One of the big questions of the #GazaWar is whether #Lebanon will get involved, greatly expanding the scope of the conflict.
But that decision rests not with the paralyzed caretaker central government, but with the Shi’ite movement #Hezbollah.
A professor of history and peace studies who studies the region explains the context.
A youth holds a snake in their left hand and reaches towards another with their right. It’s not clear whether the snake to the right is biting the youth or the youth is holding the snake by the jaw…
Israel's controversial invasion of Lebanon is the subject of this harrowing book, which unsparingly describes the impact of the war on the author and on his adopted country.
"We present 14 new ancient mitogenome sequences from pre-Phoenician (~1800 BCE) and Phoenician (~700–400 BCE) samples from Lebanon (n = 4) and Sardinia (n = 10) and compare these with 87 new complete mitogenomes from modern Lebanese and 21 recently published pre-Phoenician ancient mitogenomes from Sardinia to investigate the population dynamics of the Phoenician (Punic) site of Monte Sirai, in southern Sardinia."
Does anyone know any good researchers who study #Hezbollah and their use of violence within #Lebanon? I need to find someone who can help with an asylum claim.