Nicholas Blanford
Anti-Assad politicians in Lebanon are calling for the deployment of
United Nations peacekeepers along the country’s volatile northern border
with Syria to curb Syrian troop incursions and artillery shelling as
some locals pack up their bags.
The calls come amid rising concerns that Lebanon’s northern border,
where support for Syria’s rebels runs deep, is being dragged into the
worsening conflict next door. But the request for a UN presence is
likely to go unheeded, given Lebanese government opposition and
international reluctance to risk getting embroiled in the conflict by
dispatching foreign troops.
The Lebanese government, the bulk of which is composed of allies of
Damascus, says it will take a strong stand against Syrian border
violations but rejects the idea of allowing UN peacekeepers into north
Lebanon.
“When
the Syrian shelling of Lebanese areas occurs, we will not disassociate
ourselves but will protest,” Najib Mikati, the Lebanese prime minister,
told reporters earlier this month. “When there are attempts to
destabilize Lebanon from Syria, we will not disassociate ourselves, and
we will take necessary measures.”
But he ruled out the deployment of the 11,500-strong UN peacekeeping
force known as UNIFIL in south Lebanon to the north. “Is it the right
time?” he asked rhetorically. “Is UNIFIL ready to deploy along the
border?”
Last week, the parliamentary coalition requested the deployment of
UNIFIL troops along the northern border and the expulsion of the Syrian
ambassador to Beirut and lodged a complaint with the Arab League at
Syria’s repeated border violations.
UNIFIL has been present in south Lebanon since 1978 but was heavily
reinforced in the wake of the 2006 war between Israel and Lebanon’s
militant Shiite Hezbollah organization. The UN Security Council
Resolution 1701, which defines UNIFIL’s post-2006 mission, includes a
clause that permits it to help the Lebanese authorities prevent the
smuggling of arms into Lebanon. The clause specifically refers to
preventing the transfer of weapons from Syrian territory to Hezbollah’s
arms caches inside Lebanon.
But as far as pro-government Syrians are concerned, the security
problem is on the Lebanese side of the border, where members of the Free
Syrian Army (FSA) are hosted by sympathizers who give them a safe haven
to regroup, plan operations, treat wounded, smuggle arms into Syria,
and mount periodic cross-border attacks against Syrian Army positions.
The scale of FSA activity in north Lebanon is minimal compared to
that of Turkey, the main external base of the armed Syrian opposition.
But the nightly Syrian artillery bombardments of a string of
Sunni-populated border villages in the Akkar Province of north Lebanon,
as well as cross-border raids elsewhere along the frontier, are attempts
to interdict FSA militants crossing the border and to punish their
Lebanese supporters.
In Nourat al-Tahta, a small, hardscrabble village less than a mile
from the border, the strain of enduring nightly shelling is beginning to
take effect.
“We are very worried that the Syrians will cross the border and
invade the village,” says Abu Hussein, a farmer who is hosting a number
of Syrian refugees and FSA militants in his small house. “Some farmers
are selling their livestock and moving out of the village because they
are so worried about the Syrian soldiers coming here.”
One burly, bearded member of the Tel Kalakh Martyrs’ Brigade, an FSA
unit from the eponymous town two miles north of the Lebanese border,
says his job is to smuggle weapons into Syria, a task that has grown
even more hazardous since Syrian troops began lacing both sides of the
border with land mines to catch infiltrators.
It’s unclear if the Lebanese authorities are aware of this recent and
seemingly localized development of land mines on its territory, but the
issue is unlikely to be addressed either way due to the dangers in
approaching this section of the border.
He recalls a trip he and eight other men made days earlier, crossing
the Kabir river, which marks the border, laden with backpacks filled
with rifles and ammunition.
“I and one comrade had crossed the river when we heard an explosion
behind us on the Lebanese side. Two of the guys had tripped a landmine
and lost a leg each,” he says.
The
FSA fighters say that they are seeking ever more sophisticated weapons
to confront the Syrian Army, which has the advantage of air power and
artillery.
“We are negotiating the purchase of a Strella for $9,000,” says
Mohammed Layla, a Tel Kalakh Martyrs’ Brigade unit commander, referring
to the SAM-7 anti-aircraft missile available on the Lebanese black
market. They are also attempting to purchase a multiple rocket launcher
and 16 107mm rockets.
“They are asking $70,000, but we are telling them it’s too much,” Layla says.
The Lebanese Army has reinforced its presence in the northern border
area, but there is little more it can do. Returning fire at Syrian Army
positions is politically out of the question. But chasing and detaining
FSA militants in Lebanon will simply incur further anger from Lebanese
Sunnis who support the Syrian opposition and already distrust the Army.
If elements from UNIFIL or fresh UN forces were deployed to the
northern border to support the Army, they too would face the same
constraints, analysts say. They could also find themselves once more in
the jihadist firing line.
The threat posed by Lebanon-based Al-Qaeda-inspired factions toward
UNIFIL seems to have dissipated lately. UNIFIL has suffered several bomb
attacks since 2006 by suspected jihadist factions, but now the desire
to attack UNIFIL appears to have been overshadowed by the call to jihad
in Syria, which is drawing Sunni Islamist militants from across the
region into an epic struggle against the Alawite-dominated regime in
Damascus and its Shiite allies in Iran and Lebanon.
Sheikh Omar Bakri, the Salafist cleric from Tripoli, last week said that an “Islamic Spring” was underway in the region.
“The Sunni giant has awakened and the Caliphate State will soon see the light,” he told Lebanon’s Al-Liwa newspaper.
CSM
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