Hezbollah Is Shouting Because It Has Stopped Steering
Eight hours at the State Department. Military attachés in the room for the first time. The text on the table is “Lebanese state monopoly on arms” — and Iran’s proxy architecture is being legally dismantled across the Levant.
Key Takeaways
- Third round of US–Lebanon talks: eight hours at the State Department with military attachés present for the first time
- The negotiating text centers on “Lebanese state monopoly on arms” — inside a long-term American-Israeli framework, not UN Resolution 1701
- The same doctrine was installed in Baghdad the same day via Ali al-Zaidi’s confidence vote
- Fouad Makhzoumi’s November Washington Institute doctrine is now the State Department’s working draft
- Cross-confessional consensus — Makhzoumi, Lebanese Forces, Kataeb, and Jumblatt — has neutralised sectarian veto
- LAF Commander Joseph Aoun’s April 23 declaration functions as the treaty; this week is implementation
Hezbollah is shouting because it has stopped steering. That is the read of the third round — eight hours at the State Department, military attachés in the room for the first time. Simon Karam, Ambassador Nada Mouawad, and the Lebanese Armed Forces were beside them. The text on the table — inside a long-term American-Israeli framework, and notably not UN Resolution 1701 — is unambiguous: “Lebanese state monopoly on arms.” This is not a border negotiation. It is an institutional transfer.
The same doctrine was installed in Baghdad on the very same day. Ali al-Zaidi’s confidence vote made “state monopoly on arms” an Iraqi government programme. Iran’s proxy architecture is being legally dismantled across the Levant — and Iran is watching helplessly.
We are no longer a card in anyone’s pocket, nor a battlefield for others’ wars.
— LAF Commander Joseph Aoun, April 23, 2026This framework did not arrive by accident. Fouad Makhzoumi laid down the doctrine at the Washington Institute in November: full dismantlement of Hezbollah, state monopoly on force, direct negotiations with Israel, suspension of the boycott law. That is the exact text the State Department is now drafting.
The Sunni cover was prepositioned with strategic precision. Without it, the Christian track would face a sectarian veto. With Fouad Makhzoumi, the Lebanese Forces, and the Kataeb behind state logic, the consensus is already cross-confessional. Even Walid Jumblatt — Lebanon’s master pivoter and Druze chieftain — cannot break ranks. That is why Hezbollah Secretary General Naim Qassem has lost his narrative, and why Hezbollah MPs’ demands fall flat.
Joseph Aoun pronounced the doctrine on April 23: “We are no longer a card in anyone’s pocket, nor a battlefield for others’ wars.” That sentence is the treaty. Everything this week — the implementation, the sequencing, the signatures, the guarantees, the LAF deployment — flows from those words.
The choice is not between negotiation and resistance. It is between a Lebanon that writes its own armistice and a Lebanon scheduled by Tehran. Beirut chose the pen. Washington is underwriting the ink. Hezbollah is left negotiating with its own audience.
Let us also remember: Michel Issa, the US Ambassador to Lebanon, is doing a heroic job.
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