When it comes to Lebanon, the US and France have similar outlooks, but one major point of difference involves the Hizbullah movement -- shunned by Washington but tolerated by a pragmatic Parisian leadership.
While the United States seeks to isolate and curb the influence of the Iran-backed group it has designated a "terrorist" organisation and punished with sanctions, France recognizes it as a key political actor whose cooperation is needed to lift Lebanon out of crisis.
Lebanon's government stepped down last month amid popular anger over a massive blast at Beirut's port on August 4 that killed 191 people, wounded thousands and ravaged large parts of the capital.
Both Western powers have agreed Lebanon needs a cabinet different from its predecessors to tackle urgent reforms, but all consensus seems to end there.
"France's approach tends to be more realistic," analyst Karim Bitar told AFP.
"France views Lebanon as it is, while the (US President Donald) Trump administration tends to view Lebanon as it would like it to be."
The US view is that Hizbullah -- the only group not to have disarmed after the 1975-1990 civil war -- holds excessive influence in Lebanon, "which needs to be contained", Bitar said.
But Paris recognises "Hizbullah in Lebanon is a major political actor, that it has a wide captive constituency in Lebanon's Shiite community, that it is here to stay," he added.
- 'Elected by the people' -
The United States has been following closely as French President Emmanuel Macron twice visited Lebanon since August 4 to press for political change and reforms to unlock financial aid.
During his last trip, the French leader differentiated between two facets of Hizbullah -- one "terrorist", and the other, a political party "elected by the people" to parliament and allied with the Lebanese president's party that could not be excluded from talks.
Hizbullah chief Hassan Nasrallah has been notably positive about Macron's visits, not labeling them as "foreign interference" as he might have done for such a move by the US.
The Shiite movement's parliamentary bloc leader, Mohammad Raad, was among lawmakers who met Macron before he said all sides had agreed to form a new government within a fortnight.
France, which has outlined a roadmap for reforms for the next government, "wants to maintain a channel of dialogue with Hizbullah in order to prevent the destabilisation of Lebanon", Bitar said.
Paris views itself as "an honest broker" to do this in a time when tensions are at a peak between Washington and Tehran.
Observers say France is one of the only Western powers to have maintained direct contact with Hizbullah, pointing to the role of the current French ambassador, who formerly held the same post in Tehran.
"There has always been direct contact between Paris and Hizbullah," an Arab diplomat in Beirut told AFP.
And as Washington is caught up in preparing for the US presidential polls, it appears to be giving France some leeway on Lebanon.
"The Americans have set as a condition that Hizbullah not take part in the (next) government, but they could turn a blind eye to them remaining if there were a deal and reforms," the diplomat said.
- Hizbullah 'cannot be trusted' -
US Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker, also visiting Lebanon last week, told Lebanese newspaper An-Nahar that the US appreciated the French initiative, but differed on a few details, including that Hizbullah was not a legitimate political organisation but a "terrorist" group.
He did not meet with key political figures, instead seeing army chief Joseph Aoun, lawmakers who resigned after the port blast, civil society activists and Shiite figures opposed to Hizbullah.
One such Shiite figure told AFP that Schenker said during their meeting that Hizbullah "cannot be trusted" to lead reforms.
"Hizbullah has been given ample opportunity since 2005 to really involve itself in the state and has not changed its behaviour," the source reported Schenker as saying.
The United States has demanded Hizbullah lay down its weapons, but also echoed the call of a political minority in Lebanon that the country be "neutral", meaning that it break ties with Iran and distance itself from the region's conflicts.
Most Lebanese political sides, however, have accepted that the Shiite movement is a military force to contend with and a political actor present in all branches of state, which, with its allies, currently dominates parliament.
Responding to US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo calling for Hizbullah's weapons to be dealt with as a priority, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt in a televised interview last week responded that the solution would come through politics.
"Let Pompeo forget the rockets for now. That matter will be solved through politics when the time is right," he said.
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