When the new US ambassador to Lebanon arrived in Beirut, he did not need a learning period or special State Department training before taking up his first diplomatic post after a brief retirement from the world of business and automobiles. Ambassador Michel Issa knows Beirut and the rest of Lebanon better than he knows the corridors of the State Department, with which he had no connection before President Donald Trump appointed him. Issa was returning to the city where he was born, and to a country he had carried with him on a journey from Lebanon to France and then the United States. Today, he is coming back as the representative of the world’s most powerful country at one of the most sensitive moments in Lebanese-US relations. From the moment Issa was appointed US ambassador to Lebanon, it was clear his selection was no routine decision inside the US administration. Washington did not send a traditional career diplomat to Beirut, nor a former security official. It chose a veteran businessman and banker with deep Lebanese roots and a direct relationship with Trump. But more importantly, Issa’s appointment came as Lebanon was passing through a historic turning point. The country was trying to emerge from the worst economic and financial crisis in its modern history, while the repercussions of the war on the southern front and the future relationship between the Lebanese state and Hezbollah dominated international and regional discussions. More than one message Many saw Issa’s selection as carrying multiple messages. “On one hand, Washington wanted to send a figure who knows Lebanon from the inside and understands its complex makeup,” his friend, Lebanese lawmaker Fouad Makhzoumi, said. “On the other hand, it wanted to rely on a man who has the personal confidence of the US president and can convey the White House’s direction directly to one of the most complicated arenas in the Middle East.” Among the notable steps that accompanied Issa’s move into diplomacy was his decision to renounce Lebanese citizenship before taking up his duties as US ambassador, aimed at removing any potential legal or political ambiguity over dual allegiance. From Bsous to Wall Street Michel Issa was born in 1955 in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, but traces his roots to the town of Bsous in the Aley district, in the Mount Lebanon governorate. He grew up in Lebanon during the years of relative stability that preceded the civil war, and received his school education in Beirut before his family left the country as part of the Lebanese emigration wave of the 1970s. France was his first stop. There, he continued his studies in economics and finance, and his professional identity began to take shape. He earned a DEUG (Diplôme d'Études Universitaires Générales) in economics from Paris Nanterre University and also studied at the Graduate School of Banking Studies in Paris. In the late 1970s, he moved to the United States, the country where he would build his career and achieve his biggest successes. Finance and banking For decades, Issa worked in finance and banking, moving between prominent international institutions. He held executive posts at well-known banks and investment firms, gaining broad experience in debt management, corporate restructuring, investments, and financial markets. In American finance, he built a reputation as a man able to handle complex files, manage risk, and find solutions to financial crises. Over the years, his name became known in economic and investment circles, especially in New York, where he settled and built a wide network of professional relationships. Entering Trump’s circle Perhaps the most intriguing part of Issa’s biography is his relationship with Trump. He was not merely a political supporter of the US president. US media reports have described him as close to Trump and as one of his golf partners. Their relationship goes back years before they both entered direct political work. When Trump announced Issa’s nomination as US ambassador to Lebanon, he used striking words to describe him, praising his broad financial experience and his career in business and international trade. In Beirut, as in Washington, that relationship is not viewed as a secondary detail. “An ambassador who has a direct channel to the White House has a wider margin of movement than what is usually available to traditional diplomats,” Makhzoumi said. “For that reason, Issa’s appointment gained added importance in Beirut.” He said Issa “does not represent only the State Department, but also carries the confidence of the US president himself.” For Lebanon, that relationship gives the post a different weight. Every message Issa conveys or position he announces, is read as closer to the political mood of the White House than to a routine diplomatic view. An ambassador under scrutiny From his first weeks in Lebanon, Issa found himself drawn into files that went beyond traditional diplomacy. He took part in meetings on the future of US support for the Lebanese army, economic reform files, and international efforts to consolidate stability along the southern border. During his Senate confirmation hearing, Issa outlined the contours of his policy, setting out several themes that later became central to his performance. He spoke of the importance of supporting Lebanon’s “legitimate” institutions, strengthening economic reforms, and “empowering the state to extend its authority” across all its territory. Those positions were welcomed by some Lebanese forces, while drawing reservations and criticism from others who saw them as an extension of the traditional US approach toward Lebanon. But what made his presence different from many of his predecessors was his Lebanese background. Issa speaks Arabic fluently, understands the details of Lebanese political life, and knows the fine distinctions among its forces, parties, and sects. These elements give him a greater ability to read the local scene. At the same time, that background has made him a target of greater scrutiny. Every statement he makes is sometimes read from two angles, that of the US ambassador and that of the Lebanese who knows the details of the country where he serves. A very private life Away from politics and diplomacy, Issa appears different from the stereotypical image of many financiers. Sport plays an important role in his life. Official information says he was an international athletics competitor in his youth, before his interest later shifted to other sports, most notably tennis and golf. That sporting background also reveals an important side of his character. Discipline, competition, and the pursuit of results are qualities many link to his long career in finance. Golf also played a role beyond personal hobby. It became one of the bridges that connected him to Trump, who is known for his passion for the sport. At the family level, unlike many public figures, Issa is careful to keep his family life out of the spotlight. Available information about his wife and two sons is extremely limited, reflecting a clear desire to separate his private life from his public work. Between Lebanese roots and US interests In reality, Issa stands at the intersection of two parallel paths. The first is personal, beginning in the neighborhoods of Beirut and the town of Bsous more than half a century ago. The second is political and professional, leading him to the heart of the US administration. Perhaps the uniqueness of his experience lies in combining these two paths. He understands the complexities of the Lebanese system, but is tasked with implementing policies set in Washington, not Beirut. Makhzoumi said Issa is “clear, bold, and transparent.” “He wants Lebanon, and we are betting on his Lebanese origins and on what he is trying to do, because it leads us toward a better Lebanon,” Makhzoumi said. “He is building good relations with everyone, and that is the reason for the ambassador’s strength.” “Lebanon exists in areas where Israel is on one side, and Syria is on the other, and it has the Palestinian file. Here, there is also the distinctive Christian presence in the region,” he added. “All of this creates a unique case. But if there is no one to convey the picture to the White House, as Ambassador Issa does, that will not happen.” “Ambassador Issa can speak directly with those who make decisions in the United States, and this gives us a point of strength. We can build on it to obtain a better understanding in the US of the Lebanese position.”