|   | Shou el akhbar. Lebanon is staring down two pressures at onceâIsraeli strikes from the south and Syrian troops massing to the northâwhile five former heads of state gathered thisâ week to say, in no uncertain terms: enough. Here's where things stand. |
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 | | Five Former Leaders Gather in Bkfaya: "Save Lebanon Now"The backstory: Lebanon has a long habit of political leaders issuing joint statements during crisesâand an equally long habit of those statements changing very little. But a rare gathering of five ex-presidents and prime ministers from across the sectarian spectrum carries symbolic weight that's hard to dismiss.
- Former presidents Amine Gemayel and Michel Suleiman, along with former prime ministers Najib Mikati, Fouad Siniora, and Tammam Salam, convened at Gemayel's Bkfaya residence to issue a unified statement on Lebanon's escalating crisis.
- The five leaders condemned the ongoing Israeli offensive, citing the forced displacement of over one million Lebanese civilians from the south, the Bekaa, and Beirut's southern suburbs.
- They endorsed President Joseph Aoun's call for negotiations toward a full Israeli withdrawal from all Lebanese territory, backing the government's position that war-and-peace decisions must rest exclusively with the state.
- The statement urged an Arab and international conference to help Lebanon exit the crisis, and reaffirmed support for the Lebanese army as the sole legitimate armed force.
Why it matters: When figures this politically distant from each other agree on a single document, it signals a rare national consensus forming around one demandâstate authority over Lebanon's fate, full stop. Lebanon Is Facing Two FrontsâAnd the Math Is Terrifying
- A harrowing piece thisâ week puts the daily human cost in stark figures: an average of 65 people killed and 162 injured every day, a rate writers warn will climb sharply if a broader Israeli ground offensive begins.
- Israeli media has reported that the Israeli government is preparing to mobilize approximately 450,000 reserve soldiersâon top of tens of thousands already massed on Lebanon's borderâbacked by tanks, armored vehicles, and naval and air cover.
- Simultaneously, Syria's new governing forces have been massing troops on Lebanon's northern and eastern borders, with analysts warning of a potential intervention framed around confronting Hezbollahâechoing anxieties about Lebanon's occupation-era past.
- Commentators across the spectrum are sounding alarms about a "tragedy within a tragedy"âurging Lebanese authorities to coordinate with Syrian counterparts diplomatically rather than allow any military escalation on a second front.
What to watch: Whether Lebanon's new government can hold its diplomatic line on both fronts simultaneouslyâwith Israel pushing from the south and an unpredictable new Syrian authority pressing from the northâwill define the coming weeks. "Al-Muhafaza 15": The Lebanese-Syrian TV Series Nobody Thought Would Get Made
- A new Lebanese drama series titled Al-Muhafaza 15â"Province 15"âhas broken one of Arab television's longest-standing taboos by explicitly naming Syria's nearly 30-year military presence in Lebanon as an occupation, a term common in Lebanese political speech but virtually absent from regional TV drama.
- The show opens with the liberation of Saydnaya prison, following two protagonists: a Lebanese detainee who spent 28 years inside, and a Syrian prisoner who spent 14âboth emerging into a world they no longer recognize.
- Written by Karen Rizk Allah (who also acts in the series), directed by Samir Habchi, and produced by Marwa Ghraoui, the show portrays Syrian refugee life in Lebanon with unusual nuanceâincluding the brutal class downgrade faced by professionals who once had careers and legal standing in Syria.
The bigger picture: The show arrives as Syrian troops mass on Lebanon's borders again, making its subject matter not a history lesson but an uncomfortably live question about what Lebanon's relationship with its neighbor is allowed to become. |
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 The American University of Beirut was founded in which year? Scroll to the bottom for the answer â or play all 10 at sobhiye.news/games/trivia |
 | | - Soldiers in uniform, not at war: Three Lebanese army conscripts were killed by Israeli drone strikes in the Nabatieh region Tuesâ dayâall in uniform, none on patrol. Omar Abed, Mohammad Baadarani, and Mehdi Kobeissi were born between 2004 and 2005. The army called it a flagrant sovereignty violation.
- Ceasefire offer, meet "Al-Asf Al-Ma'koul": A senior Lebanese official revealed that Netanyahu sent a ceasefire proposal via Macron to President Aoun 10 days agoâbut Hezbollah closed its communication channels and launched a major military operation instead, torpedoing the initiative and hardening Israel's stance.
- Lebanon talks to Israel. Israel shrugs: Lebanon has proposed direct negotiations with Israel for the first time since 1982, but wants the bombing to stop first. Washington appears uninterested in mediating, and Israeli Foreign Minister Saar flatly denied any talks were planned.
- Iran loses its No. 2: Israel killed Ali LarijaniâIran's top security chief and de facto leader since Khamenei's deathâalongside Basij commander General Soleimani in overnight strikes. Iran responded with multiple-warhead Khorramshahr-4 missiles at central Israel, killing 2 people in Ramat Gan.
- Beirut airport: still open, barely: Middle East Airlines cancelled multiple BeirutâDubai flights scheduled Marâ ch 17â19 after Israeli strikes hit near the airport road, though aviation authorities confirmed Rafik Hariri International remains operational with the access road clear.
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 | â | Parallel Rate | 89,700 LBP | 0.00% | | â | Official Rate | 89,500 LBP | 0.00% | | Ⲡ| Gold | $5,018 | +0.34% | | Ⲡ| Bitcoin | $74,070 | +0.09% | | Ⲡ| S&P 500 | 6,716.09 | +1.27% |
as of 6:â 47 Aâ M GMT ¡ Source: Yahoo Finance, CoinGecko |
 | | Britain's Top Diplomat Was in the Room When Iran Offered a DealâThen the Bombs Fell
- UK National Security Adviser Jonathan Powell attended the final US-Iran nuclear talks in Geneva in late Febâ ruary, bringing his own technical team after concerns that Trump envoys Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff lacked nuclear expertise, according to three sources confirmed to The Guardian.
- Powell judged Iran's offerâincluding a three-to-five year enrichment pause, elimination of its 440kg highly enriched uranium stockpile, and potential US participation in a future civil nuclear programâas "surprising" progress, not a final offer, with a follow-up round scheduled for Vienna on Marâ ch 2.
- The US and Israel launched their all-out attack on Iran two days before the Vienna talks were set to begin, a sequence that has placed the UK-US relationship under what officials describe as unprecedented strain, with Britain calling the strikes unlawful and premature.
- Iran had also agreed that nearly 80% of economic sanctions would be lifted in exchange, including frozen assets held in Qatarâa demand Tehran had made in 2025 talks.
Zooming out: The revelation that a negotiated path was considered viable by Britain's most senior security officialâright up until the moment bombs fellâwill intensify international scrutiny of how and why diplomacy was abandoned. Washington Quietly Asked Syria to Send Troops Into Eastern Lebanon
- The United States encouraged Syria to consider deploying forces into eastern Lebanon to help disarm Hezbollah, according to five sources cited by Reuters, including two Syrian officials and two others familiar with the discussions.
- Damascus has been weighing the proposal carefully but remains reluctant, fearing entanglement in the broader Middle East war and the risk of inflaming sectarian tensions given Syria's Sunni-majority governing coalition and Hezbollah's Shia base.
- American officials first raised the idea with Syrian counterparts lastâ year; it was revived around the time the US-Israeli war on Iran began, though sources differ on whether the formal request came just before or just after hostilities started on Febâ ruary 28.
What to watch: Whether Damascus ultimately agrees, refuses, or uses the proposal as leverage in its own negotiations with Washington could reshape the military and political geometry of Lebanon's eastern border in the coming weeks. The Iran War Is Pushing Asia Into an Energy Emergency
- The blockage of the Strait of Hormuzâthrough which a fifth of global crude oil and LNG trade passesâhas forced governments across Asia into emergency energy rationing, with the Philippines moving to a four-day workweek, Vietnam urging remote work, and Thailand asking officials to take the stairs, according to AP News.
- Japan began releasing roughly 45 days' worth of strategic oil reserves thisâ week, while South Korea plans to release 22.46 million barrels under the International Energy Agency's largest-ever coordinated stock draw, though analysts warn reserves offer only a short-term buffer.
- Pakistan has been partially insulated from the worst disruptions because rooftop solar now accounts for roughly one-fifth of its grid-supplied electricity, with analysis showing the solar expansion has helped avoid approximately $12 billion in oil and gas imports as of Febâ ruary 2026, according to Renewables First and the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air.
- India, the world's most populous nation and second-largest LPG importer, is prioritizing household cooking gas supplies but faces a potential subsidy cliff within a week, with fertilizer factories and restaurants already feeling acute shortages.
The bigger picture: The crisis is exposing how deeply Asia bet on LNG infrastructureâIndia, Bangladesh, and Pakistan alone have $107 billion in terminals and pipelines announced or under constructionâat the precise moment that dependence has become a strategic liability. |
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 | | - Byblos goes to the Louvre: Lebanese director Philippe Aractingi's documentary on a 4,000-year-old Bronze Age cemetery discovered in Jbeil will premiere at the Louvre on Marâ ch 25, opening an exhibition organized by the Arab World Institute in Parisâthe film already won the Grand Jury Prize at Spain's FICAB archaeology film festival in Novâ ember 2024.
- Lebanon feeds its own: The Ministry of Tourism's "Sofra" platform has already delivered 2,444 meals to 49 shelters through 14 partner restaurants and 18 NGOs, collecting $93,384 in donations starting from just $3âconnecting Lebanese restaurants with donors worldwide to keep kitchens open and families fed.
- From Montevideo to Madrid royalty: Real Madrid's Federico Valverdeâwho once trained with Arsenal at 16, didn't speak English, and had his drills translated by Emiliano MartĂnezâhas now made nearly 300 appearances and won 11 major trophies, with manager Arbeloa comparing him to club legend Juanito.
- The footballer who finally lived freely: A new documentary, The Last Guest at the Holloway Motel, tells the story of Tony Powellâwho played 275 games for Norwich in the 1970s and spent 25 years managing a West Hollywood motelâscreening at BFI Flare on Marâ ch 22 and 24 after Powell reunited with his family for the first time in 35 years.
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That's your Wednesâ dayâhold your people close and we'll see you toâ morrow. |
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