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Lebanon is not the land of colored revolutions!

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  • Lebanon is not the land of colored revolutions!

    Lebanon is not the land of colored revolutions!


    Morning Morning
    7 March 05

    Great crises and great shocks lead people into perdition because
    great crises and great shocks are difficult to assimilate. The
    collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 disquieted those who toppled it
    as well as those who lost it. The republics that arose from the ruins
    of the Soviet Union remain perplexed even now, and their perplexity
    has kept them in a state of impotence as to their options although
    they have been independent for more than 10 years. Despite that they
    have not in the democratic line, despite the Westâ~@~Ys expectation.
    Beginning with the Baltic republics and ending with Georgia, the
    latter committed to a line independent of Moscow. For more than 70
    years Russia was the focus of an empire with an area of 22,500 square
    kilometers, from the Far East of Siberia to Moldavia and Byelorussia
    (now Moldova and Belarus). To this day neither Kazakhstan nor
    Azerbaijan, for example, has adopted the democratic system. Have
    revolutionary elections changed the nomenklatura state in place? This
    is the question posed, and it will continue to be because elections
    alone are not democracy, which is a heritage before being a practice.
    The democratic system was adopted in Greece in the fifth century BC,
    and with it public debates. From the Greeks to the Persians, to India
    and pharaonic Egypt... before France, England and Germany. Even
    before Englandâ~@~Ys Magna Carta in 1215. * * *

    Although elections change many things and many people, certainly what
    happened in Lebanon on February 14 is related to them. This all the
    more true since the next elections in Lebanon will define, as we
    know, the Lebanese process in the framework of the delimitation of
    the Middle Eastern process, probably in its evolution towards the
    Greater Middle East!
    Elections change many things and people. Even enmities, friendships
    and lines of orientation can be turned upside-down. This is accepted
    and sometimes desired.
    People change and we still say nothing of those who follow a line and
    continue to develop in accordance with it. People change, above all
    in the sense that they prefer to adapt themselves to the winds of
    change before they blow, whoever the one blowing may be. To the point
    that loss of confidence in an authority risks affecting the future of
    a nation.
    There is in Lebanon something of all this. Those who vote in
    elections to modify the prevailing image, have frozen the elections
    and their law until light is shed on the crime of February 14.
    Nothing is against that, because blood calls for justice in order to
    prevent recourse to vengeance. I donâ~@~Yt know how a man of the
    stature of General De Gaulle was able one day to say, â~@~Blood
    dries rapidlyâ~@~], in reply to a person who was announcing to him
    the decease of someone â~@~before his hands are stained with
    bloodâ~@~]. But in fact the cry of blood is deafening. The eye of
    Cain is an example. The blood of the Duke of Enghien and that of
    Hamzé, uncle of the Arab Prophet pursuing Hind, wife of Abi Soufyan
    and mother of Moawiya, as well as the blood of Al-Hussein -- the
    examples are many.
    These events are probably forgotten and, with them, the blood that
    leaves red stains in the memory, such as the incident of Greenpeace
    in the Pacific, facing the islands possessed by France, which was
    proceeding to carry out nuclear tests in order to confirm its
    presence in the club of the great powers. However, these great powers
    have given to small ones among them potentials enabling them to
    possess nuclear arms. But now the matter of acquiring nuclear weapons
    is closed, and those countries that try to acquire them are described
    as â~@~rogue statesâ~@~]. The Greenpeace incident caused the removal
    from office of Charles Hernu, French minister of defense during the
    mandate of François Mitterrand, his close friend, because the
    inquiry in New Zealand established the responsibility of the French
    minister in the explosion of the ship Rainbow Warrior. When the man
    responsible for intelligence revealed to the French president -- who
    had governed France for 14 years during which he concealed the fact
    that he was suffering from cancer -- that Hernu had dealt with the
    Soviets and given them NATO secrets, Mitterrand told him, â~@~Take
    this dossier and place it among the most inaccessible dossiers in
    your office... For we cannot rewrite historyâ~@~].

    * * *

    Itâ~@~Ys an event that will be forgotten. As for blood, it cannot be
    forgotten. But can blood that is shed be a rogue operation... and the
    cause of the death of Rafik Hariri? Is it permitted that the
    elections in Lebanon be sabotaged in the wait for the results of the
    inquiry, with everyone knowing the traps and pitfalls that will
    hamper the work of the investigators, making inevitable a delay in
    the announcement of the results?
    The elections must take place on the dates scheduled. Such is the
    challenge which the crime of February 14 has thrown down on the
    Lebanese scene, the Arab scene and even the international scene. The
    elections will be the word of Lebanon in the Lebanese essence and the
    Lebanese color. It being understood, as Stalin once said, that
    elections are less a matter of who votes than of who counts the
    ballots.
    What color will be that of Lebanon?... The Lebanon of the Resistance
    or the Lebanon of the Syrianization of the Shebaa Farms and what
    followed? What therefore will be the color of Lebanon -- the color of
    the elections in Palestine and Iraq, where the situation remains
    disturbed?

    * * *

    If the victim were to speak, he would say that the country is the
    priority of priorities. And that revolutions of velvet... the
    many-hued revolutions, pink in Georgia, orange in Ukraine,
    wine-colored in Moldavia, apricot in Armenia and aubergine in
    Azerbaijan. Colored revolutions can be exported, but not to Lebanon.
    No such revolution can find acceptance here, for Lebanon is
    sufficiently colored by wise words, exemplary justice, independence,
    sovereignty, true democracy. Not in using democracy to foment coups
    dâ~@~Yétat whose final outcome no one can know.

    * * *

    We say this knowing that great crises, like great shocks, produce a
    perdition. De Gaulle, and there is no harm in returning to him, lost
    his way after May 5, 1968, a date of great significance in the French
    calendar. On that day he saw millions demonstrating in Paris. He lost
    his way so far as to fear that the fate of Louis XVI might be his as
    well and he went to see General Massu at Baden-Baden, who told him:
    Your place is in Paris; return to Paris.
    He returned and millions demonstrated while De Gaulle was holding
    democratic elections that led to a Gaullist parliamentary majority.
    But reason led him to prepare for â~@~lâ~@~Yaprès De Gaulleâ~@~].
    Will they hear? We hope so!





    --Boundary_(ID_hVVmsvztzsW1v/OJ/5YLIg)--
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