Many Europeans perceive the Middle East crisis as a distant, volatile situation whose repercussions are felt indirectly through migration flows, political tensions or disruptions to the supply of energy. Yet this perception no longer reflects strategic reality. The Levant has become an extension of Europe’s strategic frontier. The discovery of natural gas in the Eastern Mediterranean has elevated the region’s geo-economic importance, while unresolved conflicts and institutional fragility continue to generate risks that directly affect European security and cohesion. Lebanon, situated at the intersection of regional confrontation, refugee displacement, economic collapse and emerging energy potential, offers a critical vantage point for understanding these dynamics. This article argues that Europe must transition from a reactive humanitarian posture to a proactive stabilisation strategy built around three interconnected axes: migration stabilisation through regional normalisation and refugee return, the transformation of humanitarian assistance into economic stabilisation, and energy diplomacy grounded in maritime and land border delimitation. Supporting Lebanese recovery and regional stabilisation is not charity—it is a strategic investment in Europe’s migration stability, energy resilience and geopolitical future.
Sami Nader (Fri,) studied this question.