Document #2118974
USDOS – US Department of State (Author)
Overview: In 2023 the United States provided security assistance and training to the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) and worked with the Internal Security Forces (ISF) to enhance their counterterrorism capabilities and ability to investigate and prosecute local terrorism cases. Terrorist groups operating in Lebanon included U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organizations such as Hizballah and ISIS, as well as Hamas and other Palestinian terror organizations.
Despite the Government of Lebanon’s (GOL’s) official policy of disassociation from regional conflicts, Hizballah, a U.S.-designated terrorist organization that also has representation within the Lebanese government, continued its military role in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen in collaboration with the Iranian regime. Separately, Lebanon’s 12 Palestinian refugee camps remained largely outside the control of Lebanese security forces and experienced terrorist recruitment and infiltration. Terrorist groups, including ISIS, continued to recruit Lebanese nationals to participate in conflicts in Iraq and Syria. In addition, several individuals on the FBI’s Most Wanted List and the Department of State’s Rewards for Justice list reportedly remained in Lebanon.
2023 Terrorist Incidents: Notable incidents in 2023 included the following:
Legislation, Law Enforcement, and Border Security: Lebanon does not have a comprehensive CT law, but several articles of Lebanon’s criminal code are used effectively to prosecute acts of terrorism. No new laws related to terrorism were passed in 2023. The LAF, the ISF, the Directorate of General Security (DGS), and the General Directorate of State Security were the primary government agencies responsible for counterterrorism. The existing law permits military intelligence personnel to make arrests without warrants in cases involving terrorism and does not provide a universal right to remain silent. Structural limitations in the justice system remained a barrier to conducting trials on terrorism cases in a timely manner. Because of due-process delays, some individuals suspected of terrorism were held in pretrial detention for extended periods. Although cooperation among the services was inconsistent, they took steps to improve information sharing.
In 2023 the Department of State’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) funded equipment and training programs for ISF units, judges, and prosecutors to improve their investigation and prosecution of complex criminal cases, including terrorism-related cases. INL support to the ISF’s modernization plans provided enhanced information management for key ISF units, improving performance against criminal and terrorist threats. In an effort to reduce disparities in evidentiary standards that hinder the prosecution of terrorism cases, Embassy Beirut’s Regional Security Office extended CT Bureau ATA Digital Evidence Preservation training to Lebanese police, prosecutors, and investigative judges. This initiative led to an ISF-driven strategic framework for a fusion center for cyber-based counterterrorism investigations that will support investigations based on ATA-supplied forensic and cyber hardware, software, and training platforms.
U.S. assistance in building counterterrorism (CT) capacity is funded primarily through CT Bureau Antiterrorism Assistance (ATA) funds. In 2023, ATA spent more than $6 million providing training and equipment to the ISF and the LAF, focusing on counter-IED, protection of national leadership, response to terrorist activities, and cyber-based investigations with digital forensics.
Lebanon made efforts to implement UNSC resolutions 2396 and 2309 by collecting biographic data for travelers at Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport, including Passenger Name Record and Advance Passenger Information data. DGS regularly updated INTERPOL watchlist information at border security terminals at the Beirut International Airport. DGS routinely shared information about falsified travel documents with foreign embassies in Lebanon. Lebanese security services coordinated with the United States on numerous occasions to investigate individuals involved in terrorism.
LAF and ISF units, including those receiving U.S. capacity building assistance, undertook enforcement actions against suspected terrorists. The LAF announced it had arrested individuals throughout the year for membership in terrorist organizations, including seven members of ISIS and one member of the al-Nusra Front who fought against the LAF in 2014. Most of the individuals arrested were Syrian or Lebanese.
While the GOL did not formally engage with repatriation of foreign terrorist fighters from Syria in 2023, security agencies prioritized investigation and arrest of ISIS fighters who had entered Lebanon. On November 1 the LAF reported that an intelligence unit had arrested two Syrian nationals for membership in ISIS, one of whom confessed to entering Lebanon illegally to recruit new members for the terrorist group and surveil LAF facilities and Roumieh prison grounds.
The presence of Hizballah in the Lebanese government continued to impede effective host government action against terrorist incidents. Investigations into politically sensitive murders – including the suspected assassination by Hizballah of civil society activist Lokman Slim in 2021 and the killing of an Irish UN Interim Force in Lebanon Peacekeeper in December 2022 – suffered from delays and roadblocks. Members of Hizballah accused of coordinating acts of international terrorism remain at large in Lebanon. On December 20 the U.S. DOJ unsealed an indictment against Samuel Salman El Reda for, among other things, helping plan and execute the 1994 Argentine Jewish Mutual Association bombing in Buenos Aires; DOJ stated that Reda resides in Lebanon. Two individuals convicted in absentia during the U.S.-supported Special Tribunal for Lebanon for their role in the 2005 assassination of Rafic Hariri remain at large. Some Lebanese security forces personnel may interact with Hizballah as part of official duties, but they are not beholden to or controlled by the terrorist group.
Countering the Financing of Terrorism: Lebanon is a member of the Middle East and North Africa Financial Action Task Force, and its Financial Intelligence Unit, the Special Investigation Commission, is a member of the Egmont Group.
In December, Lebanon completed its mutual evaluation, which noted that coordination among law enforcement agencies helped enable terrorist financing (TF) policies and resulted in detecting professional and organized criminal groups and uncovering their funding means. However, the report identified deficiencies in investigating, prosecuting, and sharing information about TF activities fully in line with Lebanon’s risk profile. Lebanon has not demonstrated that it pursues TF offenses, or shares information about TF offenses, committed by members of Hizballah, a major local paramilitary organization with a well-documented track record of committing terrorist acts as defined by the Financial Action Task Force.
International and Regional Cooperation: Lebanon supported counterterrorism efforts in regional organizations and participated in CT finance programs. Lebanese municipalities continued to engage in activities organized by the Strong Cities Network. Lebanon is a member of the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS.