Lebanon moves to ban Hezbollah’s military activities
A handout photo released by the Lebanese Government Press Office on March 2, 2026 shows Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam speaking at the end of the ministerial council at the Presidential Palace of Baabda, east of Beirut. (AFP Photo)


Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam announced Monday that his government has banned Hezbollah’s military and security operations, ordering the army to enforce state control over weapons north of the Litani River and restricting the group’s role strictly to political activity.

"The state rejects any military or security actions launched from Lebanese territory,” Salam told a news conference after a Cabinet meeting at the presidential palace east of Beirut, chaired by President Joseph Aoun.

He said the Cabinet decided to prohibit any military operations outside "legitimate state institutions.”

"The decision of war and peace rests exclusively with the state,” he stressed.

Salam said the move requires limiting Hezbollah’s activities and obligating the group to hand over its weapons, describing its recent actions as "a violation of Cabinet decisions.”

He instructed the Lebanese army command to implement the government’s plan decisively, particularly the provision aimed at restricting weapons north of the Litani River.

Hezbollah said early Monday that it had targeted a military site in northern Israel with a barrage of rockets and drones, in response to ongoing Israeli attacks on Lebanon and a joint U.S.-Israeli military campaign on Iran.

Israel launched a series of airstrikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs and southern Lebanon in response, killing at least 52 and injuring 154, according to Lebanese authorities.

Hezbollah lawmaker Mohammad Raad rejected the ban, accusing the government of creating additional problems and fueling tensions in the country.

"We understand the Lebanese government's impotence in the face of the brutal Israeli enemy, which violates national sovereignty, occupies land, and poses a continuous threat to the country's security and stability,” Raad, head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, said in a statement carried by Hezbollah’s Al-Manar television.

"We also understand its right to decide on war and peace, and its inability to implement and impose this decision on the enemy, which violates national peace and persists in its war of aggression against Lebanon and its people,” he added.

He said Hezbollah sees "no justification” for the government’s ban on the group.

"The Lebanese were expecting a decision to ban aggression, but instead they were faced with a decision to ban the rejection of aggression," Raad added.

Since a ceasefire with Hezbollah took effect in late November 2024, Israel has committed near-daily violations in Lebanon that have killed hundreds of people.

Israel began its offensive against Lebanon in October 2023 and escalated it into a full-scale war in September 2024, killing more than 4,000 people and wounding about 17,000.