The Republican Guard Brigade (Arabic: الحرس الجمهوري اللبناني | Liwāʾ al-Ḥaras al-ǧumhūrī), also known as the Presidential Guard Brigade, is a unit of the Land Component of the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), attached to the Directorate-General of the Presidency of Lebanon.
Insignia
The insignia of the Presidential Guard Brigade consists of:
A wreath composed of two fronds of laurel and oak leaves.
Two crossed swords.
The background of the insignia is a shield colored navy blue.
The Coat of arms of Lebanon is in the middle of the insignia, the two swords in its background, the wreath surrounding it.
above it are inscribed the words "Republican Guard".
Structure and organization
The brigade comprises a 1st Battalion, 2nd Battalion, a Support Battalion, and a Logistics Battalion. The brigade was established on May 14, 1984, and was stationed in Baabda. Up until 1949, the Lebanese Republican Guard Brigade was called the Dragon brigade. The commander in 2005 was Brigadier GeneralMustafa Hamdan, who was accused of complicity in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime MinisterRafik Hariri in February 2005 and later released from prison without being cleared as innocent along with three other generals in April 2009. When President Lahoud stepped down at the end of his office, the brigade was reattached to the Army General Command.[1][2]
Role
The Lebanese Parliament House in Nejmeh Square is one of the compounds guarded by the brigade.
The brigade's duties include providing escorts not only for the Lebanese President and its family, but also to the Prime-Minister and cabinet members or to foreign visiting heads-of-state, and guards-of-honour at official public acts. They are also entrusted with guarding important public buildings in Beirut such as the Parliament House at Nejmeh Square and the nearby Grand Serail, an Ottoman-era palatial complex which houses the Prime-Minister and the Council of Ministers' offices, and the Presidential Palace itself.