Lebanon: Diab Rejects Aoun’s Call For Cabinet Session, Prioritizes Govt Formation

Prime Minister Hassan Diab meets with President Michel Aoun at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon Janaury 21, 2020. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir
Prime Minister Hassan Diab meets with President Michel Aoun at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon Janaury 21, 2020. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir
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Lebanon: Diab Rejects Aoun’s Call For Cabinet Session, Prioritizes Govt Formation

Prime Minister Hassan Diab meets with President Michel Aoun at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon Janaury 21, 2020. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir
Prime Minister Hassan Diab meets with President Michel Aoun at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon Janaury 21, 2020. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

A silent crisis has emerged between Lebanon's President Michel Aoun and caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab, due to the latter’s refusal to respond to the president’s insistence on the holding of a cabinet session.

Ministerial sources well-informed of the matter told Asharq Al-Awsat that Diab - who moved immediately to his home in Talat al-Khayyat in Beirut following his resignation – attends his office in the Grand Serail only periodically and insists not to convene the Council of Ministers, but presides over ministerial committee meetings to manage the country’s affairs “within very narrow limits.”

The sources added that Diab has been taking lately unprecedented security measures as he moves from his home to the Serail, saying that his refusal to meet Aoun’s demand was based on several considerations, including the “unfounded allegations against him in the port explosion case”.

Moreover, the caretaker prime minister sees that he was forced to resign after Aoun dismissed the government in response to the wishes of his political heir, head of the Free Patriotic Movement, MP Gebran Bassil.

According to the sources, Diab wants the new government to be formed immediately and fears the negative repercussions of hindering its birth, amid rumors that his caretaking role would last until the end of Aoun’s tenure.

Thus, his compliance with Aoun’s desire to hold a cabinet session will push him into a political clash with the Sunni street, which will see his consent as an agreement with the president to obstruct the formation of the new government.

Also, the sources noted that Diab would not provide the political cover for the adoption by the Cabinet of an inflated budget that is intended to divert attention from the high deficit in return for the decrease in imports due to the lack of a reform plan.



Israeli Officials Call for West Bank to be Treated Same as Gaza

The scene of a shooting attack in the West Bank village of Funduq on January 6, 2025 (AFP)
The scene of a shooting attack in the West Bank village of Funduq on January 6, 2025 (AFP)
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Israeli Officials Call for West Bank to be Treated Same as Gaza

The scene of a shooting attack in the West Bank village of Funduq on January 6, 2025 (AFP)
The scene of a shooting attack in the West Bank village of Funduq on January 6, 2025 (AFP)

Israeli officials have warned of changing the security situation in the West Bank, after gunmen opened fire on a bus and surrounding vehicles in the Palestinian village of Funduq, leaving several casualties.

“Anyone who follows Hamas’s path in Gaza and enables or sponsors murder and harm against Jews will pay a heavy price,” Defense Minister Israel Katz said, reacting to the attack.

On Monday, Palestinian gunmen killed three Israelis and injured several others in the shooting attack on a car and bus near the settlement of Kedumim, a major road used daily by thousands of Israelis and Palestinians.

Israel's national ambulance service Magen David Adom (MDA) said two women in their 60s and a man in his 40s were pronounced dead at the scene, while eight passengers were wounded including a 63-year-old male bus driver who is in serious condition.

Later, the police identified the man as an off-duty Israeli police officer, Master Sgt. Elad Yaakov Winkelstein.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised to arrest the attackers and hold them accountable.

“We will find the abhorrent murderers and settle scores with them and with all those who aided them,” he said in a statement.

But Israeli far-right officials called for an all-out war in the West Bank against the Palestinians.

Israel's finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, who lives in the settlement where the attack took place, said “Funduk, Nablus and Jenin should look like Jabaliya, so that Kfar Saba does not, God forbid, become Gaza.”

“I demand that the prime minister urgently convene the Cabinet today for a discussion on changing the strategy and for a real elimination of terror in Judea and Samaria,” he added.

Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir called for an end to cooperation with the Palestinian Authority (PA).

He said checkpoints must be placed and roads must be closed “(because) the settlers’ right to life outweighs PA residents’ freedom of movement.”

The minister added that Israel should stop believing it has a partner in the PA.

Settlement officials in the West Bank expressed similar statements, clearly asking that the war be moved to the West Bank where the Israeli army should occupy Palestinian cities.

Samaria Regional Council head Yossi Dagan said in a statement after the attack, “We ask you to act now and to start the war against terrorists. We want security now.”

The operation came as a surprise to Israel as it was not preceded by any security alerts.

Israeli media said army officers had left their military checkpoint only half an hour before the operation took place.

The Israelis believe that “after Iran's failure to tighten the noose on Israel through Hezbollah, Hamas and the Assad regime in Syria, Iran is trying to establish cells inside Israeli-controlled territory,” according to the Israeli newspaper Maariv.

Hamas, Jihad Praise Attack

No party has claimed responsibility for the attack. But Hamas and the Islamic Jihad quickly praised the operation.

The Movement described it as a “heroic response against the occupation's continued crimes (including) the war of genocide in Gaza.”

Hamas spokesman Abu Ubaida said in a post on Telegram that “Israel will never enjoy security” unless the Palestinian people also have security.