Lebanese Cabinet to Debate Arms as Quorum Ensured after Aoun's Mediation

A cabinet session chaired by President Joseph Aoun (AP)
A cabinet session chaired by President Joseph Aoun (AP)
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Lebanese Cabinet to Debate Arms as Quorum Ensured after Aoun's Mediation

A cabinet session chaired by President Joseph Aoun (AP)
A cabinet session chaired by President Joseph Aoun (AP)

The Lebanese cabinet is set to convene Friday to discuss the army’s proposed plan for ensuring that weapons remain exclusively under state control.

After weeks of speculation, Shiite ministers have confirmed their participation, following intensive mediation by President Joseph Aoun with Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.

The agreement ensures full quorum for a session that had risked being boycotted over disagreements on the agenda.

The army’s plan, commissioned by the cabinet earlier this year, aims to implement state monopoly on arms before the end of 2025.

The issue has been a point of contention: Shiite ministers opposed linking the proposal to a fixed timeline, arguing that earlier cabinet decisions on the matter were taken in their absence and thus lacked legitimacy. Aoun and Salam, by contrast, pushed for adoption of the plan.

According to political sources, consultations between Hezbollah, Berri, and Aoun produced a compromise. The army’s plan will be included as part of a wider agenda rather than as the sole item for debate - defusing a crisis that could have deepened cabinet divisions.

Berri, in a recent speech marking the disappearance of Imam Musa al-Sadr, left the door open to discussing Hezbollah’s arms, but only within a broader national defense strategy. The move echoed Aoun’s inaugural pledge for a comprehensive security doctrine. Observers say Berri’s message was aimed at framing Hezbollah’s arsenal as an internal Lebanese matter, shielded from Israeli or foreign intervention.

While Berri and Hezbollah have expressed full confidence in the army’s leadership, they remain wary of the government’s approach to implementation. The United States had initially supported synchronized steps to advance disarmament but later reversed its stance in favor of Israel, further complicating the debate.

Despite these tensions, there is broad consensus across Lebanon’s political spectrum on the principle of state monopoly over arms. The dispute centers on mechanisms of enforcement.

Sources say the army’s plan deliberately avoids detailed operational steps, keeping them confidential, and does not impose a strict timeline. The army argues that conditions on the ground, such as hidden infrastructure and entrenched positions, require flexibility.

A senior minister warned that delaying the plan would damage Lebanon’s credibility with its Arab and international partners. Exclusive state control over weapons, he stressed, enjoys the widest possible external support, and retreating from that commitment would undermine Lebanon’s ability to secure foreign aid.

By contrast, adoption of the army’s plan could serve as a “passport” for Lebanon to regain its regional role and attract much-needed assistance.

Aoun’s efforts appear to have defused a potential showdown, at least temporarily. He has consistently stressed that the monopoly on arms is a Lebanese demand before being an international one, essential for restoring sovereignty and fully implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

Meanwhile, diplomatic missions in Beirut are closely monitoring preparations for Friday’s session, viewing it as a crucial test of Lebanon’s stability and credibility. The key question is whether ministers will approve the army’s plan unanimously, leaving execution to military command without binding deadlines.



Four Explosions Heard in Iraq's Erbil

FILED - 11 March 2026, Iraq, Erbil: PAK Peshmerga members stand inside a family home destroyed by strikes at the PAKShar camp in Erbil's Ashkawt Saqa district. Photo: Ismael Adnan/dpa
FILED - 11 March 2026, Iraq, Erbil: PAK Peshmerga members stand inside a family home destroyed by strikes at the PAKShar camp in Erbil's Ashkawt Saqa district. Photo: Ismael Adnan/dpa
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Four Explosions Heard in Iraq's Erbil

FILED - 11 March 2026, Iraq, Erbil: PAK Peshmerga members stand inside a family home destroyed by strikes at the PAKShar camp in Erbil's Ashkawt Saqa district. Photo: Ismael Adnan/dpa
FILED - 11 March 2026, Iraq, Erbil: PAK Peshmerga members stand inside a family home destroyed by strikes at the PAKShar camp in Erbil's Ashkawt Saqa district. Photo: Ismael Adnan/dpa

At least four explosions were heard on Wednesday in the city of Erbil in the autonomous Kurdistan region, AFP journalists reported.

It was not immediately clear what the target was. From a suburb of Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan region, AFP journalists saw interceptions of projectiles over the city, which is home to a major US consulate complex, while its airport houses US-led coalition troops.

Iraq was drawn into the Middle East war after having long been a proxy battleground between the United States and Iran.

Strikes have targeted Iran-backed groups, which in turn have claimed daily attacks on US interests in Iraq and across the region.

Since the start of the war, the coalition's air defenses have repeatedly downed drones over Erbil.

In the past few days daily explosions have been heard over the city, although mostly in the evening.

On Tuesday night, the powerful Iran-backed armed group Kataeb Hezbollah condemned the US presence in Iraq and demanded that every "foreign soldier" leave the country.

The group, which has been designated a terrorist organization by Washington, is part of an umbrella movement known as the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, which has been claiming daily attacks on US interests in Iraq and the region, and which has always demanded the withdrawal of US troops from the country.

 

 

 

 


At Least 17 Dead in Fighting on Sudan's Border with Chad

Residents receive aid from World Food Programme (WFP) at Al-Omada neighborhood of Omdurman, the twin city of Khartoum on March 11, 2026. (Photo by Ebrahim Hamid / AFP)
Residents receive aid from World Food Programme (WFP) at Al-Omada neighborhood of Omdurman, the twin city of Khartoum on March 11, 2026. (Photo by Ebrahim Hamid / AFP)
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At Least 17 Dead in Fighting on Sudan's Border with Chad

Residents receive aid from World Food Programme (WFP) at Al-Omada neighborhood of Omdurman, the twin city of Khartoum on March 11, 2026. (Photo by Ebrahim Hamid / AFP)
Residents receive aid from World Food Programme (WFP) at Al-Omada neighborhood of Omdurman, the twin city of Khartoum on March 11, 2026. (Photo by Ebrahim Hamid / AFP)

The latest heavy fighting between warring parties along Sudan’s border with Chad has killed 17 people and many wounded, a medical group said.

The attacks on Monday in Tina left 66 people in serious condition, Doctors Without Borders, also known as Médecins Sans Frontières, or MSF, said in a post on X late Tuesday.

The army said in an update that the Rapid Support Forces, or RSF, had expanded its attacks on military areas in Tina, but that troops were able to repel them and forced them to withdraw.

The attacks were part of intensified fighting near the border between the army and the RSF, who have been at war since April 2023. The conflict has killed more than 40,000 people, according to UN figures, but aid groups say the true number could be much higher.

Tina is one of the last areas still being held by the Sudanese military in the sprawling Darfur region, which has been under RSF control since October 2025.

The nearby Tine crossing was also used as the sole route for cross-border humanitarian aid and delivery from Chad when Adre border crossing was temporarily closed in recent years.

Chad said last month it had closed its border with Sudan “until further notice'' in an attempt to limit the spread of conflict into its territory.

Those injured in Monday’s attacks were treated by MSF teams and Chadian health services at a new hospital in Tine, Chad, The Associated Press reported.

A MSF staffer at the hospital said doctors are treating patients without water or electricity and are relying on generators and solar panels. Stockpiles of medicine are also said to be running low because of the influx of new patients.

Chad closed its border for a period shortly after Sudan plunged into chaos in April 2023, when a power struggle between the military and the RSF exploded into open fighting in the capital, Khartoum, and elsewhere in the country.

The Darfur and Kordofan regions became the epicenter of the Sudan war, with deadly drone attacks frequently reported in Kordofan. A surge in drone strikes in the Sudanese region of Kordofan has taken a growing toll on civilians and hampered aid operations, analysts and humanitarian workers previously said.


France Says It’s Unreasonable to Expect Lebanon to Disarm Hezbollah Amid Bombing

 People walk amidst debris at the site of an Israeli strike, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Zuqaq al-Blat district in central Beirut, Lebanon, March 18, 2026. (Reuters)
People walk amidst debris at the site of an Israeli strike, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Zuqaq al-Blat district in central Beirut, Lebanon, March 18, 2026. (Reuters)
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France Says It’s Unreasonable to Expect Lebanon to Disarm Hezbollah Amid Bombing

 People walk amidst debris at the site of an Israeli strike, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Zuqaq al-Blat district in central Beirut, Lebanon, March 18, 2026. (Reuters)
People walk amidst debris at the site of an Israeli strike, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, Zuqaq al-Blat district in central Beirut, Lebanon, March 18, 2026. (Reuters)

It is unreasonable to expect the Lebanese government to disarm Iran-backed Hezbollah while the country is being bombed by Israel, France's special envoy for Lebanon said on Wednesday.

Jean-Yves Le Drian said only negotiations would resolve the crisis, in which Lebanese authorities say over 900 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since Hezbollah entered the regional war in support of Tehran.

"Israel occupied Lebanon for a very long time and failed to eradicate Hezbollah's military capacity. Therefore, they cannot now ask ‌the Lebanese government ‌to do that job in three days under bombardment," he ‌told ⁠France Info radio.

Israel ⁠has rebuffed an offer of direct talks from Beirut as too little, too late by a government that shares its goal of wanting Hezbollah disarmed but fears that acting against it could risk civil war, sources familiar with the situation said.

President Joseph Aoun has expressed a willingness to begin direct negotiations with Israel, which has carried out airstrikes in Lebanon since Hezbollah fired on Israel on March 2. Hezbollah has rejected the move and fought on.

FRANCE SEEKS MEDIATING ⁠ROLE

France has historical ties with Lebanon and, with the United States, ‌has sought to mediate in the conflict.

"There is ‌a process of negotiation and discussion that is possible, but all the parties must want it," Le ‌Drian said.

France last week presented counter-proposals to US ideas to bring an end to ‌the conflict, two diplomats said.

Three diplomats said the US had been lukewarm to the proposals, but discussions with Washington were continuing. Israel has rejected the proposals, they said.

According to an informal document seen by Reuters, France's position centers around a three-month period to end hostilities and move towards a comprehensive ‌and permanent non-aggression pact between Lebanon and Israel.

It includes demarcation of the land border and deployment of troops from a coalition of ⁠volunteers mandated by ⁠the UN Security Council to verify disarmament in the rest of Lebanon.

It also sets out proposals ranging from an Israeli withdrawal from various points in Lebanon to reconstruction efforts and commitments to reform Lebanon's economy.

"Lebanon and Israel would declare that the state of war between them has come to an end and commit to refraining from any use of force against one another," the document says.

"Both sides would undertake to establish peaceful security arrangements along the border and to address disputes exclusively through diplomatic channels and agreed mechanisms."

Lebanon's inability to rein in Hezbollah following a 2024 ceasefire agreement brokered by the US and France to end an earlier conflict has raised questions about Beirut's credibility at negotiations.

France foreign minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, is expected to visit Lebanon soon, diplomatic sources said. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Sunday Israel's government was not planning direct talks with Lebanon in coming days.