Sunday, November 13, 2011

Happy New Jumblatt! A Lebanese Leader Gets Brave and What it Means

Barry Rubin

Happy New Jumblatt! What’s a Jumblatt? Well, it’s a joke that tells us a lot about Middle East politics. A friend of mine created the “Jumblatt” as a unit of time, one complete rotation in the political maneuvers of Lebanese Druze leader, Walid Jumblatt.
For example, during the previous Jumblatt, he moved from being a stalwart client of Syria to join the March 14 Coalition to push Syrian troops out of Lebanon. At the peak of the last Jumblatt, he gave a rather unforgettable interview which I will paraphrase here (note: this is my wording not a precise quote):

Interviewer: Is it true that you called Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a dog?

Jumblatt: Yes, I did. But I want to apologize to all dogs for comparing them to Assad. But like all Jumblatts the last one came to an end. Threatened with death, facing a powerful Hizballah militia, and knowing full well that he and his coalition allies couldn’t depend on the United States or France, Jumblatt surrendered in August 2009, deserting the pro-democratic alliance and joining Hizballah’s coalition! He made his peace with Syria, going to Damascus and bowing to Bashar al-Assad.

This was not something easy for a man whose father was murdered by Bashar’s father.
I’m not suggesting that Jumblatt is a coward or a buffoon though, certainly, his life has given him a sense of irony. After all, Jumblatt is the feudal hereditary leader of the Progressive Socialist Party. See, names don’t necessarily tell you what’s really going on, a good idea to keep in mind when examining the humanitarian-style slogans of “Moderate Islamists.”

No, Lebanese politics are a life-and-death matter. Said Hariri, the main leader of the March 14 coalition also knows his own father was killed by Bashar, yet he had to bow down for a while, too, to survive.

What’s the lesson here? Middle East politicians must respond in some way to threats and opportunities. When the United States overthrew Saddam Hussein in Iraq, Libyan dictator Muammar Qadhafi suddenly decided to stop being aggressive and cozy up to the America (little good it ultimately did him). When the United States seemed weak, eager to coddle its enemies and bash its friends, the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood decided to overthrow President Husni Mubarak, a U.S. ally (little good it ultimately did him).
But now that Bashar is under assault from a revolution, Jumblatt has taken heart and made a dramatic speech criticizing Syria and asserting Lebanese sovereignty. In other words, he’s changed sides.

Happy New Jumblatt!

Among his complaints are Syria’s use of Lebanese security forces to arrest Syrian oppositionists in the country and ship them back to Syrian prisons; Syrian troops entering Lebanese territory; and the use of torture by the Syrian regime.
Perhaps this will mark the revitalization of the March 14 Coalition. But can it hope for Western help? Can the democratic Iranian, Turkish, and Syrian oppositions depend on Western—especially American—help? How about the real moderate parties in Tunisia and Egypt (and perhaps soon in Libya)?

No. The Obama Administration is too busy helping the Islamists. It isn’t hard to understand the reality of how international affairs work: The more aid, encouragement, and support given to the anti-Islamist forces, the braver they will be and the more they will achieve.

This is not a mere matter of the “enemy of the enemy is my friend.” True, some of those allies are repressive dictatorships like the Saudi monarchy. Yet most of them are “good guys” in themselves, or at least the best you’re going to find in the region. Why encourage their enemies and ours?

If the United States and Europe had a better policy there would be many more “New Jumblatts” moving in a good direction, and they would last longer. Now that would be a real Arab Spring.


Professor Barry Rubin, Director, Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center http://www.gloria-center.org
The Rubin Report blog http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
Editor Turkish Studies,http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713636933%22

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