Lebanon on Edge Between Papal Visit and US Ultimatum

Lebanese soldiers seal off the site targeted in the killing of Hezbollah commander Haitham Tabtabai in Beirut’s southern suburbs (AP)
Lebanese soldiers seal off the site targeted in the killing of Hezbollah commander Haitham Tabtabai in Beirut’s southern suburbs (AP)
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Lebanon on Edge Between Papal Visit and US Ultimatum

Lebanese soldiers seal off the site targeted in the killing of Hezbollah commander Haitham Tabtabai in Beirut’s southern suburbs (AP)
Lebanese soldiers seal off the site targeted in the killing of Hezbollah commander Haitham Tabtabai in Beirut’s southern suburbs (AP)

Lebanon is bracing for tense weeks as public anxieties swell ahead of two closely watched dates: Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Beirut from November 30 to December 2, and a circulating US deadline that many view as Washington’s final window to address Hezbollah’s weapons before the end of the year.

These markers have cast a shadow over daily life, fueling fears of Israeli escalation and a possible slide back to wartime conditions.

Between these two dates, collective unease has spread across social classes and sects. Political deadlines are shaping everyday decisions, from travel to work schedules to planning holiday gatherings. Many are postponing commitments until after the New Year.

Karim, a Lebanese researcher based in Paris, said he chose to stay away from Lebanon during this period.

“I was planning to spend New Year’s with my family, but the increasing talk that things may change after the Pope’s visit made me pull back. Many Lebanese here believe the end of the year could bring political or security shifts. I prefer not to be in Lebanon at that stage,” he said.

Maysaa, a schoolteacher in Lebanon’s Tyre governorate, said nearly everyone repeats the same phrase when discussing future plans: “Let us wait until after the Pope’s visit.”

She said people see the visit as the reference point for the current calm, with uncertainty surrounding what follows. Even family conversations now revolve around whether security will hold through the end of the year.

In a hospital in Beirut’s southern suburbs, nurse Nadine said December has become a month defined by waiting.

“People are watching the calendar more than the events. Some patients are delaying non-urgent surgeries until next year. Many keep asking what will happen after the Pope leaves, and what the final days of the year may bring. It feels like a psychological test,” she said.

In a country where time itself has become a pressure point, the coming weeks are not simply political milestones.

They are emotional checkpoints that shape how people navigate their days. Between the Papal visit and the American timeline, Lebanon is operating on tight lines that blur the boundary between national stakes and daily life.

Peak war anxiety

Within this climate, psychotherapist Dr. Daoud Faraj said Lebanon has entered a peak phase of war-related anxiety.

He told Asharq Al-Awsat that Lebanese are responding to two decisive markers: The Pope’s visit, and the widely circulated idea that Washington sees year-end as the last opportunity to resolve the issue of Hezbollah’s weapons.

He said people link the country’s future to two tracks. One is the Papal visit, which many fear may be followed by escalation. The other is the year-end deadline that coincides with talk of an American push to reach a final decision. “With no reassuring official narrative, Lebanese are living under a heavy countdown,” he said.

According to Faraj, the anxiety is rooted in real conditions, not imagined fears. He explained that people can distinguish, consciously or unconsciously, between psychological fear of the unknown and natural fear of a clear threat.

“Today the Lebanese person sees war as a possible scenario. That alone is enough to turn anxiety into a natural reaction,” he said. Even if any future strike is limited or targeted, he added, the collective mind immediately recalls the violence of previous wars.

What intensifies the fear, he said, is the sense that the next phase could be more complicated. The regional conflict is no longer only military, but part of a broader restructuring project in the Middle East. Lebanese hear daily about scenarios concerning the future of the south and foreign pressures, but without clear alternatives or guarantees.

Faraj said the fear is twofold. The continued presence of Hezbollah’s weapons raises concerns of a possible confrontation, while their removal creates another kind of fear, since collective memory still recalls what exposure looked like in many areas during past wars. Experience shapes perceptions, he noted, leading some to consider the weapons a form of protection and others to view them as a source of danger. This duality feeds a sense of paralysis.



Syria Signs Deal with CMA CGM to Operate Two Dry Ports, State Media Says

A shipping container belonging to CMA CGM passes through the Suez Canal in Ismailia, Egypt October 5, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
A shipping container belonging to CMA CGM passes through the Suez Canal in Ismailia, Egypt October 5, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
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Syria Signs Deal with CMA CGM to Operate Two Dry Ports, State Media Says

A shipping container belonging to CMA CGM passes through the Suez Canal in Ismailia, Egypt October 5, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
A shipping container belonging to CMA CGM passes through the Suez Canal in Ismailia, Egypt October 5, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

Syria's General Authority for Borders and Customs has signed an agreement with French shipping and logistics group CMA CGM to operate two dry ports within the free zones of Adra, in Damascus' outskirts, and Aleppo, Syrian state news agency SANA reported on Tuesday.

The deal covers the management and operation of the dry ports to support logistics and trade. It coincided with the launch of a trial freight train linking Latakia port, which is Syria’s principal maritime access point, to Adra after a 14-year halt due to the Syrian civil war.

CMA CGM was not immediately available for comment.

The agreement follows a separate deal signed in May 2025 under which CMA CGM secured a 30-year contract to modernise and operate Latakia port. Chief Executive Rodolphe Saadé, a Franco-Lebanese of Syrian origin, has family roots in the country.

On May 11, the European Union restored the full application of its 1977 cooperation agreement with Syria, ending a partial suspension imposed in 2011 over human rights violations under Bashar al-Assad.

The move follows Assad's fall in December 2024 and the lifting of most EU economic sanctions in 2025, and is intended to support Syria's economic recovery and signal renewed EU engagement with the country.


Israel Orders UN Food Agency to Cut Ties with Turkish NGO in Gaza

A Palestinian girl walks past a toddler playing among makeshift shelters in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on May 21, 2026. Since October 10, a fragile US-sponsored truce in Gaza has largely halted the fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas, but both sides have alleged frequent violations. (Photo by Bashar Taleb / AFP)
A Palestinian girl walks past a toddler playing among makeshift shelters in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on May 21, 2026. Since October 10, a fragile US-sponsored truce in Gaza has largely halted the fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas, but both sides have alleged frequent violations. (Photo by Bashar Taleb / AFP)
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Israel Orders UN Food Agency to Cut Ties with Turkish NGO in Gaza

A Palestinian girl walks past a toddler playing among makeshift shelters in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on May 21, 2026. Since October 10, a fragile US-sponsored truce in Gaza has largely halted the fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas, but both sides have alleged frequent violations. (Photo by Bashar Taleb / AFP)
A Palestinian girl walks past a toddler playing among makeshift shelters in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on May 21, 2026. Since October 10, a fragile US-sponsored truce in Gaza has largely halted the fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas, but both sides have alleged frequent violations. (Photo by Bashar Taleb / AFP)

Israel has ordered the UN's World Food Program to suspend its work in Gaza with a Turkish NGO it designated a terrorist organization, the UN agency told AFP on Friday.

"WFP has been instructed by the Israeli authorities to immediately suspend fuel provision and all activities with its partner IHH, cutting off assistance to more than 166,000 people who rely on daily hot meals, bread, and nutrition support to survive," an agency spokesperson told AFP in a statement.

IHH, or the Humanitarian Relief Foundation, is a Turkish NGO that provides humanitarian assistance and search and rescue operations around the world.

WFP began working with IHH in Gaza in January 2024.

Israel designated it a terrorist organization in May 2008 over accusations of supporting Hamas.

"WFP's partnership with IHH was established at a time of extreme need, particularly to reach under-served areas," WFP said, adding that IHH had been rigorously vetted before the start of the partnership.

Israel's defense ministry body in charge of civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, COGAT, announced on Thursday that it had ordered WFP to stop all coordination with IHH after learning "that the UN agency transferred fuel within the Gaza Strip to the IHH organization".

In a letter to WFP's leadership, COGAT's chief demanded the "immediate suspension of fuel distribution and all other support by WFP to IHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation".

In a statement, COGAT accused IHH of promoting flotillas that have attempted to breach its blockade of Gaza.

Israel "will not permit the transfer of resources to entities linked to Hamas under humanitarian cover," the statement added.

WFP lamented the impact the order would have on its activities in war-ravaged Gaza.

"The imposed suspension halts around 111,000 meals per day and critical support to approximately 55,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women and young children at risk of malnutrition," its spokesperson told AFP.

More than six months after the UN endorsed US President Donald Trump's peace plan for Gaza, the humanitarian situation in the territory remains catastrophic, three international NGOs said Thursday, calling on Israel to respect its obligations.

"Israel continues to deny most experienced aid groups from bringing in essential supplies, like pipes to fix water systems, shelters, materials and medical supplies at the levels needed," Oxfam America President Abby Maxman said.

Despite the ceasefire meant to halt the war that started with Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, violence has continued, with Israeli airstrikes pounding the coastal territory several times a week.

"With 1.7 million people facing highly fragile food security conditions, it is critical that humanitarian operations are allowed to continue without disruption so life-saving assistance can reach civilians in need," WFP's spokesperson said.


Lebanon Army Says Soldiers Loyal after US Sanctions One over Alleged Hezbollah Links

Lebanese army members stand on a military vehicle during a Lebanese army media tour, to review the army's operations in the southern Litani sector, in Alma Al-Shaab, near the border with Israel, southern Lebanon, November 28, 2025. (Reuters)
Lebanese army members stand on a military vehicle during a Lebanese army media tour, to review the army's operations in the southern Litani sector, in Alma Al-Shaab, near the border with Israel, southern Lebanon, November 28, 2025. (Reuters)
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Lebanon Army Says Soldiers Loyal after US Sanctions One over Alleged Hezbollah Links

Lebanese army members stand on a military vehicle during a Lebanese army media tour, to review the army's operations in the southern Litani sector, in Alma Al-Shaab, near the border with Israel, southern Lebanon, November 28, 2025. (Reuters)
Lebanese army members stand on a military vehicle during a Lebanese army media tour, to review the army's operations in the southern Litani sector, in Alma Al-Shaab, near the border with Israel, southern Lebanon, November 28, 2025. (Reuters)

Lebanon's military said Friday its soldiers were loyal to the institution after the US announced sanctions that included, for the first time, an army officer accused of sharing information with Hezbollah.

In a statement, the army said it "affirms that all officers and members of the military institution are performing their national duties with utmost professionalism, responsibility, and discipline, in accordance with the decisions and directives issued by the army command".

It emphasized that "the loyalty of military personnel is solely to the military institution and the nation, and that they are committed to fulfilling their national duties without any other considerations or pressures", also saying it was not informed of the sanctions beforehand.

Washington on Thursday sanctioned what it called nine Hezbollah-linked individuals in Lebanon, including army colonel Samir Hamadi, and Khattar Nasser Eldin, an officer at another state security service.

The US said Hamadi and Nasser Eldin "shared important intelligence" with Hezbollah over the past year.

It marked the first time Lebanese officers have been sanctioned by the United States.

Hezbollah on Thursday condemned the sanctions, calling them "an attempt to intimidate the free Lebanese people in order to bolster the Zionist aggression against our country".