Lebanon-Israel War | 2023-present

June 10, 2026

Ramzi Abou Ismail, PHD

The Fear That Built Hezbollah and the Fear That Sustains It


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Beirut, Lebanon,
Photo by JOSEPH EID / AFP . A man walks past a placard pasted on an electricity booth in Beirut on June 10, 2026, depicting the logo of Hezbollah military media with Arabic wording that reads 'Days, nights and the field between us'.
Iran has insisted any deal to end the war must include a truce in Lebanon, which was drawn into the conflict when Iran-backed Hezbollah militants within its borders fired rockets at Israel on March 2.

At what point does a survival narrative stop describing reality and start producing it?

That question lies at the heart of Lebanon’s debate over Hezbollah today.

Political psychology has a name for what happens when movements outlive the conditions of their creation. Collective traumas do not dissolve when circumstances change. They calcify into identity. The historical memory of threat becomes almost as politically potent as threat itself, sometimes more so, because memory can be managed in ways that reality cannot.

Communities continue to interpret present events through the grammar of past suffering. Political leaders invoke yesterday’s dangers to justify today’s structures. Entire generations inherit fears they never personally experienced and inherit them as fact.

This is not a pathology unique to Hezbollah. It operates across movements, across societies, across histories. But it is particularly consequential in Lebanon today, where the gap between the narrative of existential threat and the actual nature of the threat has grown so wide that it demands honest examination.

Every serious political movement is built on a real grievance. That is what makes them serious.
Hezbollah is no exception. The movement’s critics – and there are many – often make the mistake of treating its rise as a product of Iranian engineering alone, as if a population with no legitimate fears was simply recruited into a foreign project. This is not history. It is ideology dressed as analysis.

The fears that contributed to Hezbollah’s rise were real. For decades, Lebanon’s Shia community endured political marginalization, economic neglect, repeated Israeli invasions, and the near-total absence of state protection. In large parts of the South and the Bekaa, the Lebanese state did not fail its citizens; it was never really there. Under those conditions, the emergence of an armed resistance movement was not merely predictable. It was almost structurally inevitable.

Hezbollah did not become powerful because it had weapons. It became powerful because it offered what the state could not: protection. Its founding message was simple and, for many Lebanese Shia, experientially true: the state cannot protect you, but we can.

That was the origin. The question for 2026 is whether it remains the reality.

The Hezbollah of the 1980s emerged in response to a specific, concrete reality. The Hezbollah of 2026 operates in a country where the political landscape has been fundamentally altered by the 2006 war, by Syria, by October 7th, by the collapse of its Iranian supply chain, by the decimation of its senior leadership, and by the catastrophic toll of a conflict that took far more from Lebanon’s Shia community than it returned. The movement’s military deterrence, the pillar on which its entire legitimacy rested, has been severely degraded.

And yet the discourse remains unchanged: catastrophe is imminent, enemies are circling, only perpetual mobilization guarantees survival.

This is what makes the current diplomatic moment more significant than it appears. The ongoing negotiations over southern deployments, ceasefire implementation, and the Lebanese Army’s expanded role are not, at their core, military questions.

They are psychological ones.

The real negotiation, the one that will determine Lebanon’s trajectory, is not happening in Washington or Tel Aviv. It is happening in the minds of Lebanese citizens who must decide, for themselves, whether they believe that security can still only come from a political party, or whether it must now come from a state.

For decades, Hezbollah’s legitimacy rested on the demonstrable failure of Lebanese institutions. Every state collapse, every political betrayal, every episode of sectarian cowardice by the political class strengthened the argument that only Hezbollah stood between the community and catastrophe. The state’s dysfunction was not incidental to Hezbollah’s power.

It was foundational to it.

But Lebanon in 2026 faces a different kind of catastrophe.

Not an invading army.

A dissolving society.

The country is hemorrhaging its youth, its professionals, its intellectual capital, and what remains of its institutional memory. Public trust is not merely low; in many domains, it has ceased to exist as a social phenomenon. National cohesion is a phrase politicians use at funerals.

The deepest irony of this moment is that the narrative architecture built to protect a community may now be one of the structural obstacles to building the state that community, and every Lebanese community, desperately needs.

The question before Lebanon is therefore not whether Hezbollah still has weapons.

Weapons are a symptom.

The question is whether the fear that once justified those weapons still reflects the country as it actually exists, or whether it reflects a past that has become more useful as memory than it ever was as reality.

That question belongs to every Lebanese.

And the refusal to ask it honestly is itself a form of answer.

Ramzi Abou Ismail is a Political Psychologist and Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Justice and Conflict Resolution at the Lebanese American University.
The views in this story reflect those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the beliefs of NOW.
 
...Israel negotiates with the Lebanese state, but calibrates its actions in response to Hezbollah. The United States pushes for institutional arrangements that presume state sovereignty, while acknowledging, implicitly, that sovereignty is incomplete. Hezbollah, for its part, engages in a parallel logic of deterrence and resistance that does not map onto the diplomatic framework being constructed.

The result is a three-layered system of interaction: state diplomacy, non-state coercion, and external mediation. These layers do not align. And when they do not align, agreements become fragile by design.

It is within this structure that Hezbollah’s refusal to negotiate must be understood. It is not simply following Iranian orders, nor is it acting irrationally. It is operating within a coherent strategic and ideological framework that sees the current negotiations as a potential pathway to constraint, if not outright disarmament.

And here lies the broader lesson. External pressure, no matter how intense, cannot substitute for internal political resolution. The United States can broker ceasefires and convene talks. Israel can impose costs and demand guarantees. But neither can resolve the fundamental question that sits at the heart of Lebanon’s crisis: who controls the use of force within the state?

Until that question is addressed, every ceasefire will be temporary, every negotiation partial, and every agreement vulnerable to collapse.

The temptation, in moments like this, is to look outward – to Iran, to Israel, to Washington – for explanations and solutions. But the uncomfortable truth is that the limits of this process are not only imposed from outside. They are produced from within.

Hezbollah’s rigidity is not an anomaly. It is a reflection of a system that has yet to decide what it wants to be.

And until that decision is made, Lebanon will continue to negotiate without fully being in the room.
 
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Hezbollah downs Heron-1 UAV over north Lebanon
 
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U.S. used 49 tomahawk missiles to attack Iran yesterday, which Trump admitted cost $250 million
 
Hezbollah hunts Israeli soldiers in Khiam, a town right on the border.

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Hezbollah’s War Against the Future

By Cyrille Najjar

Peace threatens Hezbollah’s political model far more than war does.

6jPupscKt3LSy6ioxXy7wblRaLclE5EtF5NYcwLm.jpeg


Cyrille Najjar is a senior advisor for AI, and a lecturer at UC Berkeley and Imperial College.
Wed 10 Jun 2026 · 10:52Last updated on Wed 10 Jun 2026 · 10:52

At the beginning of the week, the Israeli military appeared to be preparing an operation of unprecedented scale against Beirut’s southern suburbs. More than fifty-five buildings were reportedly identified as potential airstrike targets. Some sources even raised the possibility of an Israeli landing from the sea, which would have marked an unparalleled escalation.

Faced with this grim prospect, intense diplomatic activity was immediately set in motion. From the White House to the Élysée, a flurry of calls was made to convince Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to abandon an operation that risked setting the entire region ablaze. Top Western officials used every available channel to prevent Lebanon from descending into a deeper war with potentially catastrophic consequences.

Amid the threat of such escalation, it is worth recalling a reality many today seem all too eager to forget. President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawwaf Salam did everything in their power to secure a ceasefire. They made diplomatic appeals and sought the intervention of the U.S. and regional powers to spare Lebanon another cataclysm.

Yet, when a ceasefire agreement was reached on June 3, Hezbollah rejected it immediately and unambiguously, in word and deed. The militia continued its attacks against Israeli troops in southern Lebanon and launched a provocative rocket barrage into northern Israel. Hezbollah’s bellicosity made clear a strategic decision had already been taken: Lebanon was to remain a battlefield, regardless of the cost to the country and its people.

To understand this decision, one must look outside Lebanon. Iran has no interest in seeing Israel unshackled from the front in Lebanon. Every interceptor used against a Hezbollah rocket, every air-defense battery deployed in northern Israel, every soldier sent to the border is one less resource for Israel’s fight against Iran. For the Islamic Republic, maintaining pressure from Lebanon has become a strategic necessity.

Iran’s objective is to buy time at any cost and delay the inevitable. It hopes that a shift in the geopolitical landscape or a political change in Washington will divert the attention of its adversaries. As with other regimes cornered before them, the theocrats ruling Iran are banking on survival, not triumph.

Tehran’s proxy Hezbollah finds itself in a similar situation. For decades, its power rested on the pillars of Iranian money, Syrian strategic depth, and its political status in Lebanon as a resistance movement. Now, all three pillars are crumbling. The new authorities in Syria are interdicting Hezbollah’s smuggling routes. International scrutiny of Hezbollah’s illicit financial pipelines is increasing. The Lebanese government has proscribed Hezbollah’s military apparatus.

At the same time, the Middle East is transforming at an unprecedented pace. The Sunni Arab world has changed profoundly. The great regional powers no longer think in terms of permanent ideological confrontation. Instead they strategize investment, growth and economic influence. While Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Doha, and Manama are building the economies of the twenty-first century, the Iranian axis continues to operate according to the geopolitical logic of the previous century. In this new environment, Hezbollah finds itself progressively isolated.

Here lies one of the greatest ironies of this conflict. Lebanon’s Shia, who stand to gain the most from peace, have for decades been asked to bear the burden of war. For forty years, they have suffered on the front line of every conflict. Their villages have been destroyed, their families displaced, and their land turned into a battlefield for regional wars.

No region of Lebanon would benefit more from lasting peace with Israel than the South. As a frontier, it could become one of the most dynamic areas of the country. Trade would expand, investment would flow in and tourism would be revived. The youth of the South would finally have real prospects at home and not have to emigrate.

In a Middle East where Sunni powers are increasingly suspicious of Tehran, Lebanon’s Shia risk further isolation if they are perceived as associated with Hezbollah and Iran. Peace with Israel would not only end conflict in Lebanon but also help bring the country’s Shia back into the regional fold.

Faced with this reality, Hezbollah appears to be confronting an existential dilemma. If a regional agreement were one day to detach Iran from its various regional proxies, what would Hezbollah’s raison d’être be? How would it justify maintaining its arsenal or preserving its exceptional military status within the Lebanese state?

Peace threatens Hezbollah’s political model far more than war does. Conflict enables Hezbollah to entrench its position, while peace would force it to reinvent itself. That is why Hezbollah and Iran are playing the same game, one of buying time. Both are encircled, with shrinking room to maneuver, and are hoping for an external event to disrupt a balance of power that is gradually turning against them.

However, history is rarely kind to actors too stubborn to adapt to new realities. Iran and Hezbollah built their power in a Middle East that no longer exists. While regional capitals invest in artificial intelligence, infrastructure, tourism, and trade, the Iranian axis continues to mobilize its resources on a broken logic of permanent conflict.

Powerful forces do not necessarily fall to military blows, but when they fail to meet the expectations of those they claim to represent. Perhaps this is where the true turning point of our era lies. For the first time in decades, a growing part of the Middle East no longer dreams of war. Instead, it aspires to prosperity, openness, and a hopeful future of peace.
 
ET32bJx2Z6IK3F1MDIozPGuwNRBc2wmyt0hAo0Hc.svg

Hezbollah’s War Against the Future

By Cyrille Najjar

Peace threatens Hezbollah’s political model far more than war does.

6jPupscKt3LSy6ioxXy7wblRaLclE5EtF5NYcwLm.jpeg


Cyrille Najjar is a senior advisor for AI, and a lecturer at UC Berkeley and Imperial College.
Wed 10 Jun 2026 · 10:52Last updated on Wed 10 Jun 2026 · 10:52

At the beginning of the week, the Israeli military appeared to be preparing an operation of unprecedented scale against Beirut’s southern suburbs. More than fifty-five buildings were reportedly identified as potential airstrike targets. Some sources even raised the possibility of an Israeli landing from the sea, which would have marked an unparalleled escalation.

Faced with this grim prospect, intense diplomatic activity was immediately set in motion. From the White House to the Élysée, a flurry of calls was made to convince Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to abandon an operation that risked setting the entire region ablaze. Top Western officials used every available channel to prevent Lebanon from descending into a deeper war with potentially catastrophic consequences.

Amid the threat of such escalation, it is worth recalling a reality many today seem all too eager to forget. President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawwaf Salam did everything in their power to secure a ceasefire. They made diplomatic appeals and sought the intervention of the U.S. and regional powers to spare Lebanon another cataclysm.

Yet, when a ceasefire agreement was reached on June 3, Hezbollah rejected it immediately and unambiguously, in word and deed. The militia continued its attacks against Israeli troops in southern Lebanon and launched a provocative rocket barrage into northern Israel. Hezbollah’s bellicosity made clear a strategic decision had already been taken: Lebanon was to remain a battlefield, regardless of the cost to the country and its people.

To understand this decision, one must look outside Lebanon. Iran has no interest in seeing Israel unshackled from the front in Lebanon. Every interceptor used against a Hezbollah rocket, every air-defense battery deployed in northern Israel, every soldier sent to the border is one less resource for Israel’s fight against Iran. For the Islamic Republic, maintaining pressure from Lebanon has become a strategic necessity.

Iran’s objective is to buy time at any cost and delay the inevitable. It hopes that a shift in the geopolitical landscape or a political change in Washington will divert the attention of its adversaries. As with other regimes cornered before them, the theocrats ruling Iran are banking on survival, not triumph.

Tehran’s proxy Hezbollah finds itself in a similar situation. For decades, its power rested on the pillars of Iranian money, Syrian strategic depth, and its political status in Lebanon as a resistance movement. Now, all three pillars are crumbling. The new authorities in Syria are interdicting Hezbollah’s smuggling routes. International scrutiny of Hezbollah’s illicit financial pipelines is increasing. The Lebanese government has proscribed Hezbollah’s military apparatus.

At the same time, the Middle East is transforming at an unprecedented pace. The Sunni Arab world has changed profoundly. The great regional powers no longer think in terms of permanent ideological confrontation. Instead they strategize investment, growth and economic influence. While Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Doha, and Manama are building the economies of the twenty-first century, the Iranian axis continues to operate according to the geopolitical logic of the previous century. In this new environment, Hezbollah finds itself progressively isolated.

Here lies one of the greatest ironies of this conflict. Lebanon’s Shia, who stand to gain the most from peace, have for decades been asked to bear the burden of war. For forty years, they have suffered on the front line of every conflict. Their villages have been destroyed, their families displaced, and their land turned into a battlefield for regional wars.

No region of Lebanon would benefit more from lasting peace with Israel than the South. As a frontier, it could become one of the most dynamic areas of the country. Trade would expand, investment would flow in and tourism would be revived. The youth of the South would finally have real prospects at home and not have to emigrate.

In a Middle East where Sunni powers are increasingly suspicious of Tehran, Lebanon’s Shia risk further isolation if they are perceived as associated with Hezbollah and Iran. Peace with Israel would not only end conflict in Lebanon but also help bring the country’s Shia back into the regional fold.

Faced with this reality, Hezbollah appears to be confronting an existential dilemma. If a regional agreement were one day to detach Iran from its various regional proxies, what would Hezbollah’s raison d’être be? How would it justify maintaining its arsenal or preserving its exceptional military status within the Lebanese state?

Peace threatens Hezbollah’s political model far more than war does. Conflict enables Hezbollah to entrench its position, while peace would force it to reinvent itself. That is why Hezbollah and Iran are playing the same game, one of buying time. Both are encircled, with shrinking room to maneuver, and are hoping for an external event to disrupt a balance of power that is gradually turning against them.

However, history is rarely kind to actors too stubborn to adapt to new realities. Iran and Hezbollah built their power in a Middle East that no longer exists. While regional capitals invest in artificial intelligence, infrastructure, tourism, and trade, the Iranian axis continues to mobilize its resources on a broken logic of permanent conflict.

Powerful forces do not necessarily fall to military blows, but when they fail to meet the expectations of those they claim to represent. Perhaps this is where the true turning point of our era lies. For the first time in decades, a growing part of the Middle East no longer dreams of war. Instead, it aspires to prosperity, openness, and a hopeful future of peace.
It was nice not having you on here 🤦
 

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