Head of Lebanon’s Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), MP Gebran Bassil, announced that he would leave political life if he was found guilty of any corruption charges.
His comments came in response to US Treasury sanctions imposed on him earlier this month.
In an interview with Al-Hadath television, the former foreign minister, who is also President Michel Aoun’s son-in-law, touched on Hezbollah’s disarmament, saying: “If the Americans give us any commitment that preserves Lebanon’s security and stability, so that we have a country with a military balance, then I will be ready to discuss with [Hezbollah] and persuade it abandon its arms.”
He also stressed that the party joined the 2014 battle against terrorists in Arsal “when the Lebanese army did not undertake the mission.” Bassil reiterated that he was not against peace with Israel.
The head of the FPM went to reject accusations that he was obstructing the formation of a new government, saying: “We have not raised any demand or set any condition.”
Meanwhile, caretaker Foreign Minister Charbel Wehbe asked on Monday US Ambassador to Beirut Dorothy Shea to provide the documents that Washington relied on in imposing sanctions on some Lebanese politicians, including Bassil.
During a meeting with the ambassador, the minister said he hoped that the Lebanese and judicial authorities would be able “to access any information or documents that the US administration relied on in taking these measures. He said the request is part of the reforms Lebanese authorities pledged to implement to enhance transparency in public work.
A statement by Wehbe’s office said the meeting also discussed bilateral relations and US support for Lebanon in several areas, including the maritime border demarcation negotiations with Israel and the return of the Syrian displaced to their homeland.