This shift, however, does not appear to have offered any protection from the Israeli military, which is openly targeting state infrastructure, invading South Lebanon, and declaring its intent to permanently occupy all territory south of the Litani River.
Under these conditions, the Lebanese government’s geopolitical realignment risks the country settling for a strange sort of “sovereignty”, one defined by foreign powers who call upon the Lebanese state to quickly comply with their political and security demands, but offer it little protection or support in return.
Moreover, Lebanon alone will bear the risks of this arrangement. Hezbollah and Iran are openly defying the government’s orders, with their primary effect having been to ratchet up intra-Lebanese political tensions and push the country closer to renewed civil strife.
An Army Pointed Inwards
Nowhere is the gap between compliance and protection more visible than with the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF). At the start of 2026, the army had begun building credibility by moving into positions vacated by Hezbollah in the south, with the government presenting that deployment as a visible extension of state authority.
Following the outbreak of war in March and the expansion of Israeli operations, the LAF pulled back from its border positions, while Hezbollah returned to direct confrontation with advancing Israeli forces. The sequence is difficult to square with a government claiming to have reasserted its monopoly on force. The LAF is more rightly described as a symbol of state presence that can help manage territory, but when the cards are down, it has no capacity to determine the military balance on the ground.
Nor was it ever meant to. Western military support for the LAF has been calibrated for internal stabilization: salaries, logistics, armored vehicles, and help for the disarmament track. The army has not been equipped to confront a conventional state military, but rather to accompany the state’s push to monopolize arms and manage the domestic consequences. This entails pursuing the internal, policing aspect of state power, while the other, protection from external force, remains absent.
Importantly, Lebanon’s realignment is also driven by economic desperation. The country’s 2019 financial collapse and reconstruction needs from the 2023-24 war have given Gulf and Western actors considerable leverage over the country’s direction. Saudi Arabia’s renewed engagement with Beirut was explicitly tied to reforms, with the Salam government committed to adhering to a new IMF program and banking-sector restructuring. In this light, Lebanon’s pivot to the Western-Gulf axis is less a choice than a financing model, and the returns remain mostly promised rather than delivered. None of this means the government has no agency. But its immense financial needs mean its realignment is taking place under severe duress.
Clear Demands, Cloudy Commitments
The compliance benchmarks Western and Gulf sponsors espouse compound the problem. “Disarming Hezbollah” is not a fixed objective with a clear endpoint; it is an elastic condition that can be widened, prolonged, and reinterpreted at will. Economic actors, meanwhile, are unlikely to commit seriously while hostilities continue. Lebanon may keep paying the political and security price of realignment without ever reaching a moment when it secures protection, reconstruction, or a diplomatic return.