Lebanon, Ravaged by
War, Needs Changes to Unlock Aid. That Could Be a Tall Order.
For years, the
country has failed to enact financial and governance overhauls required by lenders.
The recent fighting has made that problem urgent.
·
Hezbollah — so powerful before the war that it was widely considered
a state within a state — cannot finance reconstruction.
·
Lebanon has so far secured a pledge
of $250 million in reconstruction aid from the World Bank, said Mr. Jaber, an initial
loan that is part of a broader $1 billion fund to be provided by donor countries,
but amounting to only 2 percent of what the World Bank says the country needs.
·
Nearly 100,000 people are displaced
in Lebanon, according to the United Nations, the vast majority of them from Hezbollah’s
heartlands in the south.
[ABS News Service/25.03.2025]
On his first day in office, Lebanon’s
new finance minister, Yassine Jaber, sat at his desk reading a color-coded report
on the dire state of the ministry’s operations. Nearly everything was marked in
alarming red.
The computers were decades old — some
still ran on Windows 98. Like much of the government, the ministry relied on mountains
of paper records, allowing dysfunction and corruption to fester.
“Things cannot continue as they are,”
he sighed.
To fix how it’s run, Lebanon needs
money. But to attract money, it needs to fix how it’s run: For years, it has failed
to enact sweeping financial and governance overhauls required to unlock billions
in international financial assistance that it has needed to address a debilitating
economic crisis.
Now, that support is even more critical
after the devastating 14-month war between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed
militia that has long held political sway in this tiny Mediterranean country. A
fragile truce is holding, but large parts of Lebanon are in ruins. Hezbollah has
been left battered and cannot pay for reconstruction. Lebanon’s new government is
able to afford “frankly none” of the bill, Mr. Jaber said.
Foreign donors hold the key to Lebanon’s
recovery, but to meet their demands, the state must do what it has never done before:
Undertake painful economic and structural changes, while confronting the thorny
issue of Hezbollah’s arms.
“The foreign aid is not just charity,”
said Paul Salem, the vice president for international engagement at the Middle East
Institute in Washington. “They are not going to give billions and billions of dollars
unless their position is respected.”
The total damage and economic loss
from the war is estimated to be $14 billion, and Lebanon needs $11 billion to rebuild,
the World Bank said this month, making the conflict the country’s most destructive
since its long civil war ended in 1990.
“It’s very important to move fast
on reconstruction; people are sleeping in tents. You have a whole part of Lebanon
paralyzed,” said Mr. Jaber on that day in his office last month. “Everything today
is a priority.”
The devastation has compounded the
country’s economic woes, which began in 2019 when its financial system collapsed
under the burden of state debt. That triggered a sovereign default and prompted
banks to impose informal capital controls, leaving many Lebanese people with their
life savings frozen.
Lebanon reached a draft funding deal
with the International Monetary Fund in 2022 that was billed as a lifeline for the
country, but it was conditioned on changes, including addressing the country’s weak
governance and restructuring its financial sector. The government failed to deliver,
hindered by deadlock and vested interests of the country’s political elite.
“Lebanon has to start by helping itself,”
Mr. Jaber said. “How do you do that? By starting to show real action.”
Mr. Jaber spoke with The New York
Times the day after Lebanon’s new government received a vote of confidence that
has sidelined Hezbollah politically. Mr. Jaber, now one
of the country’s most powerful figures, holds the reins to public spending and is
responsible for reconstruction efforts and securing foreign aid.
Hezbollah’s patron, Iran, contributed
heavily to reconstruction after the group’s last major conflict with Israel in 2006,
but is now largely unwilling because of its own crises, analysts said. The group
has been further isolated by the collapse of another ally, the Assad regime in neighboring Syria.
As a result, Hezbollah — so powerful
before the war that it was widely considered a state within a state — cannot finance
reconstruction, Mr. Jaber said.
“It’s a different era,” he said.
Lebanon has so far secured a pledge
of $250 million in reconstruction aid from the World Bank, said Mr. Jaber, an initial
loan that is part of a broader $1 billion fund to be provided by donor countries,
but amounting to only 2 percent of what the World Bank says the country needs.
Some experts question how quickly
the government can make systemic changes. President Joseph Aoun has said that he
hopes the foreign aid can come “step by step” as new policies are implemented.
Adding to the uncertainty, international
assistance may depend on more than just a financial overhaul. Under the terms of
the truce deal that ended the war in November, Hezbollah must also disarm — a task
that could risk violence between Hezbollah’s largely Shiite supporters and domestic
opponents. Experts said that the United States and Gulf Arab countries consider
disarmament a prerequisite for large-scale assistance.
The Lebanese government has promised
to bring all weapons under the state’s control, but it remains unclear how exactly
it will achieve that, and if so, when. Mr. Jaber did not comment on disarming Hezbollah,
but noted that the group was an established political party with popular support
and that its political role was not a point of contention.
Hezbollah remains a potent military
force, and some Lebanese officials have ruled out forcibly disarming it, hinting
at a negotiated settlement. Earlier this month, the group’s leader, Naim Qassem, implicitly rejected the
idea that the “resistance” would lay down its weapons.
The government is “being bombarded
by both demands: painful economic and financial reforms, and strangling Hezbollah’s
finances and presence,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. But, without funding first, “you are pushing
a government and a president, with no juice, to meet the most challenging goals.”
Hezbollah officials have insisted
that reconstruction must not be linked to overhaul demands, fearing a loss of support
if the rebuilding process is drawn out, experts said. Nearly 100,000 people are
displaced in Lebanon, according to the United Nations, the vast majority of them
from Hezbollah’s heartlands in the south.
“Reform will take a hell of a long
time,” Mr. Hage Ali said.
Seeking to reassure Hezbollah’s supporters,
Mr. Qassem, the group’s leader, has promised compensation
for each affected household of between $12,000 and $14,000, intended to cover rent
costs and replace furniture. But the process has been marred by delays.
With Hezbollah largely sidelined, a flurry of diplomatic efforts are underway to reassure foreign donors. Lebanese officials met
this month with an I.M.F. delegation in Beirut, which Mr. Jaber said aimed to restart
negotiations over the organization’s long-awaited rescue package. A top European
Union official said last month that Brussels would monitor the talks to assess whether
Europe could offer its own financial aid.
An immediate priority, Mr. Jaber said,
is appointing a central bank governor who can set about reviving the country’s banking
sector. Lebanon has failed to name a successor since Riad Salameh stepped down from
the role in 2023, facing accusations that he ran the world’s largest Ponzi scheme
for overseeing a strategy that required ever more borrowing to pay creditors.
Lebanon’s new leaders have also promised
an external audit of all public institutions, part of a broader pledge to crack
down on the corruption that has long plagued the country.
Mr. Jaber said
he was hopeful but acknowledged the uncertainty ahead.
“Where there
is a will, there is a way,” he said. The government faces a test “on the issue of
their will.”