Dailymaverick logo

World

This article is more than a year old

WAR IN THE MIDDLE EAST

Unstable Lebanon under Israeli attack is on the brink of total collapse

After many setbacks Lebanon cannot weather Israel’s incursion. A devastated Lebanon will only have negative ramifications for all in the Middle East.
Unstable Lebanon under Israeli attack is on the brink of total collapse A man walks past damaged buildings following Israeli air strikes in Dahieh, a southern suburb controlled by Hezbollah in Beirut, Lebanon, on 3 October 2024. (Photo: EPA-EFE / Wael Hamzeh)

The Israeli invasion of Lebanon has begun – and there are reports of heavy fighting between units of the Israel Defense Forces and Hezbollah in south Lebanon, accompanied by air strikes and shelling of Hezbollah positions.

For the past year many have feared that the war between Israel and Hamas would spill over into neighbouring countries and drag the Middle East into a devastating conflict. Now Israel has launched what it is calling a “limited ground operation”, which it claims is designed to clear Hezbollah out of south Lebanon.

In mid-September, Israel announced it was shifting its defence policy towards its northern border, where 70,000 people had been displaced over the past year by rockets fired by Hezbollah. Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said its war aims had shifted to include ensuring these civilians could return to their homes in safety.

After a fortnight of missile strikes into Lebanon, Israel claims to have eliminated much of the Hezbollah leadership as well as knocking out a great deal of its military infrastructure. This next phase of the conflict will pose more intense challenges for all involved and presents great risks to the region and beyond.

But perhaps lost in the debates about whether Israel can defeat Hezbollah (and Hamas in Gaza), how Iran (Hezbollah and Hamas’ main backer) will respond and who will ultimately win, is the possibility that Lebanon could fail as a state if this war escalates. And that serves no one’s interests.

Read more: Israel-Palestine War

Lebanon is a vulnerable country that has been plagued by devastating economic and political crises, corruption, human rights violations and a breakdown in trust between the government and society over the past decade. Its economy is fragile, having never recovered from the global financial crisis of 2008-9. The Covid-19 pandemic hammered the Lebanese economy when it was still reeling from the collapse of its financial system in 2019 and the default on its unbearably high levels of debt in 2020.

Global inflationary and cost-of-living pressures have further undermined the ability of ordinary Lebanese to provide for themselves and their families. The country has haemorrhaged capital in recent years and very few foreign investors have the stomach to risk their money there. Per capita incomes have declined substantially and remain very low at around $3,300 – down from about$9,000 in 2018.

Lebanon’s economy has gone into reverse since the crisis in 2019, with gross domestic product declining from $59-billion in 2018 to just $22-billion today. Coupled with a 95% depreciation of the Lebanese pound and inflation that has hit 200%, nearly half the population is now below the poverty line.

There has been a breakdown in waste disposal and electricity supplies (Lebanon’s state power company struggles to supply even two hours of electricity per day). Reserves of foreign currencies are exceptionally low and Lebanon runs a trade deficit that hovers around$9-billion annually. This has further strained the ability of ordinary Lebanese to access the goods and services they need to survive (let alone thrive).

War in prospect

Even short wars tend to have devastating economic effects that last long after the fighting ends. If history tells us anything about the current conflict we can expect a prolonged and intense fight between Israel and Hezbollah. This war could very easily destroy the Lebanese economy, bringing the entire country to the point of collapse.

It would not be the first time this has happened. There are parallels with the turbulent early 1970s and the outbreak of the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war.

The influx of about 1.5 million Syrian refugees since the onset of the civil war there in 2011 has placed unbearable pressures on the provision of goods and services in Lebanon. The demand for healthcare, education, utilities and housing has far exceeded supply.

The international community has helped Lebanon to host Syrian refugees with a number of initiatives, including the 2016 EU-Lebanon Compact and financial aid amounting to several billion dollars. Yet the financial and material support provided has been insufficient. Lebanon has creaked and strained under the pressures of having the highest refugee-to-citizen ratio in the world.

epa11639258 Smoke rises from a damaged building following Israeli airstrikes in Dahieh, a southern suburb controlled by Hezbollah in Beirut, Lebanon, 03 October 2024. The Lebanese National News Agency (NNA) said that Israeli airstrikes were carried out overnight in the southern suburb, along with shelling from warships at sea.  EPA-EFE/WAEL HAMZEH
Smoke rises from a damaged building following Israeli air strikes in the Hezbollah-controlled suburb of Dahieh in Beirut, Lebanon, on 3 October 2024. (Photo: EPA-EFE / Wael Hamzeh)

A failed state?

If economic turmoil and hardship were not bad enough, the Lebanese political landscape remains among the most fractured and contentious in the region. In many ways, Lebanon has not had a fully functioning set of state institutions for much of the past five years. Intense political rivalries and divisions between political parties have meant that the government cannot fully function.

And now the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah means that millions of ordinary people face serious threats to their lives and livelihoods with little the government can do to help them.

Up to a million civilians in Lebanon have been displaced and much infrastructure and property has been destroyed across the country. And that was before the ground invasion began.

Israel intends to shift the balance of power permanently by ensuring Hezbollah is no longer a viable military threat.

There are clear parallels with Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon (the 34-day war) and the much broader 1982 invasion. The 2006 conflict devastated Lebanon’s infrastructure, while the 1982 invasion lasted until 2000, leading to immense destruction, hardship, insecurity and instability.

The current conflict could destabilise Lebanon to such an extent that there is even potential for a second civil war. This would serve no one’s interests. An unstable, devastated and failing Lebanon will only have negative ramifications for all in the Middle East, including Israel.

If the Hobbesian logic of the strong doing what they will and the weak suffering what they must is allowed to continue, only collapse and ruin will follow in Lebanon, the Middle East and further afield. It is imperative that sense and reason prevail and the war between Israel, Hamas and Hezbollah de-escalates. DM

Published by The Conversation.

Imad El-Anis is an associate professor in international relations at Nottingham Trent University.

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35.

Comments (3)

Richelle Steyn Oct 6, 2024, 01:49 PM

Let's not avoid the elephant in the room. Israel is an ethno-supremacist, apartheid state committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza. Iran and Hezbollah are aligned with Hamas to (legally) stop this genocide. Israel's illegal invasion is destabilising Lebanon and the entire region.

Roke Wood Oct 7, 2024, 07:16 AM

sad to see. However, Hezbollah has brought this upon themselves and the citizens of Lebanon. This is bordering on war with Isreal, Hamas, hez, houties and Iran. With the US backing Isreal and Iran backing Hamas, hez, and the houties. it seems to me that Iran is trying to destabilise the region.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 09:44 AM

It seems to me that Israel's religion-based apartheid and oppression (yet calls itself democratic) is the root cause of this all. Their powerful US support (& media) is clearly aimed to keep the oil-rich region destabilised. All other players are simply standing up to Palestine's oppression.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 11:17 AM

Iran et al are also standing up to Western media, sanctions, etc for their own survival. But the root issue, for a lifetime now, is Palestinian self-determination. Tit for tat since then, the cause is not 1 year ago. Zionists forced almost a million locals out then, to ensure a Jewish majority.

Malcolm McManus Oct 7, 2024, 01:56 PM

That happened in most peoples life time. If Israel can hang in their for another 30 years or so, it wont have been in anybodies lifetime. So like the religious history you say shouldn't matter, in 30 years time we can all forget the recent past and Israel can be finally free.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 02:27 PM

That worked out great for all the other colonies in the world, didn't it? That's why the UK, Portugal, France, Spain, etc are all in control of most of Africa, right? And why the NP still controls SA without rights for locals.. Oh wait .. no. You honestly think this will just blow over?

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 02:29 PM

"Israel can be finally free". And the people who were living there before Israel decided the area was solely Jewish all of a sudden? When will they be free? Do they not matter as much as Jews?

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 02:45 PM

"Israel can be finally free" to continue to oppress, bomb, detain without trial, destroy in the West bank, maintain it's racist, superior, religious-based policies... while all around them remains not free. Good luck with that. At least you are acknowledging who the aggressor in all this is.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 11:19 AM

Of course Bibi has his own political agenda too. South Africans should know by now that giving oppressed natives their freedom is the answer to terrorism and hate, not more violence and "our people deserve the land more".

Malcolm McManus Oct 7, 2024, 01:52 PM

Few people have the answer, but what I do know is that there are Israelis, like Palestinians who also want peace and who are not happy with Netanyahu. They get the right to protest in Israel. Not sure how it works in the rest of that region when people are not happy with their militant leaders.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 02:24 PM

"Few people have the answer" - you often say this, and you are consistently told the answer the entire world knows is the only answer - the Two State Solution. But you just ignore this and say there isn't a clear answer ...

Malcolm McManus Oct 7, 2024, 02:40 PM

I believe its been proposed and rejected on a number of occasions followed by missile attacks. I think if there was a clear answer, we would have the much desired peace we all would like to see.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 02:54 PM

Precisely, rejected by Israel, every single time. Vetoed by the US every single time. The occupier rejects the only solution, to occupy less... Every. Single. Time. 1 country's fault, and only 1 country who can fix this. But instead they decide on more violence. Every time. And wonder why rockets

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 09:49 AM

Can you perhaps give a good logical reason why so many nations would be willing to go to such lengths, assuming you are right, and it's Iran and allies causing all the trouble? A logical, valid reason. Simple hatred of others or anti-semitism of course isn't one. That's not worth dying for.

Marky Mark Oct 7, 2024, 03:01 PM

Malcom et al, please answer this. You seem to be under the illusion that for some reason, that you just can't put your finger on, that millions of people are fighting Israel, an undemocratic state for 1 group of people only, because .. something vague. Not land. Not oppression. Right?

B M Oct 8, 2024, 10:21 PM

Umm, for the fundamentalists, it is worth dying for. There are rewards waiting for the dead. Innocents are also granted this reward. This is why the fundamentalists do not suffer grief for the innocents they hide behind: the innocents are blessed with rewards for martyrdom. Logical reason to die.

Tim Bester Oct 8, 2024, 08:55 AM

Islamist states are all failures (unless they found oil).