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BEIRUT: Alas, It Looks Like Shiites Vs. The Rest

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  • BEIRUT: Alas, It Looks Like Shiites Vs. The Rest

    ALAS, IT LOOKS LIKE SHIITES VS. THE REST
    By Michael Young

    Daily Star
    Jan 31 2008
    Lebanon

    The tragic and senseless killing of demonstrators in Shiyyah last
    Sunday was, perhaps rightfully, seen as the opening shot in a new
    phase of the Lebanese crisis that may turn much more violent. Who
    was responsible for the crimes still remains unclear. But a cooler
    analysis of what took place shows an equally disturbing reality:
    Sunday was a political disaster for the Shiite opposition parties,
    Hizbullah and Amal, whose inability to achieve their political ends,
    but also to retreat from the brink, makes the likelihood of further
    hostilities much greater.

    After the end of the summer 2006 war and the growing confrontation
    between the parliamentary majority and the opposition, Hizbullah
    was always careful to place non-Shiites in the forefront of the
    opposition's actions. While Sunni representatives were anemic,
    Michel Aoun was, for a time, someone who added credibility to the
    claim that the opposition was multiconfessional. That argument took
    a severe beating in the street protests of January 23, 2007, when the
    Aounists were unable to block roads for very long in Christian areas
    without assistance from the army. By nightfall, even that endeavor
    had collapsed as roads inside the Christian heartland and between
    Beirut and Tripoli were opened.

    However, Aoun struck back in the Metn by-election last summer, when
    he managed to get an unknown, Camille Khoury, elected to Parliament.

    It was a pyrrhic victory to be sure. The vote tally confirmed that the
    general had lost a sizable share of the Maronite vote; it showed that
    he relied heavily on a unified Armenian electorate not particularly
    committed to the general personally, that might vote very differently
    in the future; but it also showed that Aoun was not out of the game,
    as some had predicted.

    However, from the moment the March 14 coalition decided to support
    the army commander, Michel Suleiman, as its candidate for president,
    Aoun's situation changed dramatically. The general had calculated that
    a presidential vacuum would enhance his chances of being elected, on
    the grounds that the thwarted Christians would rally behind him. In
    fact the exact opposite has happened. Provided with the option of
    a potentially strong Christian president in Suleiman, displeased
    with Aoun's and his ally Suleiman Franjieh's wanton attacks against
    Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir, never really convinced by
    the Free Patriotic Movement's alliance with Hizbullah, the Christians,
    many of whom voted for Aoun in 2005, have been steadily turning away
    from the general.

    A sure sign of this is the behavior of that cunning weathervane of
    Christian opinion, Michel Murr. In recent weeks Murr has mounted
    a very damaging internal rebellion against Aoun. He has defended
    the Arab plan that seeks to bring Suleiman to power as "good for
    the Christians," when Aoun's greatest fear is that his community
    will embrace such a line and abandon his own candidacy. Murr has
    defended Sfeir against Franjieh's attacks, even as most Aounist
    parliamentarians who once made Bkirki their second home remained
    silent. And Murr declared that the Metn would not participate in
    opposition street demonstrations. This was an easy promise to make,
    because Aoun doesn't even have the capacity to organize protests in
    areas his bloc members represent in Parliament.

    The thing is, Murr's attitude is popular among Christians. And last
    Sunday, Aoun found himself in the worst possible situation when his
    ally Hizbullah and the army - the one state institution in which the
    general still retains some sympathy - clashed. For most Christians the
    choice was an easy one to make: They sided with the army, particularly
    after demonstrators were reported to have broken cars in the Christian
    quarter of Ain al-Rummaneh, where someone later tossed a grenade
    that injured several people. In that context, Aoun's alliance with
    Hizbullah now looks to many of his coreligionists like a bad idea,
    one that might precipitate a civil conflict if the opposition pursues
    its protests, which almost nobody seriously accepts as a demand for
    more electricity and cheaper food.

    But then put yourselves in Hizbullah's shoes, and those of the Amal
    movement. With your Christian partner neutralized, suddenly the
    opposition looks mainly like a Shiite phenomenon. Worse, it looks
    like a mainly Shiite phenomenon directed against the Lebanese Army,
    a presidential election, and, by extension, the Lebanese state itself.

    This is certainly not where Hizbullah's secretary general, Sayyed
    Hassan Nasrallah, ever wanted to position himself; and it is, in a
    word, suicidal for Shiites.

    However, that apparently has not induced Hizbullah to backtrack. The
    Sunday rioting was probably destined to discredit Suleiman. The
    opposition's follow-up criticism of the army commander as someone
    who is no longer a consensus presidential candidate lends credence
    to this theory. The Syrians have recently been trying to peddle
    alternative candidates, via Qatar, to the French - which Qatari and
    French denials in fact only confirmed. Suddenly, Hizbullah finds itself
    in the uncomfortable position of blocking the election of a man many
    Christians regard as a potentially strong leader, all because the
    party won't abandon Aoun, who is on the political decline. And why
    won't it do so? Because Hizbullah desperately needs the general as
    an ally in a future government.

    Whether Hizbullah's calculations are mainly domestic, or are shaped
    to a large extent by Syria is irrelevant. The party is, perhaps
    unintentionally, pushing Shiites into a confrontation with the rest of
    Lebanese society to protect itself, and nothing could be worse for the
    community. Hizbullah's inability to achieve any of its political aims
    in the past 13 months has only increased its sense of frustration,
    and the prospect of violence. The party is flailing, but March 14
    must at all costs help think of creative ways to prevent the Shiites
    from succumbing to a new "Kerbala complex," a sense that victimhood
    is the historical lot of their community.

    In 1975, the Christians had their own Kerbala complex, one that
    dictated stubbornness in the defense of Christian prerogatives, which
    at the time were regarded as an existential red line. In the process
    they lost their control over the state. Hizbullah has made defense
    of its weapons an existential red line for the Shiite community. But
    Kerbala, as one astute analyst has put it, is hardly something the
    Shiites should want to remember, as it ended in a massacre and
    defeat. Nor is it something any Lebanese should want the Shiite
    community to remember, or repeat.

    The Christians learned to their detriment during the 1975-1990
    conflict that a war against the Sunnis was also in many ways a war
    against the Arab world. The Christian community never recovered from
    that disaster. That's a lesson the Shiite community should not have
    to learn.
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