The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, two of the most powerful international financial institutions, are reportedly seeking to tie reconstruction funds for Lebanon to the normalization of the country's relations with Israel and the disarmament of the Hezbollah resistance movement.
Citing informed sources, the Beirut-based Al Akhbar newspaper reported that IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva has told the acting governor of Lebanon's central bank, Wassim Mansouri, in a recent meeting that the country's access to international funding will be "linked to specific steps and procedures with a specific time frame and objective.”
“According to those familiar with the matter, these steps coincide with expected political pressures under the title of ‘normalization’ and ‘disarmament,’” the report added.
The report came after US Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff speculated that Lebanon and Syria could be drawn into the normalization agreements that US President Donald Trump brokered with some Arab countries during his first term in office.
Earlier this month, Lebanese Finance Minister Yassin Jaber announced that the World Bank had prepared a “preliminary plan” for a $1 billion reconstruction project following a brutal Israeli war.
The Al Akhbar report said the World Bank will approve the fund at its Executive Board meeting on March 25 if Lebanon enacts financial and political reforms demanded by the West.
The EU, the report noted, had conditioned funding for Lebanon on the “need to restructure its banking system,” holding up the disbursement of €500 million in aid that is part of a 2024 deal signed between Beirut and Brussels to reduce the flow of refugees into Europe.
New estimates say Lebanon needs some $6-7 billion to rebuild infrastructure and remove debris caused by Israeli aggression.
Hezbollah has thus far provided the majority of the funding, allocating an estimated $650 million for housing and restoration in southern Beirut and Lebanon's southern areas.
Hezbollah opened a support front for Palestinians in the Gaza Strip after Israel unleashed a genocidal war on the besieged territory on October 7, 2023, launching numerous retaliatory attacks against targets in the occupied lands.
Israel was forced to accept a ceasefire with Hezbollah on November 27, 2024, after suffering heavy losses on the battleground and failing to achieve its goals despite killing over 4,000 people in Lebanon.
Lebanon should realize that no matter what stupid conspiracy they make up about being Phoenician or how much they denounce the rest of the MENA savage hordes, they will always just be a bunch of "dirty Arabs" to Israel and the west as a whole.
Solidarity is a matter of survival at this point. They don't have the luxury of petty nationalism against an entity whose existence relies on their eradication. However I believe there's a far an away enough Lebanese who understand this fact, especially those who suffer the consequences of Israeli aggression.
The attendance of Nasrallah's funeral took away nearly all my pessimism that was recently starting to develop. Even posthumously that man injects a revolutionary spirit in people.
That's partially why I believe that Lebanon will not fall. Nasrallah was a visionary of a resistance fighter, but he inspired millions through giving his life to the struggle as a martyr. Now I'm sure that dozens if not hundreds or thousands of those inspired will go on to even surpass Nasrallah's legacy.
I can't imagine the Lebanese government choosing to try and wage a war on Hezboallah on the behalf of Israel. It would be a stupid decision to say the least, as I can imagine that Hezboallah now has the popular support to supplant the Lebanese government if it ever decides to completely subjugate itself to the west.