Samia Nakhoul
Ya Libnan
Lebanese have long viewed the Hezbollah guerrilla army as a state-within-a-state. But having watched it launch a military adventure in Syria and brutality on the streets of Beirut, they feel ever more hostage to the Islamist group’s regional agenda.
Within minutes of a busload of unarmed demonstrators arriving on
Sunday at the Iranian embassy in Beirut to protest against Iran and
Hezbollah’s military involvement in Syria, Hezbollah enforcers surrounded the building and scattered the crowd with batons and gunfire, leaving one dead.
The small demonstration by an anti-Hezbollah crowd showed that the
“Party of God”, armed and financed by Iran, is not prepared to
contemplate even the smallest level of threat.
Such visibly frayed nerves in Lebanon’s capital follow the Shi’ite
group’s dramatically increased involvement in the two-year-old Syrian
civil war, helping troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad retake the
border town of Qusair.
Hezbollah’s involvement may have transformed the war into a sectarian contest, pitting Assad and his fellow Alawites, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam, against mainly Sunni rebels, including al Qaeda groups fighting under the banner of the Nusra Front.
Western powers and Turkey have also rallied behind the rebels, despite misgivings over Islamist radicals in their ranks, while Russia has armed and diplomatically shielded Assad.
ALEPPO NEXT?
Building on battlefield gains that have swung the momentum
towards Assad and Hezbollah, Syrian forces are preparing to retake
Aleppo, which could be a decisive point in the war that has killed
80,000 and forced 1.6 million to flee abroad.
The move to a northern front comes as Syria’s war is increasingly
infecting its neighbors – Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel – and
widening the regional sectarian fault line between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims.
“Syria has become an open battlefront for regional and international
powers. It is an open stage for anyone who wants to fight,” said a
politician close to the movement.
For
the first time since the start of the uprising in March 2011, an
Israeli minister suggested on Monday that Assad “might not just survive
but even regain territories” from the rebels, an assessment which reflected the difficulties the West faces in predicting Syria’s fate and weighing intervention.
Alarmed by Assad’s advances and Hezbollah’s intervention, Washington might decide later this week on whether to start arming the rebels, a U.S. official said.
What has changed is Hezbollah entering the fray on the side of Assad to fight the rebels, while the Nusra Front has made Syria a magnet for foreign Shi’ite and Sunni fighters.
“Put aside the propaganda that we’re seeing from Hezbollah, the
assault that is being prepared around Aleppo is a worry, be it in
Washington, Paris or Riyadh,” one Western official said.
“We can have all the diplomatic wrangling in the world, but the most
important element is the balance of power on the ground. That balance is
changing.”
“You have to weigh the risks,” the official said. “If you arm the rebels,
there is a risk (arms) fall into the wrong hands, but if you don’t,
then thousands more could get massacred and you’re left with Hezbollah
versus Nusra. Which is the worst risk?”
That shift in power makes it less likely that a U.S. and Russian peace conference planned for July to bring the rebels and the government to the table can agree a negotiated political transition to remove Assad from power.
CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE
Such changes in Western policy on Syria, allied to developments on the battlefield, leave Lebanon hanging by a thread.
In a country still emerging from the ashes of its own 15-year civil
war, the sight of Hezbollah men rejoicing over the fall of Qusair or
firing at protesters frightens many Lebanese.
Sunday’s killing of the protester in Beirut added to the list of grievances against Hezbollah among Lebanese, who once revered it as a resistance force above domestic politics.
“What we’re seeing is very dangerous: Armed clashes, the weakening of
the state, the killing of a protester. It’s low intensity warfare,”
said Fawaz Gerges, Professor of Middle Eastern Politics at the London
School of Economics.
Lebanese columnist Sarkis
Naoum said: “The (Hezbollah) state-within-a state already exists … This
shows that if they (Hezbollah) are challenged, they will go to the
streets.”
“They (crushed) the protest so it won’t be repeated elsewhere.”
Angry comments dominated social media, showing a bloodied picture of the slain protester, Hashem Salman, a young Shi’ite from a bloc opposed to Hezbollah.
Displayed alongside were pictures of Hezbollah militiamen charging at
the crowd with the caption: “The fascist assault and the peaceful
protests.”
“Hezbollah has already lost a great deal of ground, not militarily,
but if you lose popular support among independents and among the silent
majority, you lose. This will haunt them eventually because there was no
security threat,” Gerges said.
DEEP FAUTLINES
Hezbollah’s participation in the battle for Qusair is a turning point
for the group, set up in Damascus by Iran in 1982 with the aim of
fighting Israel after its invasion of Lebanon.
Hezbollah spearheaded the rise of Lebanese Shi’ites from an
underclass to the most powerful faction in the country, forced Israel to
end its 20-year occupation of south Lebanon, and formed a military
front with Syria and Iran against Israel and the United States.
Now many Lebanese see Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s support for Assad against an insurgency dominated by Syria’s Sunni majority as a miscalculation that will drag Lebanon into the Syrian quagmire, exacerbate fighting in Lebanon itself and deepen Sunni-Shi’ite sectarian rifts in the region.
“The internal divide between Shi’ite and Sunni Muslims is as deep and
as wide as the fault lines between Arabs and Israelis and that
statement speaks volumes about the very violent and threatening storms that are brewing in Arab lands,” said Gerges.
No matter how this unfolds, Nasrallah’s prestige in the region is
shattered. Long revered as the Arab hero who stood up to Israel, and
among his own as the man who elevated Shi’ites to the top of Lebanese politics, he is now being portrayed as the protector of Syrian autocracy and a proxy of Iranian theocracy.
Already on Washington’s terrorism list for attacks against Israeli
and U.S. targets, Hezbollah faces new sanctions from Western powers.
Arab public opinion has become hostile, seeing the group as an offshoot
of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, more responsive to Iranian interests
than Lebanese concerns.
Gulf Arab states have now pledged sanctions against Hezbollah members working in the Gulf.
While Hezbollah says it strives to maintain peace inside Lebanon, its intervention in Syria will add to pressures that threaten to fracture the fragile state and limit its ability to contain the growing threat from Sunni extremist groups.
NO RED LINES
The danger of Sunni reprisals could force Hezbollah to take greater control on the ground. Its move into Syria could also trigger another war with Israel, which has three times this year bombed what security sources said were convoys of Iranian missiles transiting Syria towards the Lebanese militia.
Hezbollah has said it will not be dragged into all-out sectarian war in Lebanon, where it is the most powerful militia.
Hezbollah’s adversaries are neither willing nor able to engage it on
the streets of Beirut. The danger could come from al Qaeda groups in
north and south Lebanon, who may retaliate against Hezbollah with
suicide attacks, security sources say.
Politically, the war in Syria and rivalry between pro- and anti-Syrian parties have prevented Lebanon from forming a new government.
“There is a dangerous power vacuum. The military and Lebanese
security forces are overstretched in Tripoli, the eastern Bekaa and
elsewhere. In such a situation, Hezbollah has emerged as the dominant
force as the power broker and the party that has military muscle, with a
power base,” Gerges said.
The pro-Hezbollah politician said the party was in no mood to
compromise. “Hezbollah has no red line. It will cross any line and take
to the streets when it feels it is in danger.” He said politicians could
“go to the ends of the earth but they won’t be able to form a
government without its approval.”
Reuters
1 comment:
It is fortunate for Hezbollah that they have friends in the CIA.
CIA BFF with Hezbollah
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