Holier than thou, now hollow: Hezbollah, Israel, and Tom Barrack’s ignominious fall
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The Middle East is once again standing at the lip of an abyss. Hezbollah refuses to disarm. Israel vows it will force the issue. Washington, amplifying its threats through its envoy Tom Barrack, has delivered an ultimatum that sounds less like diplomacy and more like a loaded gun placed on the negotiating table. But beneath this geopolitical standoff lies another implosion—moral, not military: the sanctimonious unravelling of Tom Barrack himself, whose name now flickers through the sprawling Epstein files. In a region accustomed to hypocrisy, this one still manages to astound.
Hezbollah’s defiance, Israel’s fury
Barrack’s warning in Beirut was unambiguous: Hezbollah must surrender its weapons before the year’s end or “Israel will do it for them.” It was a performance of righteous American certitude—stern, paternal, condescending. Hezbollah’s answer was not diplomatic. Secretary-General Naim Qassem declared, “No force on earth can compel us to disarm. Resistance is our identity.”
Israel, meanwhile, continues pounding Hezbollah’s infrastructure, assassinating field commanders, striking convoys, and hitting southern Lebanon night after night. Yet military analysts admit what Israeli officials avoid saying publicly: Hezbollah’s arsenal remains formidable. Chatham House scholar Dr Lina Khatib noted, “Hezbollah has been weakened but not disarmed… the language of war is drowning out the language of diplomacy.”
And hovering behind it all is a grim warning from the Pentagon: a strike on Hezbollah could ignite a confrontation with Iran, pulling the United States into a regional inferno. “This would not be a contained war,” one US defence official cautioned.
The sanctimony of Tom Barrack
Then came the revelation that detonated whatever moral leverage Washington thought it possessed. Tom Barrack—lecturer-in-chief, dispenser of ethical sermons, the envoy who scolded Lebanese journalists to “behave properly and not like animals”—is now himself a featured name in the Epstein files. Newly surfaced emails show exchanges between Barrack and Epstein, including one chilling note from Epstein: “Send photos of you and child. Make me smile.”
The reaction across the Arab press was immediate and brutal. Lebanese columnist Ibrahim al-Amin wrote that Barrack “preached morality while lecturing us, yet his own name is tied to Epstein. He is the laughingstock of the region.” Egyptian political scientist Hassan Nafaa added, “American envoys demand accountability from Arabs, yet their own hands are stained. Barrack’s hypocrisy is a mirror of Western double standards.”
American outlets echoed the outrage. The New Arab reported the email trove “raised serious questions about the relationship between sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and ambassador Tom Barrack.” Newsweek and the New Republic detailed the widening circle of embarrassment. A Washington Post columnist summarised the mood: “Barrack’s sanctimony collapses under the weight of his own associations.”
This is the empire’s inevitable collapse into self-mythology. Those who thunder about order and virtue abroad often rot from within.
READ: Further evidence emerges of Israel’s Mossad links to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein
A crisis not just personal—but strategic
Barrack’s disgrace is not a footnote. It is a strategic wound. The United States cannot demand the disarmament of Hezbollah while its envoy is tainted by the shadow of a dead paedophile financier. It cannot preach morality while its representative embodies the very decadence it condemns. It cannot claim the ethical high ground while standing next to a man whose credibility is now radioactive.
“It compromises the entire American position,” Lebanese scholar Karim Makdisi said. “Hezbollah will use this hypocrisy as a weapon in the battle for legitimacy.”
He is already being proven right. Hezbollah’s media machine is having a field day: the saintly American envoy caught in the filth of Epstein’s orbit, lecturing Arabs on ethics while stumbling through his own mire.
Even inside Washington, the calls for resignation are growing louder. “His presence is untenable,” a congressional aide admitted. “How can he lecture Lebanon on morality when his own name is in Epstein’s files?”
A region on the Brink
All of this unfolds as Lebanon teeters on the brink of paralysis and implosion. The country cannot disarm Hezbollah without triggering civil war. Israel cannot tolerate Hezbollah’s arsenal without courting disaster. The United States cannot project moral authority with a tainted envoy. And the Arab world—long sceptical—now watches the hypocrisy made plain.
Tom Barrack once enjoyed the luxury of preaching from a mountaintop. Now the ground has collapsed beneath him. His sanctimony is rubble. His authority is ash. His presence mocks the very values he claimed to defend.
December may yet bring war. But humiliation has already arrived. Tom Barrack, once Washington’s holier-than-thou emissary, is now its hollow man—a symbol of imperial hypocrisy, a cautionary tale of moral decay, and a reminder that those who wield righteousness as a weapon must ensure their own hands are clean.
He did not. And the region, already aflame, sees it clearly.
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