Published: 11:48, April 19, 2025
Hezbollah leader rejects disarmament call, terms it ‘gift’ to Israel
By Xinhua
An image grab taken from Hezbollah's al-Manar TV shows the Lebanese group's new leader Naim Qassem during a televised address from an undisclosed location on Oct 30, 2024. (AL-MANAR / AFP)

BEIRUT – Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem on Friday dismissed calls for the group to disarm, warning that any such effort was a "delusion" that would serve Israel's interests.

"No one will be allowed to remove the weapons of the resistance," Qassem said during a public address focused on Lebanon's defense strategy and the current political landscape.

"Israel wants to see Lebanon weak and defenseless so it can fulfill its expansionist ambitions."

READ MORE: Hezbollah Leader demands full Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon by Feb 18

He argued that proposals to disarm Hezbollah under the pretext of strengthening the state amounted to offering a "gift" to Israel. The resistance movement's weapons, Qassem said, were a response to Israeli occupation and aggression, and remained essential to safeguarding Lebanon's sovereignty.

"The Lebanese army alone is not equipped to defend the country," he said, asserting that Hezbollah's military role was necessary alongside state institutions.

The remarks escalate a simmering debate over Hezbollah's military autonomy, which has long divided Lebanese politics.

ALSO READ: Israel strikes Lebanon-Syria border crossings, claims Hezbollah smuggling weapons

Qassem accused domestic critics advocating disarmament of promoting foreign agendas and inflaming artificial crises. "The true danger is Israel's occupation and ongoing aggression," he said.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, during a visit to Qatar this week, reaffirmed his commitment to bringing all weapons under state control by 2025, emphasizing that the process must be driven by "domestic consensus, not external dictates".

He also praised Hezbollah's "restraint" since a November truce with Israel, citing the group's handover of more than 100 positions near the Litani River.

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam echoed the president's stance in an interview with Saudi broadcaster Al Arabiya, stating that "only the state may decide matters of war and peace."

READ MORE: Iraq summons Lebanese envoy over president's remarks on paramilitary forces

Both Aoun and Salam, who have publicly questioned Hezbollah's military role, assumed office in recent months following more than a year of intense conflicts between the group and Israel. Their appointments have been widely interpreted as a sign of Hezbollah's waning influence within Lebanon's political establishment.