Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Lebanese Parliament votes for new government

“For too long, the Lebanese people were denied a governing body that could unite the country and rebuild institutions,” said the U.S. State Department.

Nawaf Salam
Nawaf Salam , president of the International Court of Justice in The Hague, at a two-day hearing in a case Mexico filed against Ecuador at the ICJ, May 1, 2024. Photo by Remko De Waal/ANP/AFP via Getty Images.

The Lebanese Parliament expressed its confidence in the country’s new government on Wednesday, with 95 of 128 parliamentarians voting for the administration, headed by Nawaf Salam, who was designated in mid-January.

Although Salam, the former International Court of Justice president, said that only Lebanon’s armed forces should defend the country, the Hezbollah terror organization’s bloc in Parliament supported his cabinet appointments, the Associated Press reported. (Hezbollah did not support his prime ministership.)

Tammy Bruce, the U.S. State Department spokeswoman, congratulated both Salam and Joseph Aoun, the Lebanese president.

“For too long, the Lebanese people were denied a governing body that could unite the country and rebuild Lebanese state institutions,” Bruce stated. “America is partnering with Lebanon’s new government as it enacts urgently needed economic reforms, and we will continue our support for the Lebanese Armed Forces as it implements the cessation of hostilities.”

During Salam’s tenure as Lebanese ambassador to the United Nations, he voted to condemn Israel 210 times in 11 years. He has accused the “supreme Zionist leadership” of pursuing a policy of “ethnic cleansing” via “terrorism and organized massacres,” and on several occasions, he has said that Israel is an “apartheid” state.

Israel and Hezbollah entered a ceasefire agreement, which the terror organization has violated repeatedly, on Nov. 27.

The Islamic Republic’s missile assault came in retaliation for what it said was an IAF strike on its part of the same field; Israel has not taken credit for that attack.
Delta delays return of Tel Aviv route until June as damage from missile debris prompts renewed passenger limits and widespread cancellations.
The IDF struck over 200 regime targets in central and western Iran.
Troops confiscated numerous weapons, including RPGs, anti-tank rockets, ammunition, a hunting rifle and additional combat equipment.
U.N. nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors still have not accessed Iran’s new underground Isfahan enrichment facility, leaving the plant’s status unknown.
At least 21 people, all noncombatants, have been killed by Iranian ballistic missile attacks targeting civilians in the Jewish state since the start of the war.