Hezbollah Turns Against its Comrades-in-Arms in Syria’s Qusayr

Residents of Qusayr wave the Syrian national flag and flags of Lebanese group Hezbollah in celebration after government forces seized total control of the city (AFP/Getty Images)
Residents of Qusayr wave the Syrian national flag and flags of Lebanese group Hezbollah in celebration after government forces seized total control of the city (AFP/Getty Images)
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Hezbollah Turns Against its Comrades-in-Arms in Syria’s Qusayr

Residents of Qusayr wave the Syrian national flag and flags of Lebanese group Hezbollah in celebration after government forces seized total control of the city (AFP/Getty Images)
Residents of Qusayr wave the Syrian national flag and flags of Lebanese group Hezbollah in celebration after government forces seized total control of the city (AFP/Getty Images)

Members of Lebanon’s Hezbollah are trying to pressure supporters of the Syrian regime in al-Qusayr of Homs countryside in central Syria to sell their lands near the Lebanese border.

Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that owners of agricultural lands west of Orontes River complain that Hezbollah supporters are pressuring them to sell their lands at the lowest prices.

A farmer from a Christian family, known for their loyalty to the regime, is being harassed by Hezbollah supporters because he refuses to sell his land west of the river.

The sources indicated that loyalists who remained in the city and fought alongside the regime, especially the Christians, feel that Hezbollah has turned against them.

Hezbollah commanders met with residents to address the issue and asserted that the party informed its members and supporters that they are not allowed to harass Christian families. However, in reality, the situation is different.

The regime, the security services, and the Baath Party in the region are not pleased with Hezbollah’s attempts to seize land in the western region of the Orontes, according to the sources.

They reported an internal circular for the municipalities in Homs, warning against selling lands in western Orontes areas because "there is a clear fear of turning them into areas loyal to Hezbollah."

The military security secretly intervened to prevent Hezbollah and Iran to resettle the residents of Kefraya and al-Fuah in Qusayr upon the completion of the 2017 Four Cities Agreement, which stipulated a safe exit for the residents and militants.

Despite preparing places for resettlement in the west and east of the city, the project was limited to few houses after the security services instructed the people to occupy empty residences.

After the regime regained control of Qusayr area in 2013, with the support of Hezbollah, only 10,000 of the city’s 111,969 population remained in their homes, while the rest were internally displaced or left to the Lebanese border town of Arsal and other villages in the Bekaa valley.

After regaining control of the region, the displaced were allowed to return to the city, and estimates show that 8,000 persons went back between 2013 and 2019.

In 2021, around 15,000 refugees resided in illegal camps in the Bekaa, constituting 30 percent of the Syrian refugees in the north of Lebanon.

Qusayr fell under the joint control of the regime forces and Hezbollah, although the party had a wider and stronger control over the western villages and agricultural lands near the border.

After the Russian military intervention in Syria in 2015, Moscow proposed initiatives for the return of Syrian refugees, including the residents of Qusayr in Arsal’s camps.

During a speech in the summer of 2019, Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah called upon the people of Qusayr to return.

However, many were reluctant and demanded international guarantees for their safety. Their demands were obstructed, and the Russian initiative, which resulted in the return of about 170,000 refugees from Lebanon to several Syrian areas, did not include refugees from Qusayr and was later suspended.

Meanwhile, internally displaced persons, namely state employees, returned to their areas after obtaining security approvals and regularizing their status, according to a plan launched in July 2019.

Local sources reported that most of Qusayr’s internally displaced persons returned to their homes between 2019 and 2020, and many are still returning especially after state institutions, transportation lines, and schools resumed their work in the city.

The sources pointed out that the regime is clearly trying to restore services to most neighborhoods, including water, electricity, communications, and removing rubble from the streets, despite limited capabilities and corruption.

Meanwhile, Hezbollah imposes its full control over the Syrian borderlands in Qusayr. It also controls the legal and illegal crossings over the Orontes River which connects the Lebanese Bekaa region with the Homs governorate through the Jousieh crossing, established in 1919.

The region is historically considered one of the most important centers of trade exchange between Homs and northern Lebanon, especially that it is close to Qalamoun in Damascus countryside and Rabia Valley, from Qalamoun Mountains to Orontes River.

The topography of the areas is suitable for smuggling operations between Syria and Lebanon, but after Hezbollah took over, smuggling became linked to regional networks. It is led by loyalists and the Fourth Division, affiliated with the regime forces, according to an opposition activist from Qusayr.

The activist indicated that the situation resulted in the emergence of "warlords" in Qusayr, who are considered wealthy by rural standards. These persons are very important for the party and help facilitate the purchase of land and real estate in the region.



Washington Tightens Conditions on Lebanese Army, Unconditional Aid Ends

Passersby near the United States Capitol (Reuters)
Passersby near the United States Capitol (Reuters)
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Washington Tightens Conditions on Lebanese Army, Unconditional Aid Ends

Passersby near the United States Capitol (Reuters)
Passersby near the United States Capitol (Reuters)

As US-brokered direct talks between Lebanon and Israel unfold in Washington, Congress is stepping up pressure of a different kind, pushing the Lebanese army to act on pledges to disarm Hezbollah or face a freeze in annual US military aid.

Senior congressional sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Republicans have “grown tired of hearing promises from the Lebanese army to disarm Hezbollah without seeing real effort on the ground.”

The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to ongoing internal deliberations, said “the time has come for serious action,” adding that the army must prove its credibility.

They noted that funding approved by Congress comes from US taxpayers, stressing that amid heightened scrutiny of public spending under President Donald Trump, lawmakers want to ensure “every dollar is spent for a meaningful purpose.”

Pressure builds

The message is echoed by key Senate Republicans.

Senator Roger Wicker, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, issued a public call to halt US support to the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) unless they act to “completely” and “immediately” disarm Hezbollah.

Wicker made the statement on X after a French service member was killed in southern Lebanon. France has accused Hezbollah of killing the peacekeeper.

“Hezbollah’s killing of a French service member in southern Lebanon, only days after Israel agreed to a ceasefire, is a critical test for the Lebanese Armed Forces. Congress should not support the LAF unless it acts to disarm Hezbollah completely — and immediately,” Wicker wrote on X.

On Tuesday, Senator Jim Risch, who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made a similar call.

Risch said he agreed with Wicker, adding it was “well past time for the LAF to take tangible action to fully disarm Hezbollah and for the Lebanese government to follow through on long-promised economic reform.”

Risch said “the era of complacency and unconditional bailouts must come to an end.”

Commander under fire

In Washington, doubts are growing over Lebanese army commander Rodolphe Haykal.

Most US officials have avoided publicly calling for his removal, but Republican Senator Lindsey Graham did not. He said this week he does not trust the army to disarm Hezbollah and that Haykal should be replaced before there can be a credible plan.

Graham added that no peace deal in Lebanon will happen without a “credible path” to disarm the group.

Tensions surfaced during Haykal’s February visit to Washington, when Graham cut short a meeting after the Lebanese commander declined to label Hezbollah a terrorist organization, saying it was not so in the context of Lebanon.

"As long as this attitude persists within the Lebanese Armed Forces, I don't think we have a reliable partner in them," Graham said, echoing sentiment circulating in Congress, where lawmakers say disarming Hezbollah is the priority.

Talks seen as positive

Despite warnings about the lack of alternatives to the Lebanese army, congressional sources said aid cannot continue to be sent “blindly,” calling for strict conditions.

Lawmakers are closely watching the US-backed talks between Lebanon and Israel, describing the track as “positive” and strongly supporting the White House effort.

They acknowledge the complexity of the Lebanese file but say past approaches have failed, calling for a shift in strategy.

Wider US role

The US president’s move to return Lebanon to Washington’s strategic agenda, alongside a pledge to “make Lebanon great again,” includes tasking Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Vice President JD Vance, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine with working alongside Israel and Lebanon toward “sustainable peace.”

The inclusion of Caine suggests a more active US military role.

Former US ambassador to Lebanon David Hale said one lesson Washington drew from last year is that the role of US Central Command in the monitoring group was limited, with forces confined to observation.

Speaking at a Middle East Institute event in Washington attended by Asharq Al-Awsat, he said the United States needs to go beyond monitoring, while stressing this does not mean imposing Lebanese sovereignty.

Hale noted that the Lebanese army must remain the implementing force, but Washington can be more engaged, not only through equipment and aid, but also by providing advice and more active intelligence support.

He said strong person-to-person ties between the US and Lebanese militaries could help build confidence and motivation among Lebanese personnel to carry out their duties.

Reform, sanctions in focus

Economic reform is also high on the agenda.

Congressional sources said failure to advance banking reforms creates “a major loophole” that allows Hezbollah to maintain its influence.

“We are in a vicious cycle. If Lebanon’s political class is not prepared to turn words into action, why should we continue to bail it out?” the sources said.

They added that lawmakers are watching Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, warning that sanctions against reform obstructers remain possible.

Aid under review

As Congress sets defense spending priorities, some lawmakers are moving to translate their stance into amendments to final bills.

Since 2006, the United States has provided more than $2.5 billion in military aid to Lebanon to bolster border security, counterterrorism, and the army as a state institution.

Under Trump’s second administration, more than $117 million announced in January 2025 is aimed at helping the army maintain the ceasefire with Israel and implement UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

In October 2025, Washington approved $230 million in security assistance, including $190 million for the army and $40 million for internal security forces, following a separate $14.2 million package announced in September to boost the army’s ability to dismantle weapons stockpiles and infrastructure of non-state actors, including Iran-backed Hezbollah.


Israeli Fire Kills Five in Gaza and the West Bank, Medics Say

 Election campaign banners showing candidates for the upcoming municipal elections hang on a building in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on April 21, 2026.  (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP)
Election campaign banners showing candidates for the upcoming municipal elections hang on a building in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on April 21, 2026. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP)
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Israeli Fire Kills Five in Gaza and the West Bank, Medics Say

 Election campaign banners showing candidates for the upcoming municipal elections hang on a building in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on April 21, 2026.  (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP)
Election campaign banners showing candidates for the upcoming municipal elections hang on a building in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on April 21, 2026. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP)

Israeli airstrikes killed at least four Palestinians in Gaza on Thursday, while soldiers shot and killed a 15-year-old child during an army raid in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Palestinian health officials said.

One person was killed in a strike in southern Gaza's Khan Younis in which several others were wounded, local medics said. Israel's military said it had targeted militants transporting munitions, who it said had posed a threat to Israeli soldiers, Reuters reported.

Three others, including a rescue worker, were killed in a separate strike in Maghazi, a Palestinian refugee camp in the Deir al Balah area in central Gaza, health officials said. Israel's military had no immediate comment on that strike.

Israel has carried out repeated strikes on Gaza since a US-brokered ceasefire came into effect in October. Both Israel and Hamas have accused each other of ceasefire violations.

There is no mechanism for enforcing the ceasefire. Four Israeli soldiers and more than 780 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire started.

At Gaza City's Al Shifa Hospital, the territory's largest medical facility, relatives stood among mourners gathered to bury five people, including three children, who were killed on Wednesday in an Israeli airstrike on a northern Gaza town.

"There is no ceasefire, no truce, nothing at all," said Mohammed Baalousha, a relative of one of the victims. "There is no safety in any area."

Israel's military has not commented on the strike.

WEST BANK VIOLENCE

In the West Bank city of Nablus, health officials said Israeli forces shot and killed a teenager during an ongoing raid in the city.

The health ministry said Israeli settlers shot and killed a 25-year-old Palestinian man in Deir Dibwan town near Ramallah a day ago, in the latest in what human rights groups have described as a surge in violence against Palestinians waged by Israeli settlers and soldiers.

The Israeli military did not immediately comment on either incident. The Palestinian health ministry said at least 15 people had been killed by Israeli settlers' attacks so far this year.


Disputes Over Quotas Stall Iraq Government Talks

A handout image released by the Iraqi Parliament Media Office on April 11, 2026, shows Iraqi members of parliament attending a session to elect a new president, in Baghdad. (Photo by IRAQ PARLIAMENT MEDIA OFFICE / AFP)
A handout image released by the Iraqi Parliament Media Office on April 11, 2026, shows Iraqi members of parliament attending a session to elect a new president, in Baghdad. (Photo by IRAQ PARLIAMENT MEDIA OFFICE / AFP)
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Disputes Over Quotas Stall Iraq Government Talks

A handout image released by the Iraqi Parliament Media Office on April 11, 2026, shows Iraqi members of parliament attending a session to elect a new president, in Baghdad. (Photo by IRAQ PARLIAMENT MEDIA OFFICE / AFP)
A handout image released by the Iraqi Parliament Media Office on April 11, 2026, shows Iraqi members of parliament attending a session to elect a new president, in Baghdad. (Photo by IRAQ PARLIAMENT MEDIA OFFICE / AFP)

Rivalries within Iraq’s Shiite Coordination Framework have led to a political deadlock over naming a new prime minister, as internal disagreements persist over both the selection mechanism and the division of ministerial posts among the bloc’s factions.

According to sources, a meeting of Coordination Framework leaders - postponed several times in recent days - will focus on finding a solution that reconciles two approaches: one based on the “electoral weight” of member blocs, and the other on “political consensus” to choose a compromise candidate acceptable to all parties.

The bloc has failed to agree on a nominee during two previous meetings after votes between two leading candidates ended in a tie, deepening divisions and delaying a decision. The upcoming session is seen as potentially decisive, though another postponement remains possible if differences persist.

An Iraqi political source said a decision on the prime minister could come within hours as the constitutional deadline approaches.

“I expect the matter to be settled one way or another, because next Saturday marks the final deadline, and continued delay is already having a negative impact even among their own base,” the source said.

The source added that if the alliance adopts the criterion of electoral weight, Ihsan al-Awadi, the candidate backed by Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, would have the strongest chances. However, if the decision remains confined to the bloc’s leadership, the contest would stay within a pool of 12 votes, with the balance possibly tipping in favor of Bassem al-Badri.

The dispute extends beyond the selection mechanism to include internal bargaining over the distribution of ministries and sovereign portfolios. Some factions have tied their support for any candidate to the size of their share in the next government, further complicating negotiations.

Two prominent candidates have emerged with nearly equal backing within the Coordination Framework, resulting in a deadlock and reviving the option of a compromise candidate if neither consensus nor a majority decision can be reached.

The Coordination Framework, formed after the most recent elections, includes several major Shiite forces, among them alliances led by former prime ministers Nouri al-Maliki and Haider al-Abadi, as well as the bloc of current Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, who is heading a caretaker government. Political pressure is mounting as the constitutional deadline nears for the president to designate a new prime minister.

The election of President Nizar Amidi has triggered the formal government formation process, with a constitutional deadline set to expire on April 26, placing political forces under pressure to avoid a return to prolonged deadlock.

With complications persisting, there are many scenarios, including a last-minute agreement, further delay, or a shift toward a compromise candidate. The standoff underscores fragile cohesion within the Shiite camp and a widening gap between electoral calculations and the demands of political consensus.