by Tony Issa It has now become certain that the ceasefire agreement was stillborn. Lebanon has entered a dangerously escalated new phase. Israeli airstrikes continue to pound villages in the South and the Western Bekaa, while Hezbollah—categorically rejecting the provisions of the "Washington Declaration"—presses on with its bombardment of settlements and northern towns using missiles and drones. This is absolute deadlock. In its wake, the Lebanese entity appears destined for an inexorable scenario: from without, an unconstrained Israeli ground incursion; from within, a looming demographic, political, sectarian, and factional fracture poised to explode. Israel is now mobilizing its military apparatus, capitalizing on an international—and particularly American—strategic environment it deems ideal for shaping the geographical reality it aspires to establish in Lebanon. The US stance reveals a profound shift in approach toward the Lebanese file. Thus far, Washington has granted ...
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's pro-Western Civil Contract heads into Sunday's election as the clear front-runner, while a fragmented opposition and a wall of undecided voters keep the outcome from being a foregone conclusion. Armenians vote on Sunday in a parliamentary election widely seen as a referendum on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's drive to pull the small South Caucasus nation out of Russia's orbit and toward Europe. More than 2.48 million citizens are eligible to choose the members of the National Assembly's ninth convocation, in a contest both sides have framed as nothing less than a fight for the country's survival. Pashinyan's Civil Contract party enters election day as the undisputed front-runner. A final pre-election survey by EVN Report's Armenian Election Study put the prime minister's job approval at 53 percent — up from 36 percent earlier in the campaign — while a late-May poll by the International Republican Institute placed the...