The official summoning and reprimand of Iran’s regime ambassador in Lebanon by the Lebanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs—over his comments on Hezbollah’s disarmament—marks a major shift in Lebanon’s political landscape and a potentially decisive transformation in the regional balance of power. Hezbollah has long served as one of the most important proxy arms of the regime, and implementing a plan to disarm it would be a strategic blow to Tehran.
In recent weeks, multiple reports have surfaced about mounting internal and external pressures to disarm Hezbollah. From the explicit stance of Joseph Aoun, the President of Lebanon, to the repeated insistence of the United States on the necessity of arms being exclusively in the hands of the official Lebanese government, all signs indicate the beginning of a seemingly irreversible process.
Syria, Hezbollah, and Iran’s Regime Obstructed Lebanese Reconciliation for Years
Hezbollah is not merely a paramilitary group but a central pillar of Iran’s regime’s regional policy. From Syria to Iraq and Yemen, Tehran’s regional influence has largely relied on proxies like Hezbollah. Within this framework, Lebanon has consistently served as a key strategic outpost for the regime—both in confronting Israel and in exerting control over Lebanon’s internal political affairs.
At a time when Tehran is entangled in deep internal crises, international sanctions, and drawn-out negotiations with the U.S. over its nuclear program, the elimination of one of its most crucial foreign levers would amount to structural damage to the regime.
The recent remarks by the regime’s ambassador in Beirut—who initially called Hezbollah’s disarmament a “conspiracy” in a tweet, only to later walk it back by labeling it a “domestic Lebanese matter”—are themselves evidence of growing pressure on the regime to retreat from its interventionist stance in Lebanon. The repeated summons of the regime’s ambassador by Lebanon’s foreign ministry is a clear sign of the country’s political space opening up to challenge Hezbollah’s role and influence, and by extension, that of the Iranian regime.
These developments come as Hezbollah has lost a significant portion of its legitimacy in Lebanon in recent years—particularly following the Beirut port explosion, the deepening economic crisis, and its failure to provide solutions for the public’s hardship. A large segment of Lebanese society has now concluded that disarming Hezbollah and restoring military authority to the state are prerequisites for any form of national stability and progress.
In the current balance of power, disarming Hezbollah appears to be an inevitable and logical outcome. This shift is not happening through war, but rather through Hezbollah’s own political and social erosion, and the transformation of Lebanon’s internal dynamics. Just as Syria is no longer the regime’s former maneuvering ground, Lebanon too is gradually breaking free from Tehran’s proxy control.
For a regime that sits at the negotiation table while carrying out mass executions in the streets of Tehran out of fear of popular uprising, Hezbollah’s disarmament is just one more sign of its decline—not only across the region but within its own power structure.


