Henry Srebrnik, [Calgary] Jewish Free Press
The area on the Mediterranean coast known
as Lebanon has been a battleground for thousands of years, long before it
became a sovereign state in 1943.
But only since the 1970s has it become a
victim of almost permanent violence between its various religious factions, who
have often enlisted outside support, including, at times, neighbouring states
like Israel, Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia, as well as the Palestinians.
Of these Lebanese groups, by far the most
successful has been the Shi’ite Hezbollah.
Hezbollah has established cultural and
educational centres, charities, media and propaganda outlets, and professional
societies. Its network of schools exceeds anything offered by the state.
The party comprises about 10 per cent of
the Lebanese parliament and holds two cabinet positions in the coalition Beirut
government.
Hezbollah presents itself as the country’s
savior and protector against both Israel and Sunni extremists in nearby Syria
and its forces are now helping Bashar al-Assad’s beleaguered Alawite regime.
Hezbollah probably has around 10,000
fighters deployed in Syria at any given time. The movement has lost over 1,000
dead in the war.
Lebanon’s political feuds remain as
byzantine as ever. In mid-January, two of the country’s most prominent
Christian politicians, one an ally of Hezbollah, the other a longtime foe,
struck a surprise agreement that could help end the standoff that has left the
country without a president for nearly two years.
The country’s legislators have failed to
elect a successor to Michel Suleiman, who left office in May 2014, despite
meeting more than 35 times.
Samir Geagea, the leader of the Lebanese
Forces party, threw his support behind the presidential candidacy of his rival,
Michel Aoun, whose Free Patriotic Movement is Hezbollah’s main Christian ally
in Parliament, as part of the March 8 alliance. (Lebanon’s confessional
political system requires that the president be a Maronite Christian.)
Aoun and Geagea had been enemies since both
were generals in rival Christian camps during the Lebanese civil war between
1975 and 1990.
This struck a blow at Saad Hariri, the son
of Rafik Hariri, a former prime minister assassinated by the Syrians in 2005.
He is the leader of the Future Movement, the largest Sunni party and the main
political rival of Hezbollah.
Until now, Geagea’s party had been the
Future Movement’s largest Christian ally in the parliamentary bloc known as the
March 14 Coalition, formed to oppose the domination of Lebanon by Hezbollah.
Hariri has now switched his support to
Suleiman Franjieh, leader of the Marada movement, a political party formed in
2006 from a former militia group based in the northern city of Zgharta.
The internal quarrels in Lebanon reflect
the wider conflict between Iran and Saudi Arabia, the representatives of,
respectively, Shi’ite and Sunni Islam.
Lebanon has become a major front in the
ongoing Riyadh-Tehran feud, with both sides investing billions of dollars to
support their respective candidates.
When an angry mob torched the Saudi embassy
in Tehran on Jan. 2 in response to Saudi Arabia's execution of Nimr al-Nimr, a
Shi’ite cleric, the Arab League issued a statement to condemn the government of
Iran.
Lebanon was notably absent, which led the
Saudis on Feb. 19 to retract a $4 billion military aid package to train and
equip the Lebanese army and security forces. Riyadh warned its citizens against
travelling to Lebanon, and accused Hezbollah of smuggling drugs into the
kingdom and sending mercenaries to Yemen.
On March 2nd the Saudi-led six-member Gulf
Co-operation Council designated Hezbollah a terrorist organisation. It has even
threatened to deport Lebanese expatriate workers, some half a million of which
work in the Gulf.
The Saudis can be expected to radicalize
their Sunni co-religionists, further fragmenting the state.
But, as Hanin Ghaddar, managing
editor of Lebanon’s English-language NOW News, has noted, Hezbollah is now so
strong that neither the GCC declarations nor Saudi Arabia’s escalations worry
them unduly.
Hezbollah thinks these measures will only
weaken the Lebanese state and the Shi’ite group’s opponents in the March 14
camp, which has called on Hezbollah to withdraw from Syria. Should the latter
decide to confront Hezbollah, it has the arms and will to defeat them.
In a speech delivered in late January, the
party’s Secretary-General, Hassan Nasrallah, stressed Hezbollah’s determination
to continue its regional role as a military force and warned that it is ready
for any conflict.
Lebanon, which is home to over one million
Syrian refugees, is on the brink of sectarian violence and a proxy war. But all
external efforts to weaken Hezbollah have only strengthened its popular support
and given the party’s leadership more power within its community.
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