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  • Half a Million Gather for Pro-Syrian Rally to Defy Vision of US

    Half a Million Gather for Pro-Syrian Rally to Defy Vision of US
    by Robert Fisk in Beirut

    Wednesday, March 9, 2005 by the
    Independent (UK)

    It was a warning. They came in their tens of thousands, Lebanese Shia
    Muslim families with babies in arms and children in front, walking past
    my Beirut home. They reminded me of the tens of thousands of Iraqi
    Shia Muslims who walked with their families to the polls in Iraq,
    despite the gunfire and the suicide bombers.

    And now they came from southern Lebanon and the Bekaa to say they
    rejected America's plans in Lebanon, and wanted - so they claimed -
    to know who killed Rafiq Hariri, the former prime minister murdered
    on 14 February, and to reject UN Security Council Resolution 1559
    which demands a Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon and the disarmament
    of the Hizbollah guerrilla movement, and to express their "thanks"
    to Syria. This was a tall order in Lebanon.

    But only 100 yards from the Lebanese opposition protests, the
    half-million - for that was an approachable figure, given Hizbollah's
    extraordinary organisational abilities - stood for an hour with
    Lebanese flags, and posed a challenge to President George Bush's
    project in the Middle East. "America is the source of terrorism",
    one poster proclaimed. "All our disasters come from America".

    Many of those tens of thousands were Hizbollah families who had
    fought the Israelis during their occupation of southern Lebanon,
    been arrested by the Israelis, imprisoned by the Israelis and feared
    that American support for Lebanon meant not "democracy" but an imposed
    Israeli-Lebanese peace treaty.

    There were Syrians in the crowds - indeed, I saw buses with Syrian
    registration plates that had brought families from Damascus - but
    almost all the half million were Lebanese Shias and they wanted to
    reject 1559 because it called for Hizbollah to be disarmed. They
    were perfectly happy to see the Syrians leave (who now remembers
    the Syrian massacre of Hizbollah members in Beirut in 1987?) but,
    bearing in mind Syria's transit of weapons from Iran to Lebanon,
    Hizbollah wanted to be regarded as a resistance movement, not a
    "militia" to be disarmed. What the Shia were saying was that they
    were a power, just as they said when they voted in Iraq. In Lebanon,
    Shia Muslims are the largest religious community.

    Syria is run by a clique of Alawis - who are Shia - and Iraq is now
    dominated by Shia Muslims who voted themselves into power, and Iran
    is a Shia nation So when President Bush said "the Lebanese people
    have the right to determine their future free from domination of a
    foreign power", the power the Shias were thinking of was not Syria
    but the United States and Israel.

    And 100 yards away, the demonstrators who have bravely protested
    against the murder of Rafik Hariri have become factionalised,
    courtesy of the Syrians. At night, the opposition protesters are
    largely Christian. Yesterday's Hizbollah rally, while it contained
    the usual pro-Syrian Christians, was essentially Shia. And their
    message was not one of thanks to President Bush.

    "The fleets came in the past and were defeated; and they will be
    defeated again," Hizbollah's leader, Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, said in
    reference to the Americans. Ironically, President Bush was to refer
    within hours to the killing of 241 US Marines in Beirut in October
    1982, as if their deaths were the responsibility of al-Qa'ida. To the
    Israelis, Nasrallah said: "Let go of your dreams for Lebanon. To the
    enemy entrenched on our border, occupying our country and imprisoning
    our people, 'There is no place for you here and there is no life for
    you among us: Death to Israel'."

    Nasrallah's take on the 1975-90 Lebanese civil war was predictable.
    The crowds were meeting on the front lines that had separated the
    Lebanese during the civil war; indeed, on the very location of
    the Christian-Muslim trenches of that conflict. "We meet today to
    remind the world and our partners in the country," Nasrallah said,
    "that this arena that joins us, or the other one in Martyrs' Square,
    was destroyed by Israel and civil war and was united by Syria and
    the blood of its soldiers and officers."

    This was an inventive piece of history. Israel certainly killed many
    thousands of Lebanese - more than the Syrians, although their soldiers
    took the lives of many hundreds - but the half million roared their
    approval.

    So what did all this prove? That there was another voice in Lebanon.
    That if the Lebanese "opposition" - pro-Hariri and increasingly
    Christian - claim to speak for Lebanon and enjoy the support of
    President Bush, there is a pro-Syrian, nationalist voice which does not
    go along with their anti-Syrian demands but which has identified what
    it believes is the true reason for Washington's support for Lebanon:
    Israel's plans for the Middle East.

    The Beirut demonstration yesterday was handled in the usual Hizbollah
    way: maximum security, lots of young men in black shirts with two-way
    radios, and frightening discipline. No one was allowed to carry a gun
    or a Hizbollah flag. There was no violence. When one man brandished a
    Syrian flag, it was immediately taken from him. Law and order, not
    "terrorism", was what Hizbollah wished. Syria had spoken. President
    Bashar Assad's sarcastic remark about the Hariri protesters needing a
    "zoom lens" to show their numbers had been answered by a demonstration
    of Shia power which needed no "zoom".

    And in the mountains above Beirut, still frozen under their winter
    snows, few Syrians moved. There were Syrian military trucks on the
    international high way to Damascus but no withdrawal, no retreat, no
    redeployment. The Taif agreement of 1989 stipulated that the Syrians
    should withdraw to the Mdeirej heights above Beirut, which they have
    now agreed to do, 14 years later than they should have done.

    The official document released by the Lebanese-Syrian military
    delegation in Damascus suggests this is a new redeployment and that
    in April the Syrian forces, along with their military intelligence
    personnel, will withdraw to the Lebanese-Syrian border.

    But the question remains: will they retreat to the Syrian side of
    the frontier, or sit in the Lebanese-Armenian town of Aanjar, on the
    Lebanese side, where Brigadier General Rustum Gazale, the head of
    Syrian military intelligence, still maintains his white-painted villa?

    Either way, Lebanon can no longer be taken for granted. The "cedar"
    revolution now has a larger dimension, one that does not necessarily
    favour America's plans. If the Shia of Iraq can be painted as
    defenders of democracy, the Shias of Lebanon cannot be portrayed
    as the defenders of "terrorism". So what does Washington make of
    yesterday's extraordinary events in Beirut?

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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