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Beirut: Global Thaw Offers Lebanon A Chance

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  • Beirut: Global Thaw Offers Lebanon A Chance

    GLOBAL THAW OFFERS LEBANON A CHANCE

    Daily Star - Lebanon
    Wednesday, October 07, 2009

    A proposed unity deal set to be signed between rival Palestinian
    powers Hamas and Fatah, a truly significant occasion in itself, is
    the latest in a string of similar moves toward reconciliation that
    have taken place across the region in recent weeks.

    Many seemingly irreconcilable disputes are beginning to show signs of
    progress. In addition to the Hamas-Fatah deal, we have seen Iranians
    move toward openness with the international community with re­gards
    to its nuclear program, warming ties between Syria and Saudi Arabia
    and between Turkey and Armenia.

    The departure of a neoconservative administration from the White House,
    for whom force was seemingly the primary tool of diplomacy, has seen
    relations in the region take a dramatic turn for the better. It seems
    unlikely that any of these encouraging developments could have taken
    place during the Bush administration, which serves to illustrate
    both the positive and negative influence the United States can have
    on the region.

    These rapprochements stand in contrast to a period of political
    brinkmanship which characterized regional relations of the past few
    years. For Lebanon, a country whose politics is so influenced by
    external factors, they are particularly significant, not to mention
    timely.

    The protracted cabinet-formation saga tells us little save that
    Lebanese are the ones who pay the price when super­powers and regional
    heavyweights collide. It is the Lebanese who suffer from lack of a
    cabinet while external power struggles between interested parties play
    out. Lebanon is continually used as a postbox through which regional
    powers convey messages to each other. Nearly five months have passed
    since Leba­non voted in parliamentary polls, yet the country remains
    deadlocked and devoid of a working government. These are all factors
    which affect the Lebanese in their daily lives, and far transcend
    the political arena where are born.

    The moves by various powers in region toward dialogue present a
    rare window of opportunity for Lebanon to make progress in its
    own endeavors. The proposed visit of Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah
    to Syria tomorrow - the latest visit signifying better relations
    between Damascus and Riyadh - makes a solution to Lebanon's own
    dilemma real possibility.

    Leaders on both sides, while certainly not freed of outside influence,
    would do well to make the most of this atmosphere of compromise. While
    the problems that existed before have not disappeared, there is
    no reason why this transition we are seeing from confrontation to
    reconciliation throughout the region, cannot be replicated in Lebanon.

    It remains to be seen whether Lebanon will capitalize on this golden
    opportunity. This favorable atmosphere will not last forever, and
    the global community facing a variety of global problems may soon
    turn its attention to other issues.
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