General Joseph Aoun: A New President of Lebanon as the Region Shifts
Introduction:
Joseph Aoun, Lebanon’s new president, how will he transform the country — amid rising geopolitical frictions in the Middle East?
After General Joseph Aoun was elected president, the Lebanese political game will change and local and international actors are expecting that this shift of leadership will bring repercussions.
This new chapter also arrives as Lebanon remains engulfed in a profound economic crisis, political deadlock and regional turbulence.
These developments loom large for the U.S., as they bear on both Lebanon’s internal equilibrium and the broader regional balance of power. In this post, we will explore Joseph Aoun’s leadership journey, situate the regional context around his presidency, and offer pragmatic lessons for U.S. policymakers to best navigate this transition.
About General Joseph Aoun:
Joseph Aoun, the former Commander of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), is a new president of Lebanon, the 2025 Lebanese presidential election has shown.
In that vein, his military and leadership background is widely known — both in and out of Lebanon — as the U.S. and other countries have engaged moderately with him as he is perceived as a unifier for an otherwise fractured state.
Aoun is also interested in the presence of the military in the training of the Lebanese military as well as in delivery deployment for the operations of military throughout his military career. Paradoxically, his alignment with Western interests, particularly U.S. interests, makes him appear a stabilizing factor in Lebanon, especially given Washington’s record of military assistance to the LAF.
Aoun, who is pragmatic and resilient, has guided Lebanon through a series of security trials during his time in the presidency, including flare-ups with the armed Hezbollah movement, clashes with extremist groups and major humanitarian emergencies.
His presidency was seen as an opportunity for fresh engagement with the United States, which has long supported the LAF as a counter to Hezbollah’s rising strength.
But U.S. policymakers will need to wrestle with the tension between their support for Aoun’s leadership of Lebanon and the political and military reality of Hezbollah’s entrenchment in Lebanese society.
Regional context and challenges:
Lebanon’s troubles are deeply connected to larger currents in Middle Eastern geopolitics. The country has also remained in the grip of an economic crisis that has deepened further with the collapse of the Lebanese pound, runaway inflation and its inability to access international financial assistance.
which in turn continues to threaten the country’s stability. Simultaneously, a sectarian political paralysis in Lebanon has paralyzed effective government. Hezbollah, the Iran-backed group that is a powerful political and military force in Lebanon, further complicates the road to recovery.
Broader regional context features a wrenching shift in relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran, most notably a recent rapprochement between the two heavyweights, that will have spillover effects on Lebanon.