Pentagon OKs $90 million for Lebanese army

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Lebanese army soldiers patrol the Syrian border in an area they   took from Isis in Jurud Ras Baalbek on 28 August 2017 AFP/Getty Images
Lebanese army soldiers patrol the Syrian border in an area they took from Isis in Jurud Ras Baalbek on 28 August 2017 AFP/Getty Images

The  Trump administration is sending more than $90 million worth of military equipment to help the Lebanese army protect its borders, the latest sign that the United States is sticking by Beirut despite , Al Monitor reported

Lebanese army soldiers position  the Lebanese flag on top of a hill  in the town of Ras Baalbek that the army recaptured from ISIS , Lebanon August 21, 2017.
Lebanese army soldiers position the Lebanese flag on top of a hill in the town of Ras Baalbek that the army recaptured from ISIS , Lebanon August 21, 2017.

The Pentagon notified Congress on April 25 that it would be providing the Lebanese Armed Forces with 7-ton and 2.5-ton trucks as well as US Army Humvees mounted with .50-caliber machine guns, according to documents reviewed by Al-Monitor. The aid package draws from the Pentagon’s $1.4 billion global train-and-equip fund.

The notification was made just a week before the Iran-backed Shiite militia and its allies won more than half the seats in Lebanon’s May 6 parliamentary elections. Despite the Trump administration’s strident rhetoric on Iran and concerns about Hezbollah’s influence on Lebanese state institutions, the US Defense Department remains “committed to supporting Lebanon’s sovereignty, stability, security and its state institutions,” Pentagon spokeswoman Rebecca Rebarich told Al-Monitor.

The assistance is aimed at helping the Lebanese Armed Forces deter conventional attacks, reduce malign influence and defeat the Islamic State and a host of Sunni terrorist groups that flow through Lebanon’s border with Syria. US Central Command previously used the fund to outfit the Lebanese Armed Forces with six American-made light attack helicopters and a Scan Eagle surveillance drone last year, totaling $110 million. The State and Defense departments jointly review train-and-equip assistance, with input from regional bureaus, to ensure that US partners can keep track of the weapons.

The United States has been the biggest foreign bankroller of Lebanon’s army in the past decade, sending more than $1.7 billion to the Lebanese Armed Forces since 2006, according to a State Department fact sheet issued May 11 following last week’s election. Deliveries under the Barack Obama administration included high-tech US weapons, such as Bradley fighting vehicles and night-vision goggles for Lebanese special operations teams.

“Lebanon’s state security institutions, particularly the LAF [Lebanese Armed Forces], have historically served as pillars of stability in a country facing extraordinary challenges,” the fact sheet stated. It added that US assistance for the Lebanese Armed Forces “is a key component of our policy to reinforce Lebanon’s sovereignty and secure its borders, counter internal threats and build up its legitimate state institutions.”

But while the State Department said the Lebanese Armed Forces is getting more capable of sealing off the border since Islamic State fighters surrounded police checkpoints and rampaged through the town of Arsal in 2014, critics warn that the Pentagon hasn’t done enough to contain Hezbollah’s growing power. The House Foreign Affairs Committee is expected to hold a hearing next week to explore the fallout from the recent elections in Lebanon and Iraq, a congressional aide told Al-Monitor.

So far, US military aid to Lebanon hasn’t been interrupted by political turmoil, including Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s mysterious resignation during a trip to Saudi Arabia in November. The resignation was later withdrawn. About 100 US special forces troops also assist with Lebanese Armed Forces training in-country.

Yet Trump’s new foreign policy team, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and national security adviser John Bolton, have publicly indicated their willingness to push back against the influence of Hezbollah and other Iran-backed proxies. Speaking after Trump’s decision to abandon the Iran nuclear deal last week, Bolton said the White House was “very concerned” about the potential of “Iran extending its influence through Iraq, linking up with the [Bashar al-] Assad regime in Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon.”

Last year, then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s foreign aid budget included across-the-board cuts to US foreign military grants, zeroing out American military assistance to Lebanon. This year the Trump administration is seeking $50 million in aid for the Lebanese Armed Forces.

The Lebanese Armed Forces “fully complies” with end-use monitoring requirements, “continues to have an exemplary track record securing and accounting for US government-provided equipment” and “remains a critical partner on the front lines” against the Islamic State and other extremists, a State Department official told Al-Monitor.

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