U.S. Senators Warn Lebanon To Avoid Iranian Fuel, Despite Crisis

Senators Richard Blumenthal (left), Chris Murphy (center), and Chris Van Hollen in Lebanon.

Four visiting U.S. senators told Lebanese officials on September 1 that the United States was eager to help that country tackle its fuel shortages but warned against Beirut seeking to import Iranian oil to alleviate the problem.

The Democratic senators said turning to Iranian supplies could have "severely damaging consequences."

The visit follows statements last month from the leader of the Iran-backed Hizballah militant group suggesting an Iranian fuel tanker was en route to Lebanon and that others would follow.

The United States has clamped down with tougher sanctions against Iran since Washington withdrew from a nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers in 2018.

The senators' visit also comes with Lebanese politicians unable to form a government for over a year, which could enable negotiations with international financial institutions to help address Lebanon's economic crisis.

“It is inexcusable that in the middle of this life-threatening crisis, the political leaders in Lebanon have refused to make the tough choices in order to form a government,” Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut said near the end of the two-day visit.

Hassan Diab and his government resigned days after a devastating blast at Beirut’s port that killed at least 214 people, wounded some 6,000, and damaged huge swaths of the city.

Another visiting senator, Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, criticized Hizballah as a “malignant cancerous terrorist organization” and suggested he'd heard “very troublingly about maligned Iranian influence, particularly in providing fuel.”

The World Bank has described Lebanon's economic crisis as one of the world's most severe since the 1850s.

Based on reporting by AP