Lebanon’s
Brush with Civil War
Jim Quilty
May 20, 2008
(Jim Quilty
is a Beirut-based journalist.)
| Letter
to the editor |
For
background on the Lebanese political crisis, see Jim Quilty,
“Winter
of Lebanon’s Discontents,” Middle East Report Online,
January 27, 2007.
For
more on Michel Aoun, see Heiko Wimmen, “Rallying
Around the Renegade,” Middle East Report Online,
August 27, 2007.
For
more on Nahr al-Barid, see Jim Quilty, “The
Collateral Damage of Lebanese Sovereignty,” Middle
East Report Online, June 18, 2007. |
When Israel
commenced its bombardment of Lebanon on July 12, 2006, Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert and his general staff declared that the
air raids were provoked by Hizballah’s kidnapping of two Israeli
soldiers that day. As the destruction piled up over the ensuing
33 days, then, Lebanese did not ask themselves, “Why is Israel
bombing us?” Rather, the question in many Lebanese minds, those
of ordinary citizens and analysts alike, was “Why did Hizballah
provoke this? Why now?” The implicit answer -- that the Shi‘i
Islamist party was acting in the interests of its friends in
Tehran and Damascus rather than those of its constituents and
compatriots in Lebanon -- has reverberated through the country’s
political discourse ever since, with few bothering to recall
the rhetorical and historical precedents for the abduction operation.
The bloody
clashes that broke out between opposition and government gunmen
on May 7 have sparked fevered speculation as well. That Hizballah
militants could take over West Beirut came as little surprise.
Many were astonished by the speed of the advance, however, and
the low number of casualties left in its wake, as the reports
of 50-caliber machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, as
well as small arms, reverberated in West Beirut for a second
day. The pertinent question, then, is not “How could Hizballah
do this?” but “Why did the Lebanese government choose to provoke
Hizballah at this time?”
The question
may seem a bit peculiar. Is it possible to read reports of battle-hardened
Hizballah guerrillas emerging in West Beirut, brushing aside
its defenders and occupying it in a day, and see anything but
a “coup”? Television images of apparently crazed Shi‘i thugs
firing RPGs at the political offices of Parliament majority leader
(and Sunni scion) Saad al-Hariri’s Future Movement seem to corroborate
narratives of a barbarous insurgency against a democratically
elected government. Surely, images of Hizballah’s Syrian Social
Nationalist Party (SSNP) allies torching the studios of Hariri’s
Future Television and pasting the likeness of Syrian President
Bashar al-Asad outside could be nothing but reactionary authoritarianism
slashing the throat of free speech. The fires rising over the
‘Alay community of Shuwayfat, where Hizballah-allied fighters
engaged with the gunmen of Progressive Socialist Party leader
(and Druze overlord) Walid Jumblatt, seem to confirm suspicions
of an effort to suppress Lebanon’s long-cherished pluralism in
favor of a repressively monochrome Shi‘i Islamist state.
While there
may be an element of truth in these readings, they do no justice
to the political complexities beneath the appearances. Lebanon’s
18-month political crisis -- presaged by the assassination of
former Prime Minister Rafiq al-Hariri in February 2005, framed
by the subsequent departure of Syrian soldiers and expedited
by the summer 2006 war -- does seem to have reached its endgame.
There is little to cheer about in the conduct of politics in
this country, neither early May’s opposition action nor the political
circumstances that brought it on. Ultimate responsibility for
the most-recent bloodshed, as for so much needless violence Lebanese
citizens have endured over the decades, rests in the contradictions
of their sectarian state. Immediate responsibility for the country’s
latest brush with civil war lies in the hands of that state’s
inheritors, the government of Fouad Siniora, and its foreign
sponsors.
Provocation
and Response
Most non-Lebanese
became aware of what was happening in Beirut after street fighting
erupted in the capital’s mixed Sunni-Shi‘i quarters on May 7.
The match was lit on May 1 when Jumblatt told Lebanon’s national
news agency about a network of cameras evidently set up to monitor
goings-on at Beirut International Airport. He accused the responsible
party -- which, given the airport’s proximity to Beirut’s southern
suburbs, or the dahiya, could only be Hizballah -- of
planning an operation, remarking how easily a shoulder-fired
missile could be launched against any plane on the runway.
At a press
conference on May 3, Jumblatt called for the expulsion of Iran’s
ambassador to Lebanon, and the banning of Iranian flights to
Beirut because they might be carrying weapons and money to Hizballah.
He charged that Gen. Wafiq Shuqayr, the airport security chief,
was complicit in allowing the Shi‘i party to install the dubious
cameras and demanded he be sacked.
Judicial officials
told the press on May 5 that Lebanon’s prosecutor-general Sa‘id
Mirza ordered the investigation into the airport security cameras.
(The same day, as it happens, the New York Times and various
Western wire agencies reported the US military’s unverified accusations
that Hizballah was involved in training Iraqi Shi‘i militants
in camps near Tehran.) After a marathon meeting of the rump cabinet
the next day, the information minister told reporters the government
had reassigned Shuqayr and was launching a judicial probe into
an illegal telecommunications network that Hizballah had set
up, with Iranian help, in southern and eastern Lebanon as well
as the dahiya, describing the network as “an attack on
state sovereignty.” Hizballah mocked Jumblatt’s accusations as
delusional. The party’s second-in-command, Sheikh Na‘im Qasim,
defended the telephone network as an integral part of the Islamic
Resistance, the militia that fought Israel in 2006 and beforehand.
Since September 2004, with the passage of UN Security Council
Resolution 1559, the international community has backed Hizballah’s
domestic rivals’ demand that the Resistance be disbanded. Hizballah
warned it would not cooperate with the government’s investigation,
and called out its supporters for a show of strength.
The opposition
timed its mobilization to correspond to a 24-hour general strike
called by Lebanon’s General Labor Confederation for May 7. The
strike began peacefully enough, despite the opposition’s closing
of several key roads with sand berms, burning tires and the like.
The airport road was among those blocked, forcing the suspension
of flights. Civil disobedience degenerated into (sometimes armed)
clashes between opposition supporters and government loyalists
in several mixed (Sunni-Shi‘i) quarters, however, leaving ten
people wounded.
Hizballah
and its fellow Shi‘i party Amal continued their civil disobedience
campaign on May 8, accentuated now by the sound of periodic gunfire.
Government loyalists blocked the highway linking Beirut to southern
Lebanon with burning tires and berms of their own and barricaded
the Beirut-Damascus highway near the eastern border crossing
at Masna‘.
In
a speech before a video-linked press conference that evening,
Hizballah Secretary-General Hasan Nasrallah said the Siniora
government’s decision to outlaw and dismantle the telecommunication
network was effectively “a declaration of war...against the Resistance
and its weapons for the benefit of America and Israel. The communications
network is the significant part of the weapons of the Resistance.
I said that we will cut off the hand that targets the weapons
of the Resistance.… Today is the day to carry out this decision.”
The opposition action would continue, Nasrallah said, until the
government rescinded its ban on Hizballah’s security infrastructure.
In a speech
televised soon afterward, Saad al-Hariri characterized opposition
moves in West Beirut as “a crime that must stop immediately.
We will not accept that Beirut kneel before anyone.” Hizballah,
he continued, had “misinterpreted” the government decisions to
probe the party’s private communications network and reassign
Shuqayr. The measures, he said, were meant to protect the army
and did not target Hizballah. He proposed ending the crisis by
placing the two decisions in the hands of the army to implement
or suspend.
After the
broadcasts, the West Beirut clashes changed complexion. By the
next day Hizballah and Amal forces (and their allies in the SSNP)
had taken control of West Beirut, having systematically taken
out select Future Movement and affiliated offices and disarmed
hundreds of Future Movement militants. Since the end of the 2006
war, and particularly since the current political crisis began
18 months ago, this nascent militia (mostly composed, it seems,
of underemployed young Sunnis from West Beirut) had been amply
supplied with arms and ammunition. Evidently there had been less
emphasis on training: Anecdotes have emerged of amateur gunmen
firing on non-combatants, lobbing RPGs into the sea or, more
frequently, abandoning their positions without a fight. Hariri-owned
media outlets -- al-Mustaqbal newspaper, Future Television
and al-Sharq Radio -- were attacked (in some cases, ransacked),
shuttered and handed over to the army. On the morning of May
9, SSNP and Amal gunmen set fire to the buildings.
Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice narrated events for Western consumption.
“Backed by Syria and Iran, Hizballah and its allies are killing
and injuring innocent citizens and undermining the legitimate
authority of the Lebanese government and the institutions of
the Lebanese state,” she said. “Seeking to protect their state
within a state, Hizballah has exploited its allies and demonstrated
its contempt for its fellow Lebanese.”
In mainly
Christian East Beirut, meanwhile, life carried on more or less
as normal.
Hizballah-owned
al-Manar television broadcast on May 8 that the party rejected
Hariri’s terms for cessation of hostilities. That said, Amal
and Hizballah fighters began to disappear from the streets two
days later, shortly after the government handed responsibility
for the anti-Hizballah legislation over to the army. The military
overturned the measures, saying it would handle the issue of
the communications network in a way “that would not harm the
public interest and the security of the resistance,” and reinstated
Shuqayr. Siniora also called upon the army to secure the capital.
The army asked the gunmen to withdraw and (except for the recalcitrant
SSNP) they obliged. It was estimated that 37 people were killed
in four days of fighting.
By that point,
gun battles had flared up outside Beirut, first in the Bekaa
Valley. Pro-government gunmen later overwhelmed SSNP and Baath
Party offices in Tripoli; in Halba, they stormed the SSNP headquarters,
leaving seven dead inside. On May 10, Hizballah accused fighters
loyal to Jumblatt of abducting three opposition members, killing
two of them and throwing their bodies in front of the Iman Hospital
in ‘Alay, just east of Beirut. Fighting soon spread to this town
as well. The same day, the guided-missile destroyer USS Cole
-- which was briefly deployed off Lebanon on February 28 -- crossed
the Suez Canal en route to the Mediterranean. By May 12, the
guns and grenade launchers had fallen silent and the Lebanese
army was deployed between opposition and government loyalists.
Backdrop
of Stalemate
Anyone
believing in representative democratic government, civil society
activism and the like would have difficulty condoning an opposition
group organizing such a paramilitary action against a national
capital, regardless of how representative and democratic the
government in question might be. Prime Minister Siniora and his
colleagues in the March 14 bloc -- named after the date of the
largest popular rally held in Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square during
the 2005 “Independence Intifada” -- were swept into office in
the elections after that ferment helped to push Syrian troops
out of Lebanon. The March 14 bloc holds the parliamentary majority,
but other political groups hold a large minority. Most of the
Hizballah-led opposition is comprised of parties loosely representing
those Lebanese who (for manifold reasons) abstained from the
“Syria out!” demonstrations; the partisans of Michel Aoun’s Free
Patriotic Movement, a key member of the opposition, were enthusiastic
participants. The opposition has deemed the Siniora government
illegitimate for about 18 months, since its ministers resigned
from the cabinet in December 2006.
Before the
resignations, Lebanon’s government was based on the so-called
four-way coalition. Negotiated in the runup to the 2005 elections,
this arrangement had several components. First, it saw Speaker
of Parliament Nabih Berri, the head of Amal and, increasingly,
a Hizballah ally, agree with Nasrallah to apply the 2000 parliamentary
electoral law. Not the most democratic electoral legislation
ever devised, the 2000 law was designed by the Syrian occupation
regime to favor Lebanon’s compact minorities in the Druze and
Christian communities. Though, as the plurality, Shi‘i politicians
dislike the 2000 law, it suited both (the now anti-Syrian) Jumblatt
as well as the various Christian camps -- all of whom prefer
to vote for “their own” deputies. Amal and Hizballah also cooperated
with Future and its allies in ensuring that the election, or
at least its first two rounds, went uncontested. This bargain
alienated a good number of the idealistic young democrats who
had manned the Martyrs’ Square campground. On the other hand,
it secured a comfortable parliamentary majority for the March
14 bloc, the speaker’s chair for Berri and seats in the cabinet
for Hizballah.
The dissent
from this tentative framework for Lebanese self-government came
not from Amal and Hizballah, but from Michel Aoun, the former
army chief who had returned from years in exile after the Syrian
pullout. When Aoun contested the third round with his ally Michel
al-Murr, the team won more seats in Parliament than any other
Christian political group. This fact was lost on the March 14
forces, who denied Aoun any voice in the cabinet, and the Western
media, which generally depicts the right-wing Samir Geagea and
Amin Gemayel as Lebanon’s most important Christian leaders.
As Nasrallah
remarked at his May 7 press conference, the government was made
aware of the existence of his party’s private communications
system when Amal and Hizballah were seated in the Siniora cabinet.
“I would like you to recall that when the four-way alliance was
forged, this network was in place. They did not consider it then
an infringement on sovereignty, law and public funds,” he said.
“Now, when the four-way alliance has become a mere dream, some
members of the government are angered by it.”
From the outset,
the Siniora cabinet was undermined by structural contradictions.
Several factors were at play, but chief among them were, first,
Washington’s sponsorship of the March 14 side, and the pressure
it put upon the Siniora government to fully implement Resolution
1559 and, second, the 2006 war. The Siniora government immediately
depicted that war, and the havoc it wrought in Lebanon, as the
fruit of Hizballah unilateralism -- rather than the work of,
say, an Israeli government that watches warily as Hizballah becomes
entrenched in Lebanese high politics.
The resignation
of pro-Hizballah ministers in December 2006 stemmed from their
indignation at the decision of Siniora and his March 14 cohort
to overrule their dissent in enacting certain legislation. To
do so ignored Lebanon’s tradition of cabinet consensus, which
demands that major acts of legislation be tabled if a sizable
number of ministers object. This cumbersome convention -- often
blamed for endless delays in the process of government -- was
deemed necessary to secure nationwide representation in the sectarian
mechanisms of the state after the 1975-1990 civil war. The Siniora
government is dishonest when it terms the opposition’s demand
for more equitable representation “a cabinet veto,” because,
excepting the odd “technocratic” cabinet, all post-civil war
cabinets have been assembled, and acted, on this consensus basis.
One of the many ironies of the present crisis is that -- though
it is consistently represented as a force dedicated to overthrowing
the state -- Hizballah’s argument since December 2006 has been
that the government play by the rules.
If the Siniora
rump cabinet has somehow forgotten the customs of local governance,
the Hizballah-led action in West Beirut does not fit the strictest
definition of the term “coup” -- as government and Western media
representations would have it. Terrifying as early May was for
those citizens caught in the crossfire, militants neither tried
to change the government by force of arms nor to occupy government
or state offices. Rather, they demanded that Siniora’s rump cabinet
withdraw a controversial decision. The cabinet did this late
on May 13 and the opposition welcomed the move with rounds of
ecstatic automatic weapons fire (after which the death toll from
the conflict remained steady at 65, though the number of dead
in ‘Alay has yet to be properly confirmed). An Arab League delegation
arrived in Beirut on May 14 and proposed that the rivals meet
to renew dialogue in Doha, capital of Qatar. The government agreed
and Beirut’s airport road opened immediately. Lebanon’s politicians
have flown to Doha, purportedly seeking a solution to the stalemate
that dates from December 2006. One of the first substantive issues
they took up was the election law for the next round of parliamentary
polls.
Whither the
Peacekeepers?
During his
first televised appearance of the crisis, Siniora called on the
army to restore law and order, “to live up to its national responsibilities
without hesitation or delay. This has not happened up to now.”
His call echoed the feelings of amateur Lebanon watchers and
government loyalists, who were perturbed by the way Lebanon’s
security services responded to the opposition “coup.” To this
point, the army has been singled out for opprobrium, though the
gendarmerie, or Internal Security Forces (ISF), also failed to
behave in a manner that citizens of North American or Western
European countries would expect. The reasons are sectarian and
political.
ISF units
practically disappeared from West Beirut streets on May 7, and
residents of some West Beirut neighborhoods say they did not
see another ISF patrol until May 14. Though the rank and file
hails from most all of the 18 Lebanese confessions, the ISF is
perceived to be a Sunni Muslim domain. A phenomenon of Lebanon’s
post-1990 reconstruction regime, this “confessionalization” of
the security apparatus began as a counterpoise to demographic
changes in the army -- as did the practice of equipping it with
army-style materiel. Confessionalization has been carried to
an extreme under the Siniora government, which created a blue-uniformed
section of the (usually gray-camouflaged) ISF, the Panthers,
reported to be overwhelmingly Sunni. Amidst the sectarian tensions
of the post-2006 war period, this confessional identification
has had curious practical consequences. The southern precincts
of downtown Beirut, where the opposition has squatted for 18
months, are guarded by the Lebanese army, which the opposition
trusts. North of the government’s razor wire barricades, one
is far more likely to see the uniforms of the ISF, which the
opposition does not trust. Under these circumstances, it was
deemed wise to remove the gendarmes from West Beirut streets
when one might imagine residents most needed them.
The behavior
of the Lebanese army during these events was a more complex matter.
On May 7, army units in riot gear deployed in West Beirut. They
directed traffic around trouble spots, but did not intervene
directly. They remained circumspect on May 8, the day of the
opposition takeover of West Beirut, the army command issuing
a statement warning that if the crisis lengthened, the armed
forces’ unity was in peril. When opposition gunmen withdrew from
the streets, they relinquished their positions to soldiers.
These tactics
gave rise to accusations that the army was complicit in the opposition
“coup.” Indeed, there were anecdotes of involvement of soldiers
in the burning of the Future news building. Photographs provide
hard evidence of gunmen wearing the ISF’s gray fatigues during
the clashes, but it is impossible to know whether these men were
serving ISF troops, or simply bought or borrowed a uniform. Similarly,
stories of looters in green fatigues do not prove army complicity.
The cornerstone
of the Lebanese army mythos is that it is not primarily a fighting
force, but an institution of state, where clan and sectarian
identification is subordinated to the national interest. Along
with the central bank, in fact, the army is considered the only
such institution, the operations of state being otherwise inseparable
from the partisan interests that hold power at any given time.
Historically, army commanders have kept the army aloof from civil-sectarian
conflict or else presided over its dissolution. This is no matter
of sentimental patriotism: When the army splits, more trained
men at arms are at the disposal of the combatants. Thus Gen.
Fouad Shihab declined to intervene in the 1958 troubles. The
efforts of President Sulayman Franjiyya and his allied minister
Camille Chamoun to deploy the army during the crises of 1975-1976
provoked mutinies among army units in the north, the south and
the Bekaa Valley, with Muslim troops and middle-ranking officers
coalescing under the leadership of Col. Ahmad al-Khatib. When,
in February 1984, President Amin Gemayel tried to deploy the
army in West Beirut (to fill the vacuum left by Israeli withdrawal),
the armed forces again snapped in two, with Shi‘i units going
over to Amal.
Lebanese are,
of course, aware that the army has an operating relationship
with the Islamic Resistance. Though it was not a combatant in
the 2006 war, for instance, the army apparently did provide some
communications assistance to Hizballah, and the Israeli air force
bombed its barracks as a result. Yet there is nothing unusual
about the army having an intimate relationship with the country’s
strongest paramilitary force. In 1975, when it was still much
more of a Christian preserve, the army had close ties with the
Phalange, the main Christian paramilitary group, and facilitated
its arms acquisitions. Indeed, some scholars of recent Lebanese
history point out that Michel Aoun was one of several members
of the Lebanese military who were integral to the rise of Bashir
Gemayel, leader of the Lebanese Forces (the militia offspring
of the Phalange), to the Lebanese presidency.
One of the
differences between 1975 and 2008 is that the largest paramilitary
force is aligned with the opposition rather than pro-government
factions. The gear-grinding cognitive dissonance that presently
afflicts pro-government citizens and pundits arises from the
fact that nowadays the (inherently inclusive) army must negotiate
confessional-political sensitivities -- a large Shi‘i rank and
file and Shi‘i officers whose promotions are monitored by Amal
and Hizballah -- that mirror the current trials of the (inherently
exclusive) Lebanese political class.
The interaction
between the tribulations of the Lebanese army and the state it
is meant to symbolize raises other interesting questions, none
of them related to complicity in civil disorder. One of these
concerns the loyalist and opposition sides’ agreement (as of
December 5, 2007) that army commander Michel Suleiman should
be the consensus candidate for the Lebanese presidency. Lebanese
politicians, who pride themselves on not going the way of military
dictatorship pursued by other Arab states, do tend to fall back
on military figures in times of crisis. The Shihab presidency
emerging from the 1958 unrest provides the prototype. The political
class (in the person of President Amin Gemayel) subsequently
looked to Michel Aoun when it was otherwise unable, or unwilling,
to organize a presidential succession. Though he was chosen by
Damascus, in 1998 Emile Lahoud was viewed with enthusiasm by
many Lebanese, who considered him a counterweight to the unbridled
power of Rafiq al-Hariri. For Mount Lebanon’s Christian voters
in 2005, Aoun seemed the strongest candidate to balance Nasrallah
and Hariri the younger.
The political
class’ necessary confidence in Suleiman and the military is only
one episode in the drama the army has undergone since 2005. After
the civil war, the senior partner in defending Hariri’s reconstruction
regime was the Syrian army and intelligence services. When that
force was made to withdraw in 2005, the Lebanese army’s responsibilities
increased exponentially and (in an environment of political assassinations
and opportunistic bombings) thanklessly. After the 2006 war,
by which point the government had canceled obligatory military
service, the army’s capacities were further taxed when it was
required to deploy south of the Litani River to partner with
the UN peacekeeping force. From May to September 2007 the army
had to contend with the crisis at Nahr al-Barid Palestinian refugee
camp, which left some 420 people killed, 168 of them soldiers.
The battle
with Fatah al-Islam, the salafi group dug in at Nahr al-Barid,
was notable for the alacrity with which both sides of the political
stalemate expressed their support for the struggling army. This
exercise in Lebanese national unity fostered a culture that made
public criticism of army malfeasance intolerable. Members of
NGOs dealing with Nahr al-Barid’s humanitarian crisis, for instance,
reported grisly tales of arson and looting at otherwise undamaged
Palestinian properties in the camp, while the army kept journalists
at bay. Since the country was principally united against the
Palestinians (for having “allowed” Fatah al-Islam to settle in
the camp), news coverage of this looting was rare, to say the
least.
The United
States and its “moderate” Arab allies came to Lebanon’s assistance
during the Nahr al-Barid crisis as well, and donations of materiel
flooded into the country, presumably destined for the arms caches
of the army and security services. Though such transfers are
seldom transparent, an outside observer might be forgiven for
thinking Washington, Riyadh, Cairo and Amman were keen to assist
the March 14 government in retaining the army’s loyalty.
Between the
events of Nahr al-Barid and the opposition’s drive through West
Beirut, two incidents threw the army’s role in the mechanism
of state, and its relations with Hizballah, into question. On
December 12, 2007, a week after the opposing parties agreed Suleiman
would be the next Lebanese president, army Brig. Gen. Francois
al-Hajj was killed by a car bomb in Baabda, the twelfth political
assassination or attempted assassination in Lebanon since October
2004. The hit was professional and provocative. Though he was
not widely known up to that point, the press and public was subsequently
informed that Hajj was Suleiman’s top lieutenant and presumptive
successor as army commander if his boss ever became president.
Apparently he also directed the Nahr al-Barid operation and was,
interestingly enough, an army liaison with Hizballah. The first
member of the army to be targeted in the post-2004 bombing campaign,
Hajj’s location on the political and operational grid challenges
the narrative advanced by the Siniora government and its Western
backers that Lebanon’s chaos all flows from Hizballah’s Syrian
and Iranian allies.
The army is
an opaque institution, and alternative explanations for Hajj’s
slaying are of little more than speculative value. But assuming
that Hajj’s assassination was a warning to the armed forces,
the need for exaggerated political neutrality on the part of
the army was underlined during the opposition’s previous effort
to mobilize on Beirut streets on January 27, 2008. At that time,
an army unit shot and killed seven Shi‘i protesters. The incident
put major strains on Hizballah and Amal’s relationship with the
armed forces and, on February 11, three army officers and 16
soldiers were charged in the killings.
Motives and
Ramifications
Why did the
Lebanese government move against Hizballah’s security apparatus
now, when it did not have the means to implement or enforce the
measure?
Given Nasrallah’s
promises concerning the inviolability of Hizballah arms, and
given the complete inadequacy of the youngsters so irresponsibly
armed by the Future Movement to the task of confronting Hizballah,
it is difficult not to conclude that this media-savvy government’s
move was sheer provocation. Had Hizballah chosen to comply with
government demands -- presumably in order to avoid the sectarian
street clashes of the sort that broke out during previous opposition
demonstrations -- the government initiative would have greatly
increased its stature in the eyes of its sponsors and supporters.
If, as proved to be the case, Hizballah responded in the manner
that Nasrallah promised, the party would have ample opportunity
to demonstrate its state-within-a-state status, effectively giving
the international media a “coup” to condemn, and creating an
intolerable state of affairs for Washington and its regional
allies. In either case, the crisis would be pushed back to the
top of the agenda of a conflict-fatigued international community.
In Lebanon,
where political rivals habitually rely upon foreign patrons to
stave off the prospect of domestic political concessions, it
is assumed that the US and its allies were behind the provocation.
Such a theory would take some time to prove. The March 14 forces’
constellation of allies range from the royal families of Saudi
Arabia and Jordan to Egypt’s oligarchs to Bush’s functionaries
-- all of whom enjoy varying degrees of closeness to the Hariri
family and Jumblatt. The order to move against Hizballah may
not have come straight from the US embassy or Condoleezza Rice’s
office, but the speed with which UN Middle East envoy Terje Roed-Larsen
took the issue of Hizballah’s security apparatus to the Security
Council suggests forethought. On May 8, Roed-Larsen informed
the UN that Hizballah “maintains a massive paramilitary infrastructure
separate from the state” that “constitutes a threat to regional
peace and security.”
Washington’s
responsibility resides in the culture of intransigence it has
helped to cultivate in the Siniora government since the 2006
war and its consistent rejection of dialogue with the opposition.
Realities in Iraq are quite different than in Lebanon, but it
is tempting to see the Siniora government’s provocation as a
Lebanese version of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s decision
to employ the Iraqi Army and internal security forces against
Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army in Basra in March. Had it been a
less humiliating failure, Maliki’s gambit might have offered
a template for Lebanon’s fragile rump cabinet.
On the other
hand, as Washington’s relationship with Israel has amply demonstrated,
international clientelism leaves a fair degree of play between
patron and client regimes. Opposition watchers have insisted
upon Hizballah’s operational autonomy from Damascus and Tehran,
and the same privilege ought to be accorded to Hariri and Jumblatt.
One reading
suggests the government’s move against Hizballah is the expression
of a coalition of a disparate, politically bankrupt, political
class, among whom strong statesmanship is utterly lacking. As
it happens, strong leadership is also at a premium among the
Siniora government’s putative patrons and allies, particularly
the US, which has entered the doldrums of a lame-duck presidency.
Under these circumstances, it is just as likely that Washington
would allow its Lebanese clients to take the lead as it is that
the US recommended the course of action itself.
Whether it
acted in consultation with its overseas allies or not, the government’s
attempt to curb Hizballah’s security apparatus has had the same
effect: The international community is engaged.
The crisis
has any number of possible consequences. There are optimists
among the pundits who see this brush with civil war as a means
for both sides to make the concessions needed to end the 18-month
deadlock. With the gunmen off the streets, the army declaring
its intention to enforce the peace more strenuously and the government
forced to rescind its attack on Hizballah’s communications infrastructure,
it is reasoned, now is the time for the opposition to end its
downtown sit-in. At least one editorialist, Rami Khouri, has
suggested that, bluster from the various regional and local actors
aside, these events could provide an opportunity for the US and
Iran to exercise joint trusteeship over Lebanon’s stability --
the sort of condominium observers have hoped would take shape
in Iraq.
Then there
are the negative ramifications. Regardless of its militia’s discipline,
and no matter how low the body count in the first two days, Hizballah’s
sweep through West Beirut has done irreparable damage to its
image among moderate supporters, particularly in the Sunni and
Shi‘i communities. By the end of Lebanon’s civil war, the party
had vowed never to wield its arms against other Lebanese, saying
these were reserved for use against Israel. A good deal of public
tolerance of Hizballah among those outside the party rested on
trusting Nasrallah to keep that promise. Given the climate of
sectarian fear that Lebanon’s political class has nurtured since
2005, the specter of firefights involving ski-masked militants,
the very embodiment of “them,” was bound to conjure up horrific
memories of the 15-year civil war, and with it the resentment
of those Lebanese who never want to return to those days. True,
the Hariri-owned media (like most Lebanese media) is a neo-feudal
institution whose principles of disinterested journalism have
badly lapsed since 2005, but silencing media voices (and worse,
allowing SSNP partisans to vandalize and torch the premises)
could not but confirm accusations that the opposition is authoritarian.
For Lebanese Sunnis, it is not difficult to see these actions
as an assault upon the memory of Saad’s assassinated father.
The ensuing bitterness is unlikely to be assuaged by reminding
them how many opposition media outlets Rafiq al-Hariri shut down
when he was prime minister.
Among those
government loyalists more comfortable with the language of militancy,
this anxiety and frustration is woven into a complex of shame
and desire for revenge, particularly among those whose friends
and relatives were killed. Palpable, too, is the feeling of betrayal
among the young men armed and liberally supplied, if barely trained,
by the Future Movement or its proxies. Some of these aspiring
fighters feel abandoned by Hariri and Jumblatt. Compounded by
loyalist resentment of Lebanese army conduct throughout the contest,
this alienation could have severe consequences for securing a
peaceful resolution over the long term.
There is no
shortage of precedent for where young men’s loyalties can turn
when they become disenchanted with their moderate political leadership.
If the political leadership is already a sectarian one, as in
Lebanon, the migration to political Islam is that much briefer.
In this, the army’s battle for Nahr al-Barid in the summer of
2007 may be instructive. On one hand, the army’s victory after
14 weeks surely marked a blow against salafi Islam in Lebanon,
presumably making it less likely Lebanon’s Sunni Muslims would
drift in that direction. On the other hand, there are reasons
to be less sanguine. It will be recalled that politicians associated
with the Siniora government were accused of supporting Fatah
al-Islam, as well as a second salafi organization subcontracted
to secure a refugee camp in Sidon after militants attacked Lebanese
army units there. Finally, the conditions of Nahr al-Barid’s
fall -- with an undisclosed number of militants, indeed the entire
leadership, escaping -- arouse suspicions that the army’s conquest
of transnational political Islam was not as absolute as its supporters
would hope.
On the day
the opposition action began, Michael Young, opinion editor of
Beirut’s English-language newspaper The Daily Star --
many of whose readers associate his opinions with those of American
neo-conservatism -- published a column suggesting it might be
time for the rest of Lebanon to seek an “amicable divorce” from
its Shi‘i community. Deliberately or not, such calls evoke the
discourse of the “canton,” advocated during the civil war by
Lebanese Forces chieftain Samir Geagea as a solution to the withering
of the inter-sectarian consensus upon which the state was founded.
For other Lebanese, the origins of their country’s serial political
crises reside in the sectarian state, not the confessions of
those who happen to live in it. For many secular Lebanese, the
notion that partitioning this country of 4 million residents
is the only way to save Lebanese sectarianism from its irreconcilable
differences sounds a little too much like cutting off the nose
to spite the face.
Addendum:
the Doha Agreement
A delegation
of pro-government and opposition politicians traveled to Doha
on May 15 to try to negotiate a solution to Lebanon’s 18-month-long
standoff. On May 21, at around 10 am local time, both sides announced
they had reached an agreement that addresses Lebanon’s crisis
with short and medium term measures.
In the short
term, the deal calls for House Speaker Nabih Berri to convene
the Lebanese parliament within 24 hours to elect armed forces
commander Michel Suleiman president of the republic; for practical
reasons, spokesmen from both sides later clarified that the election
would take place on Sunday, May 25. Both sides agreed to assemble
a national unity government of 30 ministers -- 16 from the parliamentary
majority led by Saad al-Hariri, 11 from the ranks of the opposition
and three to be appointed by the new president -- and to participate
in that government in good faith. This arrangement, a concession
to what the government has termed the opposition’s demand to
a right of “veto” over cabinet decisions, entails a return to
the convention of “cabinet consensus” that has conditioned Lebanese
government practice through most of the reconstruction period.
Over the medium
term, the parties agreed to base the 2009 parliamentary elections
on the country’s 1960 electoral law -- which assumes smaller
voting constituencies are the best means to ensure democratic
representation in parliament -- with amendments to Beirut’s three
constituencies. Both sides agreed to refrain from accusations
of treason or other language that can incite sectarian violence,
and from resorting violence, armed or otherwise, as a means of
resolving political conflict. This is considered a step-down
from the government demand that Hizballah promise never again
to raise its arms against Lebanese citizens. The president is
expected to lead talks delineating the extension of state authority
throughout Lebanon, with an eye to maintaining security.
The agreement
has been characterized as a major win for Hizballah, and thus
a setback for the government and its Washington and Riyadh sponsors.
Preliminary reactions to the agreement have nevertheless been
overwhelmingly positive. Spokesmen of the political class have
rehearsed the “no victor, no vanquished” slogan that is habitually
chanted whenever ad hoc solutions have been found for Lebanon’s
structural contradictions. The international patrons of both
sides have applauded that civil war has been averted. Within
hours of the Doha announcement, opposition protestors manning
the 18-month-old sit-in in the southern parts of downtown Beirut
began to dismantle their tents. Lebanese on the street have professed
a range of responses. There is relief that the long standoff
has finally been resolved. There is anger that the political
class didn’t reach this accommodation many months, and many more
lives, ago. There is skepticism, since none of the substantive
issues at the root of the confrontation have been resolved. The
Doha Agreement will grant the citizens of Lebanon a breathing
spell, during which they can attend to more mundane but manifold
crises that have festered for the last 18 months. In the interim,
the political class can toy with the possibilities, challenges
and responsibilities of self-government.

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