US will not give ‘bailout’ to Lebanese government without reform after deadly Beirut blast
The U.S. will continue to provide humanitarian support for the Lebanese people affected by a deadly and devastating explosion at the port of Beirut in early August, a top State Department official said Wednesday, but will not underwrite the current government until real reforms take place.
David Hale, the under secretary for political affairs, spoke candidly about Lebanese government corruption and incompetence in a briefing with reporters following a recent trip to the region.
He said while the U.S. remains committed to addressing the immediate humanitarian crisis — the U.S. has so far provided $18 million in emergency assistance — it will not provide a bailout for the Lebanese government.
“We will not be providing that kind of long-term assistance until we see a government that’s actually capable of reform and change,” Hale said.
He further criticized the government, saying that Lebanon’s leaders “have been ignoring their responsibility to meet the needs of the people and have resisted the kind of deep, fundamental reforms that are needed.”
He added that “we can’t fix that from the outside. Lebanese leaders have to demonstrate the political will and commitment to that and that was my main message.”
Lebanon has been viewed as a country on the brink of collapse even before the Aug. 4 blast amid an economic crisis worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The source of the blast is believed to be from a fire at the city’s port that spread to nearly 3,000 tons of abandoned and improperly stored, highly-explosive ammonium nitrate. The explosion killed nearly 200 people, injured thousands and left hundreds of thousands of people with destroyed homes.
The explosion was seen as a dark metaphor for the trajectory of the country and long-standing public frustration with the political elite and a government that has failed to rehabilitate the country and provide basic services in the aftermath of its 15-year civil war ending in 1990.
The Lebanese government resigned in the aftermath of the explosion and is in a caretaker role until new political leaders are chosen.
Hale, who has traveled to the country multiple times over the course of his career since 1988, said he was overwhelmed by the devastation and that the anger and frustration among the public was “extremely potent.”
He said that he heard a wide range of views from political leaders over the need for governmental reform, saying some understood the need for change, while others were in complete denial.
“Some of them are aware of the problem that they face with the public, and are trying to develop a concept of governance that can be responsive,” Hale said.
He added that reforms needed include combating corruption, improving transparency, restructuring public debt, fixing the electrical system and ending the practice of sending customs revenues at the ports to political parties instead of the government, among others.
Other political leaders are in denial, he said.
“Others I found to be in denial and trying to paper this over and ride out the moment in the hopes that the public will lose interest and, either don’t understand the magnitude of the problem or are unwilling to cope with it.”
Hale heaped praise on everyday Lebanese citizens, who have come out in a show of force to clean the city streets block by block of debris from the blast and absent any government presence.
“Frankly, the meetings that were the most rewarding were those with civil society,” he said.
Hale did not say whether the U.S. government would support a new Lebanese government that includes Hezbollah, but mentioned that the U.S. has worked with a government before that includes the terrorist-designated organization and its political party at the head of the Health and Industry Ministries.
He offered instead that public frustration with political leaders extends to Hezbollah and pointed out that an effigy of the leader of the organization, Hassan Nasrallah, was burned in Beirut’s Martyrs Square as part of protests last week.
“This is a recognition, I think, that people are beginning to realize that Hezbollah is also part of the corrupt, self-serving system,” he said.
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