In a direct blow to US-led diplomacy, Hezbollah Secretary General Naim Qassem has rejected all direct negotiations between Lebanon and the Israeli occupation. Framed as a “defense of sovereignty,” the group says the era of trading resistance for Washington’s approval is over.
The rejection targets a planned Washington meeting Tuesday between Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors. Qassem calls the talks a pretext to pressure Hezbollah into disarming, labeling them a coercive scheme to dismantle Lebanon’s only deterrent against future aggression.
Qassem positions Hezbollah as the last shield against what he calls a “stab in the back” to Arab dignity. The group ties the US-brokered summit to broader campaigns by Tel Aviv and Washington to strip sovereign actors like Iran and Lebanon of strategic defenses for empty promises of peace.
The strategic cost is clear, forced normalization risks Lebanese fracture and regional escalation. Hezbollah frames the refusal as principled resistance against erasing Palestinian rights and forcing Lebanon to submit to Israeli security demands while occupation continues.
With Washington’s talks looming, the resistance axis hails the move as defense of sovereignty over Western diktats. Hezbollah’s message is set: the resistance will not negotiate its existence, and it will not disarm.
