Joseph Aoun: Lebanon's fifth army general-turned-president

An army chief who impressed both at home and abroad in recent years was handed a six-year term to fill the void in this important but largely ceremonial role. Who is he, and what is on his to-do list?

Yusra Naim

Joseph Aoun: Lebanon's fifth army general-turned-president

At the 13th time of asking, Lebanon’s parliament finally elected a president this month: General Joseph Aoun. At 61, he has been Commander of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) since 2017. He was elected on 9 January, a day before his birthday, and will now serve a six-year term.

Despite the country’s constitution banning any serving army commander from being elected president, Aoun becomes the fifth army general to become president after Fouad Chehab, Emile Lahoud, Michel Sleiman, and most recently, Michel Aoun.

Michel Aoun's (no relation) term expired on 31 October 2022. Since then, there has been a vacancy in the Baabda Palace. By convention, the president and the head of the army is always a Maronite Christian (the prime minister is always a Sunni Muslim and the deputy prime minister is Greek Orthodox).

Rise through the ranks

Born in 1964 in Sin El Fil, a suburb of Beirut, to a Maronite family originating from the southern Lebanese town of Al-Ayshiyeh, Aoun joined the army aged 19. His cohort was named the ‘Army Martyrs Class’ because the civil war was still ongoing. His first battles were against armed militias.

Graduating in 1985, Aoun completed the Rangers’ course before becoming platoon commander in the Special Forces. He trained abroad from 2008-13, including in Syria and the United States, where he learned about counter-terrorism, rising through the ranks over the years to eventually attain the rank of General. By 2015, he was commanding the 9th Infantry Brigade along the border with Israel.

By 2017, he was Army Commander, succeeding Gen. Jean Kahwaji. In January 2024, Aoun turned 60—the legal retirement age for an army general—but Lebanon’s parliament extended his tenure for another 12 months because, three months earlier, Hamas had attacked southern Israel, and Hezbollah was supportive. In November, on a point of rare political consensus, they extended it again.

AFP
Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati and army commander General Joseph Aoun visit the southern Lebanese village of Khiam on December 23, 2024, after the withdrawal of Israeli forces under a ceasefire deal with Hezbollah.

Navigating challenges

During Gen. Aoun’s tenure as Commander, the LAF has faced significant political, financial, and military challenges, and he is credited with navigating these crises with minimal damage to the army and Lebanon as a whole.

In one now-famous example of his pragmatism, he allowed his 80,000 soldiers to work certain days of the week and moonlight in second jobs on the others. Why? Because the state is effectively bankrupt, their army salaries are insufficient to sustain a household, and if he did not let them earn from other activities (such as taxi driving), he knew he would lose them. Better a part-time army than none.

In August 2017, just months after assuming command, LAF units and jihadists belonging to Islamic State (IS) and Jabhat al-Nusra clashed along the Lebanon-Syria border, where the Islamist militant groups had established positions in Lebanese villages.

With Aoun supervising efforts, the LAF launched Operation Fajr al-Joroud (Dawn of the Outskirts). Over several days, soldiers removed the jihadists from 80-120 sq.km of Lebanese territory, killing 35 militants in the process and uncovering a tunnel network. Their efforts were praised internationally.

When Lebanon's economic crisis hit in 2019, the value of the Lebanese pound plummeted, with a huge impact on the purchasing power of public sector salaries. This cut down soldiers' salaries to about $100 per month. That year, massive protests gripped the country. Groups like the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) urged Gen. Aoun to use force to suppress the demonstrations.

He was later praised for balancing the right to free speech with the need to maintain public order. He refrained from using excessive force, even when demonstrators blocked roads leading to the presidential palace, and instead focused on protecting the protesters, intervening only to prevent vandalism of private and public property.

Aoun is credited with navigating LAF's multiple crises with minimal damage to the army and Lebanon as a whole

With no money in the treasury, in March 2021, Aoun warned Lebanon's politicians about the impact of the state's economic catastrophe on military capabilities while seeking money from abroad to help pay his military personnel and keep the army operational. Thanks to the international trust he had garnered, he secured $200mn from other countries at a conference for the LAF in Paris in October 2021.

When politicians voted for Lebanon's next president last week, the FPM did not back Aoun, but others did, including the Democratic Gathering bloc (led by Druze leader Walid Jumblatt), the Kataeb Party, and the Lebanese Forces (both Christian groups). Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar also supported his candidacy. Even Hezbollah (which favoured Suleiman Frangieh) said it would not oppose Aoun.

Read more: As Lebanon gets new president, Hezbollah clamours for relevance

Under Aoun's leadership, the LAF has sometimes had to act more like policemen than soldiers, such as dealing with disputes, manning checkpoints, patrolling the border with the UN, keeping a lid on sectarian tensions, and protecting Syrian refugees in Lebanon. Aoun has told his men to distinguish between offenders and non-offenders.

He has worked with Lebanese security agencies to secure the borders and address any security threats linked to refugee movements, and following the Beirut Port explosion in August 2020, he oversaw rescue and relief operations, ordering LAF units to help those affected and to clear debris, all of which was popular. It was, therefore, no big surprise when he emerged as a consensus candidate for the presidency.

Notably, in a country with damage estimated in the region of $9bn, he was the only contender for the job who is widely respected in the Gulf and the West, from where funding for reconstruction will likely come from.

AFP
Newly elected Lebanese president Joseph Aoun (L) stands next to the parliament speaker Nabih Berri as he delivers a speech during a parliamentary session to elect a president in Beirut on January 9, 2025.

Monumental task

In his inaugural speech, Aoun pledged to help restore confidence in Lebanon, rebuild its economy, secure financial aid for reconstruction, consolidate arms under state authority, force Hezbollah to withdraw to the Litani River, reinstate constitutional and judicial institutions, and ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon.

This is a monumental task even if he had political experience and Lebanon had a strong government free from political rivalries, factional disputes, and partisan interests. Supporters hope his 42-year military career, including his LAF leadership during a presidential vacuum, will hold him in good stead.

As president, he can now start to build a network of Arab and international relationships. His style will help—he is known for his quiet demeanour and for being a good listener. He has also been called "incorruptible".

In Lebanon, such claims raise eyebrows, but he kept an equal distance from all political factions. The public now considers him to be a "man of integrity". He will need all these qualities and more if he is to succeed.

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