#washingtonpost.com. Northern Israel is quiet again, but most families have not gone home. Of the 60,000 Israelis forced from their homes in the north by Hezbollah fire, only about 20 percent have returned since a ceasefire agreement five weeks ago.
#Jan.03.2025
#oilprice.com. Turkey Says It’s Ready to Supply Electricity to Syria and Lebanon | OilPrice.com. Turkey has offered to provide electricity to Syria and is exploring opportunities to cooperate in the country's oil and gas sector following the regime change.
#Dec.30.2024
#nytimes.com. A Month on, a Tenuous Cease-fire Holds in Lebanon. Israel and Hezbollah have exchanged strikes and accusations of breaches. Implementation of the deal has been slow. But the truce has brought some calm to a tumultuous region.
#Dec.27.2024
#economist.com. Israel and Hamas look close to some kind of deal. Lebanon, Syria and Donald Trump have all been important
#Dec.19.2024
#economist.com. The Lebanese-American businessman in Donald Trump’s inner circle. Can Massad Boulos influence the incoming administration in the region?
#Nov.28.2024
#economist.com. Israel’s war aims in Lebanon are expanding. It is hoping for political change as well as the destruction of Hizbullah
#Nov.07.2024
#economist.com. Bad ideas are back on the menu in the Middle East. From a proxy force in south Lebanon to regime change, what’s old is new again
#Oct.17.2024
#economist.com. Lebanon’s army is less useless than its reputation suggests. It is one of the few remaining institutions holding the country together
#Oct.17.2024
#economist.com. Just inside Lebanon, Israeli soldiers debate how far to go. They are 2km inside the country, but prepared to go farther
#Oct.14.2024
#economist.com. Israel’s invasion of Lebanon may bolster support for Hizbullah. The group is deeply embedded in Lebanese politics and society
#Oct.07.2024
#economist.com. Iran bombards Israel as the war escalates further. Israel may take it as justification to attack Iran
#Oct.01.2024
#economist.com. Hassan Nasrallah’s death will reshape Lebanon and the Middle East. A decapitated Hizbullah faces the most precarious moment in its history
#Sep.28.2024
#economist.com. Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hizbullah. Israel has killed the head of the militant group
#Sep.28.2024
#economist.com. Israel targets the head of Hizbullah in a deadly strike on Beirut. It may provoke the militia into a response that leads to all-out war
#Sep.27.2024
#economist.com. The flight from southern Lebanon has been swift. Israel’s attacks have left the Lebanese fearful and suspicious
#Sep.26.2024
#economist.com. Hizbullah seems to have miscalculated in its fight with Israel. But neither side would gain from a ruinous and pointless war
#Sep.25.2024
#economist.com. Can Israel’s economy survive an all-out war with Hizbullah?. The country’s banks are experiencing capital flight
#Sep.24.2024
#economist.com. Israel has bloodied Hizbullah but is stuck in a war of attrition. Two attacks on the Shia militia may not change Israel’s strategic dilemma in Lebanon
#Sep.18.2024
#economist.com. Israel and Hizbullah play with fire. They both attempt escalating attacks that fall short of all-out war
#Aug.25.2024
#economist.com. Making love not war in the Middle East. Israelis and Lebanese are finding each other on dating apps, whether they want to or not
#Aug.22.2024
#economist.com. The bunkers on Beirut’s golf course are in the crosshairs. Still, hazards off the fairway are no excuse for slow play
#Aug.15.2024
#economist.com. Israeli aircraft buzz Beirut as the drums of war bang loud. As Iran and Hizbullah threaten retaliation for Israeli assassinations, Lebanon is in the firing line
#Aug.07.2024
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