Prime Minister designate Adib’s surprise resignation raises questions on the future of US-mediated Lebanese-Israeli talks aimed at resolving the two Middle Eastern nations’ long-standing maritime dispute.
Less than 24 hours before Adib’s announcement, a spokesman for Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz confirmed that the two countries had agreed to direct talks, with the negotiations expected to start in mid-October in the Lebanese city of Naquora, home to the United Nations peacekeeping force in Lebanon.
The talks, expected to be mediated by a senior US official, possibly Secretary of State for Near East Affairs David Schenker, according to Israeli media, were to discuss the 860-square-kilometre resource-rich wedge of maritime territory in the Eastern Mediterranean claimed by both countries.
Initially, Beirut wanted the talks to be mediated by both the UN and the US, but had reportedly caved in amid Israeli resistance and agreed that a UN rapporteur be present only in the capacity of observer, with the US serving as the sole mediator.
Energy Minister Steinitz was expected to represent the Israeli side, while Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, coordinating with President Michel Aoun’s office, representing the Lebanese side.
Hezbollah, the political and militant group which carries significant influence in Lebanese politics, expressed strong resistance to the idea of talks with Israel, and had supported the Diab government politically before its resignation in August in the aftermath of the deadly 4 August Port of Beirut explosion, which caused nearly 200 deaths and levelled nearby parts of the city. Diab had criticised Israeli military aggression against Lebanon during his short tenure in office, and in July accused Tel Aviv of carrying out a “dangerous military escalation” after a string of clashes between Hezbollah and the Israeli Defence Forces.
President Aoun told the 75th meeting of the UN General Assembly on Wednesday that his country “stresses its full rights to its maritime resources,” and repeated Beirut’s “call for the international community to stop Israel’s violation of Lebanese sovereignty.” He added that he was counting on UN efforts and US mediation to reach a maritime border deal with Tel Aviv.
After Adib's resignation, the fate of the maritime border negotiations is now unclear.
Lebanon and Israel have suffered decades of poor relations, and are technically still at war. In addition to the maritime dispute, Israel continues to occupy a 25-square-kilometre strip of territory known as the Shebaa Farms, which Tel Aviv occupied in 1967 during the Six-Day War, and annexed in 1981. The two countries have fought multiple wars, the last of which took place in 2006. Hezbollah and the Israeli military have since traded blows repeatedly amid tensions along the border area, with Hezbollah rockets and hit-and-run attacks met with Israeli air and artillery strikes.