower, because those who consume energy (households and businesses) will spend less, whereas those energy producers who enjoy windfall profits will not produce or invest more (knowing all too well that the shock is temporary).


The Trump administration and Israel made two serious miscalculations. They assumed that decapitating the Iranian leadership would cause the regime to collapse in a few weeks, and that Iran would prove unwilling or unable to block the Strait of Hormuz or damage Gulf energy-production facilities. They were wrong, and now the market is pricing in US President Donald Trump’s desperation for an off-ramp—the famous TACO (Trump always chickens out) scenario.


But expecting TACO also looks like a miscalculation. If Trump ends the war and locks in the status quo, the threat to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz will remain, risk premia on oil prices will stay permanently higher (at least 20%), and Trump’s popularity will sink even further ahead of this year’s midterm elections. Not only would the current Iranian regime still be in power, but it would almost certainly pursue a nuclear weapon and double down on its production of ballistic missiles, drones, and other means of threatening the Gulf, Europe, and the global economy.


So, normative judgments aside, Trump (and Israel) will feel the need to escalate to try to “finish the job.” That means seizing Kharg Island, from which 90% of Iran’s energy flows, and intensifying the daily bombing campaigns to degrade the regime’s (new) leadership and capacity to project power militarily. Such a strategy is inherently high-risk, but it could lead—in two or three months—to effective regime collapse and a more stable Middle East. The world economy and markets would no longer be subject to perennial blackmail by a regime with a chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz. The Gulf states and their oil facilities would be safe and secure.


That is the optimistic scenario. If Kharg Island is taken but the regime does not collapse, the Strait of Hormuz and the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait off the Houthi-controlled Yemeni coastline will remain vulnerable, as will the Gulf states and their energy facilities. If the regime holds on, the stage could be set for a repeat of the 1970s stagflation.


Nonetheless, I see escalation and a US-Israeli victory (with regime collapse in a few months) as more likely than escalation and a US-Israeli defeat. The first scenario is obviously better for everyone, and better than the unstable status quo. But, of course, the second scenario could be worse than the status quo. Ultimately, the decision comes down to Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, both of whom are politically doomed if they cannot improve on the current situation in a way that allows them to save face.


The case for eliminating Iran’s fanatical Islamist regime remains strong. For 47 years, the Islamic Republic has been a curse on its own people and the wider region. While subjecting Iranians to oppression and economic misery, it has consistently threatened Israel and meddled in Sunni-majority countries and or countries with large Shiite populations, many of which—including Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, and Libya—have become failed or semi-failed states. In addition to destabilizing the entire Middle East, it has sponsored terrorism around the world, helped fuel mass migration into Europe, and supported Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine. Iran’s long-range ballistic missiles can reach all of Europe while an Iran with nuclear weapons would be a direct threat to all the Middle East and Europe.


Regardless of what one thinks about Trump’s choice to go to war, everyone should want an endgame in which the current regime can no longer threaten global economic and financial stability or security. Trying to finish the job is better than the alternatives, even given the obvious risks.


German Chancellor Friedrich Merz put it well during the Twelve-Day War last June: “Israel is doing the dirty work for all of us.” That was true then, and it is true now. Even though Europe, China, and Asia would benefit more from the end of the Islamic Republic than America would, US escalation is likely. The best-case scenario is global economic turmoil in the short run followed by greater global stability; but medium- or long-term disruptions are a very real possibility.


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Nouriel Roubini, a senior adviser at Hudson Bay Capital Management LP and Professor Emeritus of Economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business, is Co-Founder of Atlas Capital Team, CEO of Roubini Macro Associates, Co-Founder of TheBoomBust.com, and author of Megathreats: Ten Dangerous Trends That Imperil Our Future, and How to Survive Them (Little, Brown and Company,  2022). He is a former senior economist for international affairs in the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton Administration and has worked for the International Monetary Fund, the US Federal Reserve, and the World Bank. His website is NourielRoubini.com, and he is the host of NourielToday.com.




EURONEWS - How successful has the US been in achieving its war objectives in its now one-month-old war in Iran? - By Malek Fouda - Published on 28/03/2026 - 9:50 GMT+1•Updated 12:29

 EURONEWS

How successful has the US been in achieving its war objectives in its now one-month-old war in Iran?

US President Donald Trump speaks during a Cabinet meeting at the White House, Thursday, March 26, 2026, in Washington

Copyright AP Photo/Alex Brandon

By Malek Fouda

Published on 28/03/2026 - 9:50 GMT+1•Updated 12:29


How successful has the US been in achieving its war objectives in its now one-month-old war in Iran?


The White House continues to claim major successes in its ongoing operations in Iran, which have now reached the one month mark. Objectives of the war appear to constantly be shifting, but how successful has Washington been so far?

One month has passed since the US and Israel fired the opening salvo in Iran, kickstarting a war which has destabilised the region, disrupted global supply chains and caused an international oil price crisis, as attacks on energy infrastructure continue and shipping remains closed via the strategic Strait of Hormuz.


US President Donald Trump outlined five objectives for Washington to achieve before ending its war with Iran. But now, one month in, he has suggested that the US may soon be “winding down” its operation, despite some of his key aims remaining undefined or unfulfilled.


By most accounts, US and Israeli strikes have significantly degraded Iran's military capabilities and killed scores of senior leaders. But, those tactical successes don't necessarily translate to achieving all the president's strategic aims.


Trump listens to a reporter during the swearing in for Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin in the White House, Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in Washington Alex Brandon/Copyright 2026 The AP. All rights reserved


Some of his objectives are difficult to achieve and if the US walks away with unfinished aims and Iran's paramilitary Islamic Revolutionary Guard still in power, Trump could face political fallout at home and global repercussions about what was accomplished in his decision to launch a war of choice that upended the Middle East and roiled the global economy.


The US president has consistently insisted that operations in Iran are exceeding predictions both in success and timelines. Here is a look at the objectives as laid out by Trump and where they stand.


‘Complete degradation of Iranian missile capability’

One of the main goals laid out by the US president in Iran was to destroy their missiles and “raze their missile industry to the ground."


The administration says that the ability has been significantly degraded, but Iran is still launching missiles and drones, including a series of barrages at Israel as Trump claimed that negotiations with Iran were underway.


Trump said at the White House on Thursday that around 90% of Iran's missiles and launchers have been knocked out, and that drones and the factories where drones and missiles are manufactured “are way down.”


However, over the past week, Iranian attacks appear to have intensified, with Tehran regularly firing barrages of drones and advanced missiles at Israel and neighbouring Gulf Arab states hosting US bases.


On the eve of the one month mark of the war, a missile attack on a US military base in Saudi Arabia on Friday wounded 10 US troops and damaged several planes, according to US officials who spoke to the AP anonymously.


A US F-35C Lightning II preparing for launch on the flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) in support of Operation Epic Fury on Monday, March 2, 2026 AP/AP

‘Destroy Iran’s defence industrial base’

Before last week, the US president and his administration sometimes listed this as a standalone objective, describing it as a goal to “raze their missile industry to the ground.”


Other times, this has fallen off the list. The Pentagon has generally lumped it into the first objective of destroying Iran’s missile capability.


The US Central Command has said its targets for strikes in Iran have included weapons production and missile and drone manufacturing facilities. Still, Iranian attacks against its Gulf neighbours and Israel continue, with officials in Tehran claiming they can continue fighting for as long as it takes.


Analysts say Iran has been mass producing and stockpiling weapons in preparation for such a war for many years, noting that Trump’s objective is unrealistic as these weapons, especially drones, can be produced in relatively small facilities at great quantities. It is also unclear how many of these facilities exist.


This partially redacted image from video provided by US Central Command shows a military aircraft in Iran shortly before it was struck by a US missile, Sunday, March 1, 2026 AP/AP

‘Eliminate their navy and air force’

The US and Israel quickly established air superiority in the skies above Iran, where they have flown largely unchallenged. US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Thursday that Washington has damaged or destroyed more than 150 Iranian vessels throughout the course of the war.


After a US submarine torpedoed and sank an Iranian warship in early March, two other Iranian vessels — the IRIS Bushehr and IRIS Lavan — docked in Sri Lanka and India and sought assistance from the two countries.


There has been no indication from the US that they have since been sunk or captured.


Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has its own navy that also relies on smaller vessels to carry out swarm attacks and drop mines.


It is unclear how much of that force remains or whether it has planted any mines, but Iranian missiles continue to disrupt shipping through the chokepoint Strait of Hormuz.


US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks during a Cabinet meeting at the White House, Thursday, March 26, 2026, in Washington Alex Brandon/Copyright 2026 The AP. All rights reserved

‘Never allowing Iran to get even close to nuclear capability’

Trump made a dramatic U-turn over the last year after declaring that the US has “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear programme in June, only for his aides to warn that Iran was just weeks away from acquiring a bomb to justify the current operations.


Iranian state media said its nuclear facilities were attacked on Friday. A heavy water plant and a yellowcake production plant were struck and Israel later confirmed it was behind the strikes.


Israel had previously announced strikes on other nuclear-related targets, including the killing of a top Iranian nuclear scientist.


One of the most pressing questions in the war is whether Trump will seek to seize or destroy about 440 kilograms of enriched uranium that Tehran has that could potentially be used for a nuclear weapon.


This partially redacted image from video provided by U.S. Central Command shows a military vehicle in Iran shortly before it was struck by a US missile, Monday, March 2, 2026 AP/AP

For the first time on Monday, Trump, said the US would retrieve the uranium, which is believed to be buried deep under a mountain facility.


He indicated that would occur if Washington struck some kind of deal with Iran for the US to retrieve it. Without permission from Iran, seizing it would be a dangerous mission, experts say, and would require a sizable deployment of US troops into the country.


‘Protecting, at the highest level, our Middle Eastern Allies’

Trump, in a recent post on Truth Social, added a fifth objective for the U.S: “Protecting, at the highest level, our Middle Eastern Allies, including Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, and others. The Hormuz Strait will have to be guarded and policed, as necessary, by other Nations who use it — The United States does not!”


The US already maintains thousands of troops on bases and other installations in the region.


It's not clear how much further Trump is willing to go to protect Middle East allies from threats, and Iran is still able to attack those countries. It’s also not clear how far the US is willing to go to keep open the Strait of Hormuz.


Trump has vacillated on whether the US needs to take a role in policing it. He has again extended a deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face attacks on its power plants, now giving them until April 6.


This image provided by US Central Command shows Navy sailors taxiing aircraft to a staging point on the flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026 AP/AP

Additional goals not on the list

Trump has spoken about regime change since the start of the war, encouraging the Iranian people to “take over” their government after Israel, assisted by the US, launched strikes that killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and much of its upper echelon of leaders.


The Trump administration has never explicitly stated regime change as an objective in Iran, despite making it clear they want to end the repressive theocracy's 47-year reign.


Trump said Thursday at the White House that the regime is “largely decimated.”


“You could really say we have regime change because they have been killed,” he said in an interview with US broadcaster Fox News.


Now Washington claims to be holding talks with elements of the same Iranian government as it looks to bring a swift end to the conflict and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to maritime traffic. Iran, however, continues to publicly insist it is not negotiating with the White House.


And Trump's initial hopes for the Iranian people appear set to continue unfulfilled.


Screen grab of a post by US President Donald Trump on Truth Social outlining the goals of his military operations in Iran @realDonaldTrump/TruthSocial

Additionally, Trump had previously spoken of ridding Iran of its ability to fund proxy groups in the region, like Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and Popular Mobilisation Forces in Iraq.


White House officials have offered few updates about this objective, which the president has described as ensuring that “the region’s terrorist proxies can no longer destabilise the region or the world and attack our forces” and “ensuring that the Iranian regime cannot continue to arm, fund, and direct terrorist armies outside of their borders.”


While the US has struck Iranian-aligned militia groups in Iraq, and Israel appears to be expanding its operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon, the administration has not offered details about how it’s going to permanently halt Tehran’s support for the militant groups.


The White House said in a statement however that ensuring that Iranian proxy groups cannot further destabilise the region remains a key goal and claimed that “proxies are hardly putting up a fight because our United States Military is so strong and lethal.”









Foreign Affairs - Lebanon and its Inheritors - Fouad Ajami - Spring 1985 Published on March 1, 1985 ( 9 bölümlük bir yazı.)

 Foreign  Affairs 

Lebanon and its Inheritors

Fouad Ajami

Spring 1985 Published on March 1, 1985

Israeli troops in southern Lebanon, February 1985


Havakuk Levison / Reuters



Fouad Ajami, born to a Shia family in the south of Lebanon and raised in Beirut, is Director of Middle East Studies at The Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and author of The Arab Predicament.



In the Shia vision of history, born of centuries of oppression and marginality, a time comes when the mighty are humbled; the lowly who kept the faith rise up and inherit the earth free from oppressors. From this vision has come consolation. It sustained an embattled minority faith through the eras of worldly and political dispossession.


Something of this vision has come to pass in our time in Lebanon. The country has turned into a slaughter ground, but an inheritance as well. Passion, demography and chance have raised a once-marginal community above the insularity and fears of the past.


In the south of Lebanon, two and a half years of Israeli occupation have given the Shia a new and sustaining myth of resistance. In Beirut, Shi‘ite squatters and urban newcomers have crossed once-forbidden lines. The western half of the city, traditionally home of the more privileged Sunni Muslim community, has all but fallen to the downtrodden Shia. In the Bekaa Valley, under the shadow of Syria, extremist elements in the loosely joined Party of God, known as Hizbollah, proclaim their intention to “cleanse the country” and to transform this fractured polity into an Islamic republic: a seeming parody of the realm established in Ayatollah Khomeini’s Iran.


The Shia phenomenon arises from the accumulated resentments—and achievements—of a quarter-century. But the midwife of the current resurgence was none other than Israel, which came into Lebanon in June of 1982 both to destroy a Palestinian dominion in West Beirut and the south, and also to restore Christian Maronite hegemony over the country. The first mission was relatively easy to achieve. Over the course of a decade the Palestinian armed presence in Lebanon had been emptied of its exalted claims and had turned into an affair of caprice and showmanship.


Israel’s second mission was not to be fulfilled. The time of the Maronite ascendancy had passed. Demographic realities had caught up with the Maronites; no amount of Israeli or American support could sustain their bid for hegemony over an unwieldy country. In retrospect, the Israeli invasion and its aftermath only served to highlight the Maronite weakness.


The beneficiaries of Israel’s war and the subsequent occupation of south Lebanon turned out, thus, to be the long-suppressed Shi‘ites. Israel shattered the Palestinian dominion; it did for the Shia what they had not been able to do for themselves. Then Israel’s occupation of the Shi‘ite ancestral land in the south closed the circle: it gave a people awakening to their own power the material out of which militant myths are made.


The Israeli withdrawal has begun and must eventually take Israel back to the international border, or something very close to it. If the withdrawal were to be confined to the first two phases—from Sidon and its surroundings in the first phase, from the eastern sector overlooking Syrian positions in the second phase—Israel would still be in occupation of the Shia heartland. There would still be nearly 400,000 Lebanese under Israeli occupation, and 80 percent of those would be Shi‘ite. Resistance to Israel would take on an added measure of despair and determination. All this was known to the Israeli decision-makers when they announced in mid-January 1985 that they were on their way out of Lebanon.


Israel’s withdrawal will leave Lebanon a virtual Syrian protectorate—a dubious prize for any patron. It also prepares the Shia, more radicalized than ever before and representing some 40 percent of the country’s population, to come of age as claimants to power.


II


They were an unlikely people for a history of rebellion and exaltation; historically, the Shia of Lebanon were the bearers of a tradition of lament and submission.


The Shia world in Jabal Amil (the mountain of Amil, a largely barren piece of land north of Galilee, today’s South Lebanon) was, until its inclusion in Greater Lebanon in 1920, an impoverished and marginal corner of the larger entity of Syria. Remote Shia villages and towns fell under Ottoman control, along with the rest of Syria, when the Ottomans spread across Islam in the sixteenth century. The Shia geographic isolation was parallel to their religious and cultural isolation. Though subjects of a (Sunni) Ottoman state governed in various eras from Damascus, Sidon and Acre, the Shia were cut off from the power and symbols of the empire and the culture of its great cities.


To make matters worse, early in the sixteenth century the Safavid dynasty in Iran imposed Shi‘ism as a state religion and entered into a protracted war with the Ottoman empire. Shi‘ism may have rescued the Safavid empire, marked it off from the expanding Ottoman state, but men caught on the wrong side of the divide—Shia in Ottoman realms, Sunnis in the Safavid world—were destined to suffer.


Plunder and cruelty intruded upon this Shia domain, and power was always exercised by men beyond the Shia faith. Folklore related the cruelty of Ottoman officialdom; it taught the futility of political action. More objective histories did not differ much from the folklore. C.F. Volney, French author of one of the great eighteenth-century travel books about Syria and Egypt, passed through the Shia lands after one of the ruinous Ottoman military campaigns; he recorded the existence of a “small nation,” a “distinct society.” “Since the year 1777,” he wrote, “Djezzar, master of Acre and Saide [Sidon] has incessantly laboured to destroy them . . . it is probable they will be totally annihilated, and even their very name become extinct.”


David Urquhart, another eighteenth-century British traveller and pamphleteer, called the Shia “unclassible men.” “In religion, they are Shi‘ites, in race Arabs. . . . They have been prevented by their religious schism from being included in the administrative order of the empire.” Urquhart wrote of the “mystery” of the Shi‘ite appearance in Lebanon: “Whence it came, how it came, what its race, what its character . . . have been matters of much doubt and mystery. . . . To all inquiries respecting them, even on their immediate borders, the only answers to be obtained were fables revealing utter ignorance mixed with fear and hatred.”


Shia history remained raw and limited. This was a people who neither waged, nor faked, a great anticolonial struggle. No major causes of nineteenth-century nationalism touched their lives or transformed their heritage.


At the end of World War I the Ottoman empire collapsed, and no Shia grieved for it. Ottoman dominion was replaced by the mandatory rule of France, which in 1920 appended the Shi‘ite territories to Greater Lebanon, with its heartland in the Mount Lebanon area, overlooking the city of Beirut, with the Maronites in its northern part and the Druze in the south.


Two dominant ideas were brought together in the Lebanese polity that the French fashioned and whose independence they granted in 1943: a Maronite concept that stressed Lebanon’s Christian identity, and a Sunni Arab conviction, upheld by the merchants of Beirut, Tripoli and Sidon, that the country was a piece of a larger Arab world. The impoverished and quiescent Shia fit into neither concept. They were Lebanon’s “hewers of wood and drawers of water.” On the eve of independence, Lebanese statistics (for whatever they are worth) put the Shi‘ite population at some 200,000 inhabitants. Numerically, they were behind the Maronites and the Sunnis. Politically, they lagged behind the smaller but more assertive Druze. The Shia carried into the new Lebanese republic age-old attitudes of aversion to the world of politics.


Quintessential outsiders, some Shia youth were drawn to fringe political movements in the 1950s, the Baath, the communists, or the Syrian Socialist Nationalist Party. More dominant remained the handful of semi-feudal Shia families, the rule of the “big men.” The Lebanese state had its ways of dealing with both: the big men, the beys, could be ignored or bought off with small concessions; the parties of the left labored in a country of sects and clans that could not comfortably assimilate borrowed ideologies. Conflicts of class and economic grievances were turned into sectarian feuds. The marginal parties were shut out of the politics and the division of spoils.


So it all was seen through Lebanon’s first two decades of independence. But within the closed Shia community, things were changing. There was a demographic explosion, a migration to the city, improved schooling made possible by remittances from those of the faith who made their way to West Africa to work as hawkers, small traders and diamond smugglers. Such changes remained largely undetected by the world outside as the 1950s drew to a close.


III


The Shia had always maintained cultural and religious traffic between the hinterland of Shia Lebanon and Persia. Normally, the direction of the traffic took ambitious Shi‘ite divines, mullahs, from the impoverished world of Jabal Amil to the large realm of Iran, where clerics were needed to spread the Shia faith. A latecomer to Shin’ism, Iran had become one of the two great centers of the Shia world (Iraq being the other). Ambitious and restless clerics from a small impoverished community were drawn to the patronage and resources of a large state. Shia Lebanon remained a backwater.


In 1959, one Sayyid Musa al Sadr, a tall, handsome cleric, 31 years of age, made a reverse journey. To retrace his path is to embody the transformation of the Shia.


Born in Qom, Sayyid Musa came to the Lebanese coastal town of Tyre as its mufti, or religious judge. He was heir to a distinguished lineage; his was one of the most celebrated clerical and scholarly families in the Shia world. Their roots were in Iraq and Iran. Sayyid Musa’s cousin and brother-in-law, Ayatollah Muhammad Baqir al Sadr, was a brilliant scholar executed by the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein in 1980. Sayyid Musa’s father, Ayatollah Sadr al din al Sadr, had crossed the border from Iraq to Iran in the mid-1920s after a Shia-led revolt was broken by the British. In Qom, Ayatollah Sadr al din al Sadr, until his death in 1953, played a leading role in the revival of the religious madrasas, the seminaries. On his maternal side, Sayyid Musa was the grandson of Ayatollah Hussein Qummi, a cleric in the forefront of the opposition to Reza Shah’s effort to centralize the Iranian state and undermine the role of the clergy.


Sayyid Musa al Sadr brought with him a daring and self-confidence alien to the world of Shia Lebanon. In the land of his birth, ayatollahs and great ulama had supported and opposed kings, paid for private armies, administered large welfare networks, led merchants and urban mobs to resist the encroachment of Western monopolies and concessions. Sayyid Musa al Sadr was to do some of the same in Lebanon over the next two decades.


More still, Musa al Sadr was to leave the Shia of Lebanon with a vibrant myth. In the summer of 1978, he disappeared while on a visit to Libya’s Muammar al-Qaddafi, a fitting end to a leader of the faith. In the Shia myth, the Twelfth Imam—religious and political successor to the Prophet—vanished to the eyes of ordinary men in 873-74, to return at the “end of time” and fill the earth with justice. This is the doctrine of the Ghaiba, the absence, the occultation, of the Hidden Imam. Musa al Sadr embodied the myth in modern times. He left inheritors and followers sitting under his posters, repeating his words, awaiting his “return.” Musa al Sadr was the medium for some of the profound changes in the Shia community.


Sayyid Musa arrived as the Shia were breaking out of their rural insularity and making their way into Beirut, its southern suburbs arid its northeastern shantytowns. In 1960, the per capita income in Beirut was five times larger than in the south. The city was a magnet; the lure of the land was being eroded.


In his first decade in Lebanon, Sayyid Musa put together a coalition of educated Shia civil servants, professionals and men with new money. He sought, as he put it, to change the “psychological outlook” of the Shia community; he provided an alternative to the parties of the left and the rule of the feudal families. His first institutional creation was the Higher Shia Council to represent the corporate demands of the Shi‘ites before the state. This was a break with the Sunni establishment, and a search for an independent Shia path. It was an effort blessed and aided by the Maronite elites.


A decade after he had arrived in Lebanon, Sayyid Musa al Sadr became known as “Imam” Musa al Sadr, a title loaded with messianic expectations. Here, on a small scale, was the tale to unfold in Iran a decade later with the rise of Ayatollah Khomeini. In both cases, a cleric was set apart from other clerics, was accorded the title of imam and given political authority and obedience.


The symbols of Shi‘ism were turned into political weapons, as would happen later in Khomeini’s Iran. The tales of martyrdom and persecution that had provided the material for Shia laments became, in Musa al Sadr’s reconstruction of them, episodes of political choice and courage. Annually, the Shia mourned the death of Imam Hussein, the Prophet’s grandson, who fell in the seventh-century battle of Kerbala, which pitted him and a small band of zealots against the armies of the caliph in Damascus. Musa al Sadr read modern needs into Imam Hussein’s death; Hussein was turned into a “revolutionary,” a man who made a clear political choice against the rule of an oppressive state. The bearers of Hussein’s legacy, he exhorted, owed it to the memory of Hussein to go beyond tears and lamentations.


Musa al Sadr’s first followers had come from among the Shi‘ite patricians. His second decade was one of populist politics. He was, as he said of himself, a man who grew up in Iran without hearing the sound of a bullet. Yet by the mid-1970s, he established and financed a Shia militia, Amal; “Arms were the adornment of men,” he declared to his followers. Shi‘ism, the religion of lament, was undergoing transformation into a faith of activism.


IV


Musa al Sadr’s populist themes were elaborated against mounting disorder in Lebanon. The Palestinians, banished from Jordan in 1970-71, had created a mini-republic of their own in Lebanon. The Lebanese state to which the cleric had been appealing turned out to be—his description—a scarecrow. The Maronite custodians were in no mood to discuss issues of political reform. They brooded over the country’s future and its purity. Panic was driving the Maronites behind their own lines. By the mid-1970s the country was claimed by two armed camps—the Palestinians and their Muslim Lebanese allies on the one hand, the Maronites on the other.


Musa al Sadr straddled the fence. There was no easy choice for him, or for his community. The program of the Maronites was too brittle for him to embrace; that of the Palestinians too reckless. The Palestinian dominion was, for the most part, in Shia land. The Palestine Liberation Organization staked a claim to the south of Lebanon that made the claims of its own inhabitants look petty and irrelevant. The south was turned into a “bridge” for the “re-conquest of Arab Palestine.” The Palestinians spoke the language of national liberation and revolution. Their mistakes could be smothered by appeals to a larger cause. No apology had to be made for the massive Israeli reprisals that Palestinian operations brought in their train. A grandiose “Arab Cause” was pressed from remote places where the inhabitants had no voice of their own.


The Shia were not articulate and organized as were the Palestinians. The latter belonged to the mainstream of Arab political life. The Palestinians represented an urban Sunni culture imposed upon a rural Shi‘ite population. Dispossessed in 1948, the Palestinians had found their way into Arab courts and nationalist movements alike. Unable to “liberate” Palestine or retrieve what had been lost in 1948, the Arab states did the next best thing: they gave the Palestinians yarn and invited them into the Arab councils of power. Funds were available to maintain a Palestinian movement of considerable wealth, to arm and equip a relatively formidable Palestinian presence in Lebanon. The other Arab states bought peace for themselves by indulging turmoil in Lebanon. Steadily, the Palestinian sanctuary in the land north of Israel was evolving into a substitute homeland, and the resident Shia had trouble finding the means and self-confidence to cope with their new Arab occupiers.


Musa al Sadr himself was particularly ill-equipped to confront the Palestinians. His Iranian birth trailed him like a dark shadow, and he was ever anxious, at times excessively so, to assert his Arab credentials. Like the community he led, he desperately wanted acceptance by the larger Arab world. In the early 1970s, he had made the standard statements of fidelity to the Palestinian cause. But years of disorder in the south of Lebanon brought the breaking point between the Shia and the Palestinians. A remarkable memoir by a Lebanese politician, Karim Pakradouni, renders Musa al Sadr’s judgment of the Palestinian occupation:


Shortly before Musa al Sadr’s disappearance, he said to me: “The Palestinian resistance is not a revolution; it does not seek martyrdom. It is a military machine that terrorizes the Arab world. With weapons Arafat gets money; with money he can feed the press; and thanks to the press he can get a hearing before world public opinion. . . . The Shia have finally gotten over their inferiority complex vis-à-vis the Palestinian organizations.”


The Shia journey out of self-contempt and political quiescence had been led by the charismatic mullah as far as one man could take it. Musa al Sadr walked between rain drops. He had given political activism the sanction of religious symbols; he linked to the larger Shia world lonely people who had felt isolated and cast adrift. It fell to his inheritors to build up his mystique, to exploit the power and symbolism of his birth in Qom and his mysterious disappearance.


Like a chameleon, he was different things to different people. The patricians among his followers saw him as a man of moderate politics, a reformer. For others, Musa al Sadr was to become a great avenger, his tale and memory a warrant for daring deeds and unbending politics. Some saw him as a man who sought the integration of the Shi‘ites into the Lebanese political order. Others depicted him as a Pan-Islamic figure who had his gaze fixed on Iran, who spent the last two years of his activity consumed with the struggle between the Shah and the Iranian opposition.


The times played into the legacy and enhanced it: Iran’s revolution erupted shortly after Musa al Sadr’s disappearance. An “armed imam” brought down the monarchy; the humble folk of Shia Lebanon became part of a large upheaval. The Iranian revolution exalted the once-timid and embarrassing symbols of Shia Islam. Leading figures in post-revolutionary Iran had been sheltered and helped by Musa al Sadr and had drawn on the funds and the hospitality of the Shia of Lebanon—men like Musa al Sadr’s nephew, one-time Deputy Prime Minister Sadeq Tabatabai, or Mustapha Chamran, who was defense minister until his death on the Iraqi front in 1981. Musa al Sadr himself was a man of double identity claimed by the Iranians and by the Shia in Lebanon; he embodied the bonds—both real and imagined—between the Shia of Lebanon and of Iran.


Khomeini’s revolution brought a change in the relation of the Shia to the larger Arab world and its symbols. In times past, when Pan-Arabism was the strident faith of large Arab cities, the “Persian connection” of the Shia of Lebanon and other Arab realms was carried like some embarrassing and insinuating baggage. Now the Iranian revolution stood history on its head. A major revolt succeeded in the name of Islam and cultural authenticity. The material for messianic politics and radicalism was there—all the more so as the Iranian revolution devoured its liberal wing and set out to create a “reign of virtue,” and to export its ways.


V


The Shia of Lebanon sat out the war of 1982, it was not their war. Initially, they gave Israel’s campaign their silent approval. No tears were shed for the Palestinians, whose presence was a dominion of strangers that showed every sign of digging in for a long stay, turning into something permanent, impossible to dismantle.


But the Shia—unlike the Lebanese Christians—could not openly embrace Israel. They were not that kind of people; traffic with men beyond the faith was not part of their history. For centuries, the Maronites had played the game of inviting strangers and drawing on their resources. The Shia, on the other hand, brought with them a nervousness about encountering strangers, a fear of defilement. The peculiar Shia relationship to the larger Arab world—they were of it, but not fully—rendered them unable to come to terms with Zionism. Like Caesar’s wife, they had to be above suspicion. They were sure that they would not be forgiven a close association with Israel.


Israel’s long-range designs in Lebanon were yet another problem for the Shia. Israel had come in as a savior, but saviors could betray. There had always existed in Lebanon a suspicion that Israel coveted the lands of the south and the waters of the Litani River. A body of political literature had popularized that theme. There was enough Zionist scripture around, and enough Palestinian reiterations of it, to make men wonder and worry. Israel could never provide sufficient assurance that its presence would be temporary. And the longer Israeli troops stayed, the more credible the suspicions became.


The grace period extended to Israel lasted little more than a year. Israel had come to Lebanon with a flawed understanding of the country; Israeli decision-makers knew next to nothing about the Shi‘ites. Israel was, in effect, trying to impose Christian hegemony in a part of Lebanon which had very few Christians. On Israel’s coattails rode the brigands of Israel’s crony, Major Saad Haddad, who moved all the way from their strip on Israel’s border up to the Awali River. Then came the zealous units of the Maronite “Lebanese Forces.” A Palestinian dominion in the south was replaced by a Christian regime of harassment and extortions.


Trouble was waiting to happen. And trouble came on a particularly symbolic day: October 16, 1983, the day of Ashura, the tenth of the Muslim month of Muharram, commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Hussein at Kerbala. An armed Israeli convoy coincidentally turned up in the Shia town of Nabatiye on that day, and tried to make its way through the procession of mourners and flagellants. Two people were killed, several wounded.


The die was cast in the south. The next day Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi Shams El Din, the leading cleric in the Shia community, vice-chairman of the Higher Shia Council (the chairmanship is retained by the missing Imam Musa al Sadr), issued a fatwa, a binding religious opinion, calling for “civil disobedience” and “resistance to occupation in the South.” Dealing with Israel, he said, was “absolutely impermissible.” Of his “brothers and sons in the South,” the cleric asked fidelity to the land, that they defend and hold it at any price. Every generation, the cleric said, has its own Kerbala man makes his own choice; he can “soar and sacrifice” or he can “submit and betray.”


The seventh-century tale of Kerbala became a modern weapon. The cleric who issued this fatwa was a conservative man who played the conventional game of Lebanese politics. But other clerics and true believers believed in an entirely different kind of politics. And Syria, entrenched in the Bekaa Valley, was ready to harness the wrath and the passion of extremists for its own purposes. Suicide drivers and “martyrs” were not far behind. On November 4, a suicide driver struck the Israeli headquarters in Tyre. Israel responded by closing the crossing on the Awali River which connected the south to Beirut. Clinton Bailey, an Israeli academic who served as a liaison officer in south Lebanon, summed up the impact: “The basis of the southern economy collapsed. It was this event that finally smashed the last friendly sentiments toward Israel.”


VI


The fight in the south was one Shia concern. Another Shia fight was waged in Greater Beirut over the city itself, and over the nature of the Lebanese regime to emerge after the war. This was a fight that pitted the Shi‘ites and their Druze allies in the nearby Shouf Mountains (and their Syrian backers) against the Phalange-based regime of President Amin Gemayel and, by extension, his American backers.


Guilt for the summer of 1982 and for the Sabra and Shatila massacres of that autumn had taken the U.S. marines to Lebanon on an undefined mission in a setting that Washington did not fully understand. Once on the ground, the distant superpower became a party to the sectarian feud. Behind the shield and prestige of a great power, the Phalange-based regime set out to subdue an unwieldy country. In times past, when France was a power to be reckoned with, the Maronites made themselves part of France’s mission in the Levant. And for a brief moment (from the fall of 1982 until the winter of 1984) history seemed to repeat itself for the Maronites. The United States was to do for them—so they hoped—what France once did. It was a time of great Maronite delusions. The Shi‘ite “squatters” in the southern suburbs were to be cleared out; the Druze of the Shouf Mountains were to be defeated.


A fantasy from the past continued to see the Shia of Greater Beirut as intruders on the city, peasants who could be sent packing to their two ancestral homelands in the south and the Bekaa Valley. It was in this vein that one Pierre Yazbeck, the representative of the Lebanese Forces in Israel, told a visiting American journalist: “The Shia in Beirut are an unnatural concentration. They are refugees from the south and should return.” Boulos Namaan, the influential head of the Maronite Order of Monks, put forth a similar view to a young Shi‘ite journalist. In the vision of this militant priest, the urban Shia—some 700,000 inhabitants, perhaps more—would be sent back to the land. A large Shia population had grown in the city, and much of the real estate in Greater Beirut belonged to them. Yet their right to a place in the city was not yet recognized.


The Shia had been through this before. Early in the civil war, they had lost one of their major city footholds, an Armenian-Shia settlement northeast of Beirut. They were expelled in 1976 when that suburb fell behind Maronite lines. It took no great imagination to see the new scheme: East Beirut would remain Christian; West Beirut, the traditional haven of the Sunni community, would have to come to terms with the Phalange for it lacked the armed manpower to defend itself. There was no room left for the Shia.


The Gemayel regime found a Sunni figleaf in the person of a minor Beirut politician, Shafiq al Wazzan, who was appointed prime minister. Then it pushed on two fronts—against the Druze in the Shouf and the Shia in Greater Beirut. It shut out of its deliberations Nabih Berri, the leader of Shia Amal, and the Druze chieftain Walid Jumblatt. It then signed the American-sponsored accord of May 17, 1983, with Israel. The Gemayel regime sought the support of a foreign power to substitute for a social contract at home. By mid-summer 1983, the Gemayel regime’s strategy had forged in opposition a novel alliance between the Druze and the Shia.


The Maronite bid for hegemony could not be sustained against the Druze and the Shia together, and the ruthless determination of Syria to hold sway in Lebanon. The Phalange were convinced of America’s commitment to them, but soon the distant superpower was on its way out of Lebanon. Suicide drivers struck the American and the French barracks on October 23, 1983. The United States could not annul geography for the Maronites, or push Syria out of the country, or make the Druze and the Shia accept Phalange hegemony. Eight days after the attack on the marines, Syria convened a conference of Lebanon’s warlords in Geneva. Nabih Berri, a man of modest background, joined the traditional notables in the councils of power.


But the fight in Beirut would not be settled for another three months. In early February, the Shia and the Druze swept into West Beirut, and Berri called on the army to desert the regime. All along, the army had a rank-and-file Shi‘ite majority and, predictably, it split along sectarian lines and collapsed. The leader of Amal had acted in the nick of time, for the battle in the south against Israel was being fought by militant clerics, and the extremists in the Bekaa Valley were gaining power. The middle-ground held by Amal was caving under. In Clinton Bailey’s words, Berri had to act “to check a growing tidal wave of support for the fanatics.”


The challenge of the Druze was an old communal threat. Constituting only some six percent of the country’s population, the Druze sought only to be left alone in their own part of the country. The Druze centrality of command subordinated the men of the religious institution to the authority of the chieftain.


The Shia were a wholly different problem. Their numbers were much larger. Their long memories of persecution were suddenly awakening to a sense of power. They spoke with a multitude of voices: clerics battled secular leaders for ascendancy. Only Musa al Sadr himself, “the Imam,” had laid claim to combined political and religious leadership. In his absence there were competing inheritors: the clerics insisted on the primacy of their role; the laymen who willingly followed Musa al Sadr now wanted the clerics to return to the traditional functions of the men of religion. A patrician from the Bekaa Valley, Hussein al Husseini, now speaker of parliament, continued to play by the old rules of the Lebanese system. His rival, Nabih Berri, now a member of the coalition cabinet, brought to his own quest the energy of an ambitious outsider—the drive of a new Shia middle class grasping for its own place.


And there was the chaos in the country bringing forth new men who found in the anarchy an outlet and a vehicle for their own ambitions.


VII


The most profound truth of Lebanon is as old as the land: the primacy of the religious sect and the clan, and the will of the “big man” leading a particular sect. Men may have moved beyond their sects during periods of self-confidence, but they retreated behind communal lines during times of upheaval. The leading sect thrived when it had something to offer the country beyond sheer dominion. Liberals had long tried to make of Lebanon a sophisticated republic by the Mediterranean. But that was a pretense, and we have seen its terrible harvest. Marxists brought to Lebanon the categories of class and the conflicts of class. But the country outwitted and eluded them as well. Today Shia clerics, Maronite monks and Sunni emirs (princes) of Islamic associations lead the people of Lebanon and tap their deepest phobias and aspirations.


The Druze, a formidable sect of warriors, once governed the heartland of Lebanon as feudal rulers and warlords. Then, in the mid-nineteenth century, the Maronites overtook them, found their way to the city of Beirut when it was becoming a thriving trade center, developed links to Europe through a vibrant silk industry, and learned the ways of the modern world. The Druze were too brittle to change. The Maronites had something more substantial and viable to offer Lebanon—and even the Arab world beyond. It was on that reserve that the Maronites drew for a little more than a century.


History has again turned in Lebanon. It is the Shia who have emerged as the country’s principal sect. The skills and the habits of authority, and the self-confidence that come with power and a settled existence, are not yet theirs. But a profound change in their fortunes has taken place. For the moderate Shia mainstream, this was a chance for the country’s largest group to lay claim to its legitimate share of power. For more marginal and intemperate men, there was something to the recent events resembling a millennial fulfillment. The great drama that came to pass in Iran, Wilayat al Faqih, the rule of the jurist, found those who would want to emulate it in Lebanon. In the words of a young cleric from the Party of God (Hizbollah), Sayyid Ibrahim al Amin: “the realm of the faqih, the jurist, is not a specific geographical realm; it covers the entire world of Islam.” In this one true believer’s vision, the special situation of Lebanon is not particularly important; Lebanon is an “impure realm” that has to be cleansed and the Shia state that found its fulfillment in Iran should be duplicated in Lebanon.


But the specter of a Shia state is a Shia delusion; it is also a demon that others in Lebanon—Sunnis, Maronites—summon up to deny the legitimate claims of the country’s largest group. The fight in Lebanon now is not about the establishment of a state of the zealous; it is about the apportioning of power among the country’s principal sects. Some Shi‘ites, to be sure, borrow the example of Iran. But the overwhelming majority of the Shia recognize the limits of the country. Even Sayyid Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, Shia Beirut’s most compelling preacher, dismisses the idea of an “Islamic state” in Lebanon. The “objective conditions,” he says, are not there for “Islam to rule Lebanon”; such ideas, he says, are “leaps into the void”; one has to consider “the larger balance of forces.”


Men in Lebanon sharing Iran’s Shi‘ite faith live in a world and a state of their own. Carried across frontiers—particularly across a tough, unsentimental state like Syria—the Shia truth of Iran runs into concrete social realities that are different from the old country. Beirut is a tough and cynical city now hardened by war and ruin. There, men and women see a scoundrel behind every mask. This is not exactly the ideal site for great movements of redemption.


The true believers in Hizbollah in the southern slums of Beirut and a splinter movement of fanatics in the Bekaa—Islamic Amal headed by Hussein Muswai, a former government schoolteacher now doing Iran’s bidding in Lebanon—are sure to give their militant vision a try. They have going for them the sense that history is on their side, that moderation everywhere in the region has been discredited, that the time is right to settle old historic accounts, that great odds could be overcome by faith and terror. Hizbollah and Islamic Amal will fight for their place and their vision of the country. As in other similar situations, the true believers will bring to their quest the grievances of ambitious men, the legitimacy of time-honored symbols, and will try to make up in passion and frenzy what they lack in numbers. But if the offer made by Hizbollah for the Christians of Lebanon to convert to Islam is a true indication of the extremists’ mood, theirs is a state approaching delirium.


So far the men in Hizbollah have coexisted, uneasily, with the Shia mainstream movement, Amal. The former are made of sterner stuff, but they know that they are in the minority. Only a fool would say for sure whether the Shia center will hold: the odds are in its favor, and the Shia mainstream is not without some credits of its own. It fought a successful battle for Beirut in February of 1984; it threw its weight into the battle in the south against Israel as a way of preempting the appeal and the claim of the extremists. The Shia mainstream is a legitimate piece of Lebanon—with all the appertaining strengths and weaknesses.


A Shia bid for power that tries to outrun the sectarian compact can succeed no better than the Maronite dream of a state cut off from its Arab environment. The harsh economic limits of Lebanon will always push that country in the direction of the Arab world as a petitioner for funds and help. And the custodians of Arab wealth in the Gulf states will try their best to calm the tempest in Lebanon, or to quarantine Lebanon’s troubles. A radical Shi‘ite enterprise in Lebanon will end in isolation and frenzy. There is no viable agricultural hinterland in Lebanon to sustain a zealous state of the faithful. Unlike Iran, there is no oil wealth that would accrue to those who conquer political power. The space and resources for a utopia of any kind do not exist in Lebanon. A radical Shia political enterprise would be starved by the Arab world. Utopias do not thrive in small economies of trade and services.


VIII


More concrete and less grandiose Shia causes will figure in the phase ahead. Above all, there is the issue of reclaiming the land. The south of Lebanon will be up for grabs in the aftermath of Israel’s withdrawal. That is as sure as anything in Lebanon; the weakness of the Lebanese government will preclude a happier outcome. There will be, as well, a settlement of petty accounts with the collaborators and “enforcers” of the occupation regime. But beyond the small accounts, there is the larger imperative of controlling the territory itself.


Israel’s preferred solution is the control of the south by its new client, General Antoine Lahd, and his South Lebanon Army; its nightmare is the return of its old nemesis, the PLO. It should be patently obvious that the South Lebanon Army—a group of mercenaries—will be unable to inherit Israel’s position or to pacify the south. What power has been exercised by that army has been derived from Israel’s own presence. And that power has in the main consisted of acts of harassment and violence. As a force of Christians in a predominantly Shi‘ite part of the country, the South Lebanon Army will, in time, be overwhelmed.


The question of the return of the Palestinians to the south of Lebanon is more tangled. One does not have to range very far to divine the reasons why Yasir Arafat might try a comeback to the south of Lebanon. In the latter part of 1983, Arafat returned from his Tunisian exile and made a stand in the refugee camps of Tripoli; he vowed to “fight to the end,” and was forced out by Syria and its own Palestinian clients. As the dream of Palestinian nationalism faces the combined power of Israel and Syria, Arafat’s search for some geographic base of his own is a fight to keep his own claim alive.


The large Palestinian refugee camps in the Sidon area could tempt Arafat. This would be in keeping with his own style: the avoidance of hard choices, his inability to disavow the slogans of the past—i.e., the “armed struggle”—or to pursue, through Jordan, whatever diplomatic options are available on that front, and to carry with him his principal lieutenants in a sharp break with a legacy of Palestinian negations.


The PLO would bring to Lebanon money and weapons and more of the delusions that the West Bank could be rescued, and Israel could be defeated, from Lebanon. Young Palestinian boys without a future would be given guns and the illusion of a political undertaking. The Sunnis of West Beirut and Sidon, worried about Shia numbers and Shia militancy, could offer support to Arafat’s PLO. The Palestinians would be brought back—indeed this has begun—to West Beirut as a praetorian guard for a threatened Sunni community witnessing the passing of its own ascendancy.


In the final analysis, though, Arafat and his organization would bring to the refugee camps in the south the same hell that trailed them to Tripoli in 1983. Arafat would have to fight Syria’s breakaway Palestinian factions, as he did in Tripoli. And this time his forces would be face to face with an armed Shia population. It will be impossible for the Palestinians to brandish in the face of the Shia the cause of an armed struggle against Israel. Plainly, the Shia proved to be more formidable enemies of Israel than did the PLO. The awe with which Arafat and his cause were once held is a thing of the past.


Israel, then, is left with having to trust today’s enemy—the Shia—to keep the Palestinians out of the south. Until the Lebanese state goes beyond the factionalism of the warlords—not a likely prospect in the near future, if ever—it is only the Shia mainstream, and its armed movement, Amal, that could secure the south. They would do it for their own reasons; armed Palestinian activity would be checked to keep intact the Shia world in southern Lebanon.


No assurances should be sought by Israel from the Shia. For, if the past is any guide, none will be offered. The control of the land would have to be left to its own people. The fragile institutions of the Lebanese state—a cabinet in which the leader of Amal has a portfolio for the affairs of the south, an army in which whole brigades and units are manned and led by Shia, a Shia defense minister—could provide the cover and the legitimacy of the state for the Shia endeavor in the south. None of this will bring order to Lebanon, or change the country’s ways, or enable the place to look beyond its feuds and phobias. It only means that a foreign power that crossed an international border has retreated, leaving the place to find its own balance of forces.


There is no likelihood of a tranquil Israeli-Lebanese border, no guarantee that Katyusha rockets will not again be fired into Galilee after Israel’s withdrawal. No government in Israel should have to make that kind of promise; only the men who waged the war of 1982 entertained such grandiose expectations.


The case for the Israeli withdrawal is a more cautious one, based on a hard reading of the outcome of Israel’s invasion of Lebanon. The war ended in a major setback for the nation that waged it, and in great ruin for the people at the receiving end of that invasion. A war billed as a war against terrorism and radicalism culminated in deeper levels of rage and terror. The retreat to the international border would be a liquidation of that war and a return to the status quo ante. From the border, Israel would have the means to defend itself and the right to reprisals that stay within the rough rules of proportionality. The reign of informers and of Israel’s Shin Beth security force, which made life a nightmare for occupier and occupied alike, would be replaced by a return to more conventional means of security.


The fight between the Shia and Israel is more “normal” than that between Israel and the Palestinians. The current struggle in the south of Lebanon is the classic one between a native population and a foreign occupier. There are no Shia territorial claims against Israel. The argument that Israel has ended up with the enmity of hundreds of thousands of Shi‘ites, as opposed to that of several thousand Palestinian guerrillas, is misplaced. It is not across the border to the south that the Shia look. Their cause is in the south of Lebanon itself and in Greater Beirut. For the true believers among them, there is a cause to their east—the battle between the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein and its Shia challengers. Iraq has the holy cities of Shia Islam—Najaf and Kerbala—and the gripping historical memories of an embattled faith. It was in Iraq’s shrines and religious seminaries that the Shia clerics of Lebanon studied.


IX


Closer to home, there is the power of Syria to be confronted by Lebanese Shia and non-Shia alike. So far Syria has pursued a two-tier Shia policy—unleashing the Shi‘ites against the Americans and the Israelis and the Gemayel regime, and then reining them in when it saw fit to do so. From its position in the Bekaa, Syria manipulated the Shia rage and the passions for its own raison d’état; it has played off rival Shia factions and contenders for power against one another. As the new guarantor of the Lebanese political order, Syria can be expected to do what it can against a major Shi‘ite bid for power. This would be in keeping with Syria’s past behavior in Lebanon. A decade ago, Syria dashed the hopes of those on the Lebanese left and among the Palestinians and the Druze who sought to overwhelm the Maronites and turn Lebanon into a radical republic of their own. Then it aborted the Maronite drive for hegemony. Is one to doubt whether Syria would have the will to thwart a radical Shia undertaking that goes beyond the limits of Syria’s tolerance?


Syria has no great schemes for Lebanon; it is free of the sort of illusions that Israel and America had about the country. The Syrian leaders know the Lebanese cast of characters. They have been dealing with Lebanon’s warlords for more than a decade; they know the factionalism of the place and the hopeless ways of Lebanon’s tribes. The custodians of the Syrian state have asserted, and successfully so, their right to intervene in Lebanon, and have defended that prerogative against the Palestinians and their Lebanese allies in 1976, and against the Maronites and Israel and America in 1978-84. Syria has paid homage to the shell of Lebanese sovereignty when it saw fit to do so, and violated it during that brief interlude in 1982-84 when the Phalange-based regime groped for an Israeli, then for an American, prop in order to push Syria out of the country.


Syria will continue to work within and through the shell of Lebanese sovereignty. The Syrians will not push their luck in Lebanon. The facade of Syrian power—imposing when the Syrians are engaged in mischief against the Israelis and the Americans, and against other Arabs—hides all sorts of Syrian weaknesses and troubles, troubles that would come to the surface if the Syrians set out to subdue Lebanon or if the dream of Greater Syria becomes more heady and reckless. The Syrian regime remains a minority-based regime ruling a sullen and resentful country. A presence in Lebanon that turns unduly grim and costly is not something that the custodians of the Syrian state are interested in.


Syria has in place the kind of Lebanese regime it wants: a regime with clipped wings and with no other foreign option, a regime in which all the competing warlords—Shi‘ite, Sunni, Maronite and Druze—journey to Damascus to check the schemes of their rivals, to obtain what insurance policies the custodians of the Syrian state are willing to underwrite. Syria will let the “natural” workings of power run their course. Damascus is sure that its pull and weight will bring whole parts of Lebanon under its sway, places like the Bekaa Valley (Shia) in eastern Lebanon and Tripoli (Sunni) in the north were historically parts of Greater Syria. It was a foreign decision—that of the French in 1920—to assign these portions to the Lebanese state. As the Western world, France, then the United States, retreats from Lebanon, an old historical pattern will reassert itself. Damascus, a city of the interior, will have its way against Beirut, a city on the Mediterranean hitherto sustained by Western power and pretensions.


Syria will not allow Lebanon to be used by others against it. Damascus denied the land to the Palestinians, then to the Israelis and the Americans. Shrewd players, the Syrians knew—and repeatedly told the Lebanese—that the Americans did not have the stomach, or the stakes, for a fight over Lebanon. The Syrians escalated the stakes and waited for America to pack up and leave. Roughly the same strategy was applied against Israel. Israel was far too vulnerable to withstand a campaign of attrition. It was the “balance of interest” that operated to Syria’s advantage against the Americans and the Israelis in Lebanon and that will continue to do so in the years ahead. Syria was willing and able to out-wait both the Americans and the Israelis in Lebanon and to sustain greater losses there.


As for Syria’s duel with the Palestinians in Lebanon, that was never such a difficult undertaking and will be far easier in the phase ahead. An armed Palestinian presence in Lebanon is an alien structure. For now the three preeminent groups in Lebanon’s politics—the Druze, the Shia, and the Maronites—are all agreed that there can be no independent Palestinian role in Lebanon. And it is a view shared by the custodians of the Syrian state who have long believed in their own prerogatives as the “principal Arab state” in the Fertile Crescent, and as the most legitimate and interested party to the question of Palestine.


If and when the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon is completed, those in Lebanon trying to shape the future will confront the will of Syria and the harsh economic and sectarian limits of their country. Some power has come to the Shia, to be sure. The Shia leaders recall a time not so long ago when Beirut was an alien place, a land of Sunni Muslims and Christians, and when the dead in the Shia community had to be taken back to their ancestral villages for burial because there was no Shia cemetery in the city. Now some of the great fortunes in the city are Shia fortunes; the Shia are present in force. But power has come to the Shia during a time of ruin. All in Lebanon battle one another, a vicious circle of helplessness. In a world of states, the lives of men and sects without states of their own are chronicles of futility.


LE MONDE TIM EVANS/REUTERS INTERNATIONAL DONALD TRUMP La guerre en Iran au centre des manifestations « No Kings » contre Donald Trump aux Etats-Unis : « L’Amérique est du mauvais côté dans cette histoire » Par Nicolas Chapuis (New York, correspondant) Publié aujourd’hui à 05h07, modifié à 07h28 (Le 29 Mars 2026)

 LE MONDE

TIM EVANS/REUTERS

INTERNATIONAL

DONALD TRUMP


La guerre en Iran au centre des manifestations « No Kings » contre Donald Trump aux Etats-Unis : « L’Amérique est du mauvais côté dans cette histoire »

Par Nicolas Chapuis (New York, correspondant)

Publié aujourd’hui à 05h07, modifié à 07h28 (Le 29 Mars 2026)

Temps deLecture 3 min.


Article réservé aux abonnés


RÉCIT  Des millions de personnes se sont mobilisées contre l’administration Trump, samedi dans tout le pays, avec pour épicentre Minneapolis-Saint Paul, où deux Américains ont été tués en janvier par des agents fédéraux.

Pour la troisième fois en un an, les bannières « No Kings » (pas de rois) ont flotté un peu partout aux Etats-Unis, samedi 28 mars. Les opposants à Donald Trump sont descendus massivement dans la rue à travers le pays, répondant à ce mot d’ordre qui dénonce une dérive autoritariste du président américain. Pas moins de 3 000 rassemblements avaient été organisés, dans des petites villes du Midwest comme dans les grandes métropoles des côtes. Le collectif à l’origine de la mobilisation revendiquait 8 millions de participants samedi soir, un chiffre impossible à vérifier.


Lire aussi | Aux Etats-Unis, les manifestations « No Kings » contre Donald Trump en images


L’évènement phare avait lieu à Minneapolis-Saint Paul (Minnesota), où des prises de paroles, entrecoupées d’intermèdes musicaux, étaient organisées, en présence de célébrités comme Bruce Springsteen, Joan Baez, Jane Fonda, ou encore du sénateur indépendant du Vermont Bernie Sanders, figure de la gauche américaine. Les Twin Cities sont devenues le symbole de l’opposition à Trump, depuis l’opération anti-immigration sur place qui a causé la mort de deux citoyens américains, Renee Good et Alex Pretti, tués par des agents fédéraux. La Maison Blanche a dû reculer et la résistance pacifique des citoyens, qui se sont mobilisés pour défendre les immigrés de la ville, fait désormais office de modèle à travers le pays.


Le chanteur Bruce Springsteen lors de la manifestation « No Kings » à Saint Paul (Minnesota), le 28 mars 2026. ELLEN SCHMIDT/AP

« On s’est senti galvanisé, raconte Jérôme Chateau, président du comité d’aménagement dans le quartier de South Uptown à Minneapolis et membre du Parti démocrate, qui assistait au rassemblement. L’atmosphère était bon enfant, avec de l’humour, de la combativité et aussi des moments très touchants. On en a besoin parce que le sous-texte ici, c’est que tout le monde a été traumatisé par ce qui s’est passé. Mais c’était aussi une célébration, il y a une forme de fierté parce qu’on a remporté une victoire. »


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Saturday, March 28, 2026

T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı - 28 Mart 2026, Sayın Bakanımızın Pakistan'da Düzenlenecek Toplantıya Katılımı Hk.

 T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı 

28 Mart 2026, Sayın Bakanımızın Pakistan'da Düzenlenecek Toplantıya Katılımı Hk.


Sayın Bakanımız, bölgedeki gelişmelerin ele alınması amacıyla İslamabad'da düzenlenecek toplantıya katılmak üzere 29-30 Mart 2026 tarihlerinde Pakistan'a bir ziyaret gerçekleştirecektir.

THE NATIONAL INTEREST - Does the US Have a “Day After” Plan in Iran? By Eric Alter Dean and Professor of International Law, Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy Member, Council on Foreign Relations

 THE NATIONAL  INTEREST

Does the US Have a “Day After” Plan in Iran?


By Eric Alter

Dean and Professor of International Law, Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy

Member, Council on Foreign Relations


What destroyed Iraq after 2003 was not the war; it was the failure to plan for the post-war order. Iran could turn out the same way.



The lights went out in Baghdad in April 2003 and stayed out for years. Not because the grid was bombed—it remained largely intact—but because the people who knew how to run it had been removed. Coalition Provisional Authority Administrator Paul Bremer’s decision to dissolve the Iraqi army and purge the Ba’ath Party from the civil service in a single week in May 2003 stripped the country of the engineers, administrators, and officers who maintained whatever order existed. Four hundred thousand of those men, armed and suddenly without pay or purpose, had nowhere to go and every reason to be angry. 

The insurgency that followed was not a surprise to anyone who had thought about it. Almost nobody in the occupation’s upper ranks had thought about it. Al Qaeda in Iraq and eventually the Islamic State grew as a result of that oversight. The proliferation of terrorist groups was not an ideological inevitability, but the spawn of a specific and avoidable failure of planning for the morning after a military victory.

Libya in 2011 was faster and in some ways worse. Libyan Dictator Muammar el-Qaddafi had hollowed out every institution in the country that might have rivalled him, which meant there was almost nothing beneath him when NATO removed him. The militias running Libya today are not an accident of Libyan culture or history. They are the direct inheritors of an intervention that destroyed a government, watched the country fragment, and left. 

The consistent lesson across seven decades of Western military action in the Middle East is not that intervention fails on the battlefield. It rarely does. The failure lies in the gap between military victory and legitimate authority—the gap filled by whoever was organized and armed enough to wait in the wings.

Iran is a harder version of this problem in almost every respect. While the Trump administration has not specified what kind of “regime change” it wants or how it seeks to achieve it, it is clear that it wants significant changes to Iran’s internal government and policies. 

Iraq’s borders were drawn by a British official named Mark Sykes in 1916, on a map he’d never studied carefully, in a negotiation with François Georges-Picot, a French diplomat who had his own interests. The national identity that was supposed to hold Iraq together was always contested and in important ways remains so. Iran is a civilization that has governed itself in one form or another for more than two thousand years. 

When Iranians take to the streets—as they did in 2009, 2019, 2022, and in January 2026, when the regime killed at least 30,000 of them—they are arguing over what kind of Iran they want. The existence of Iran is not in question in the way the existence of Iraq as a coherent unit has always been in question.

That matters because it means there is a state to redirect rather than a vacuum to fill. The engineers running Tehran’s water infrastructure are not, for the most part, people who believe in the Islamic Republic. They are people who made their accommodation with it and kept working. A transition must preserve those people. Baghdad lost its electricity because Bremer removed the only class of people who knew how to keep it on. Tehran does not have to repeat that.

Because the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) regional architecture makes Iran’s day-after problem unlike anything that has come before it, Hezbollah has its own revenues, its own hospitals, its own seats in the Lebanese parliament, thirty years of institutional development that has nothing to do with who is running Iran on any given day. The Houthis, the Popular Mobilization Forces in Iraq, the network of commanders embedded across Syria—these organizations were built with Iranian money and direction. Still, they have grown their own roots and often pursue their own objectives. When the connection to Tehran is cut, they will lose the constraints that came with Iranian patronage as much as they lose the support. They may become autonomous, competitive, and unpredictable in already unstable countries.

And then there is the uranium. The Isfahan enrichment facility was hit in the US-Israeli strikes of June 2025. How much weapons-grade uranium survived, and where it is now, is impossible to say. The same strikes that destroyed the centrifuges destroyed the monitoring equipment that would have told us. No previous target of Western military action had as advanced a nuclear program as Iran. The question of what happens to the enriched uranium during a governance transition is not a technical detail that can be addressed later. It is a question that must guide US strategy going forward.

Meanwhile, the Strait of Hormuz, 21 miles wide at its narrowest, is effectively closed. Iran does not need to sink tankers to achieve that—the threat of mines and missiles is enough to make insurance prohibitive, which keeps the ships at anchor. The Brent crude oil price has risen to $112 as of March 27. In the United States, that is a political headache. But, in Pakistan, Bangladesh, or across the Sahel, the same price movement means people go hungry.

There is a democratic opposition in Iran that has been built at a real cost over many years. The post-2009 Green Movement generation has maintained resistance despite the 2022 and 2026 crackdowns. Diaspora networks in London, Los Angeles, and Berlin maintained connections to the interior. In 2003, the Iraqi liberals who hoped to build a democratic Iraq after Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship were also serious people. 

Most of them were overwhelmed not by their own failures but by the conditions the occupation created: the security vacuum, the militias Iran funded into that vacuum, the basic inability of the Coalition Provisional Authority to establish circumstances in which civilian politics could function. The conditions matter more than the people, and the conditions depend on decisions being made right now by an administration that has given no public sign of having thought them through.

The question hanging over the Iran War is the same one that went unanswered in Iraq. Is the United States prepared for what comes next? In Iraq, it took 20 years and hundreds of thousands of lives to answer that question.

About the Author: Eric Alter

Eric Alter is the dean of the Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy in Abu Dhabi and a professor of international law and diplomacy, as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. A former United Nations civil servant and a senior consultant/team leader with various international organizations such as the WTO, the World Bank, IFC, UNDP, UNEP, and FAO. Professor Alter has been seconded abroad and worked with embassies in an advisory capacity, in particular in Aden, Beirut, and Cairo. He received his PhD from Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne. Follow him on X: @eralter_eric.