Hezbollah and Palestinians with Iranian extreme idealogy destroyed robust Lebanon economy and Jordans landmark and finally Syria destruction

AU-African Union, South-Sudan, Ecowas, East Africa and Africa in general. The extremist cancer about to be on the move again and now into Africa-
How the Pattern Played Out Before
1. Lebanon – From “Paris of the Middle East” to Collapse
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Before: Lebanon had a thriving economy, free banking, tourism, and a cosmopolitan culture.
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After:
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The PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization) set up armed bases in Lebanon after being expelled from Jordan in 1970 ("Black September").
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This helped ignite the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990).
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Later, Hezbollah — built and funded by Iran — entrenched itself as both a militia and a political force, hijacking the state and dragging it into endless confrontation with Israel.
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Result: Economic collapse, mass emigration, and the effective loss of state sovereignty.
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2. Jordan – Nearly Lost the Kingdom
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In the late 1960s and early 70s, heavily armed Palestinian groups built parallel power structures in Jordan.
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They attempted to overthrow King Hussein during Black September (1970).
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The Jordanian army crushed them, but the violence left deep scars and altered Jordan’s internal politics permanently.
3. Syria – From Authoritarian Stability to Ruin
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Syria already had an authoritarian regime, but Hezbollah and Iran’s presence in Lebanon spilled over.
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During the Syrian civil war, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah fought alongside Assad, prolonging the war and worsening destruction.
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Refugee flows, sectarian radicalization, and Iranian ideological export left Syria fragmented and impoverished.
The Core Problem
When militant groups with Iranian revolutionary ideology embed themselves:
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They militarize politics — no compromise, only confrontation.
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They undermine the economy — prioritizing war over trade and stability.
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They weaken the state — because loyalty shifts from the national government to the sectarian/militant cause.
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They invite foreign wars — turning the host country into a battlefield.
Why This Matters for Africa
If even a small number of ideologically committed militants or recruiters enter South Sudan or neighboring states:
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They can blend into refugee communities while quietly building networks.
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Africa’s weak state systems make it easier to smuggle weapons, launder money, and indoctrinate youth.
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The endgame could mirror Lebanon’s — a state slowly hollowed out from within until it’s a proxy battleground.
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