Skip to content
Solutions
Who it's for
Publishers & Broadcasters
Hire in minutes, anywhere on earth.
Content Marketing Teams
Anyone can generate content. You can commission journalism.
PR & Comms Teams
Know before it becomes the story.
Risk & Intelligence Teams
Start every day already briefed.
Journalists & News Professionals
Get verified, get booked, get paid.
Product
Media Monitoring
The world's media, analysed for you.
Pricing
Log in
Sign up
Publishers & Broadcasters
Content Marketing Teams
PR & Comms Teams
Risk & Intelligence Teams
Journalists & News Professionals
Media Monitoring
Pricing
SA
Soubhi Amhaz
International Affairs · United Kingdom
Compiled from public sources
Covers
International Affairs
Conflict & Security
Politics & Government
Seen in
Asharq Al-Awsat English
2
Published work
Asharq Al-Awsat
·
Jul 2026
US-Iran Escalation Revives Lebanese Fears of War
Escalating US-Iran tensions have renewed Lebanese concerns that conflict could spill into southern Lebanon amid stalled implementation of the framework agreement with Israel and continued Israeli operations. Retired military officials say the escalation may reflect temporary pressure rather than a breakdown in negotiations, but warn that renewed war between Washington and Tehran would likely draw in Hezbollah. Lebanese dissatisfaction with negotiation outcomes and concerns over insufficient US guarantees have shaped Beirut’s approach ahead of upcoming Rome talks. Increased US diplomatic and military engagement, including assigning a general to oversee agreement implementation, signals Washington’s renewed focus on Lebanon. Analysts note that Hezbollah’s tougher posture aligns with Iranian strategy, suggesting major shifts depend on Tehran’s decisions.
Log in
Log in
Forgot password?
Sign in with a magic link instead
Cookies That Care!
We respect your privacy and use a limited number of cookies to provide essential functionality and enhance your visit. No third-party advertising cookies involved. For more details, please read our
Cookie Policy
.
Continue