Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Victory Was Like A Defeat

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Victory Was Like A Defeat

    THE VICTORY WAS LIKE A DEFEAT
    Jihad el-Khazen

    Dar Al-Hayat, Lebanon
    http://english.daralhayat.com/opinion/OPED /08-2007/Article-20070814-643a4fad-c0a8-10ed-01eb- b70dabb40108/story.html
    Aug 14 2007

    On the day of the by-elections in Lebanon, I said in this column I
    would have voted for President Amin Gemayel if I had been a voter in
    the North Metn and I am still holding the same view after his loss.

    In addition to the personal, old and lasting relationship with
    Sheikh Amin, I find that he deserves the victory for different
    reasons, the most important of which are his high potential and
    his wide experience. Furthermore, the seat became vacant upon the
    assassination of his son Pierre, and I do not mean here bequeathing
    a political office nor do I mean political families. I rather mean
    scoring a victory for the young martyr by voting against the idea of
    assassination and those behind it.

    The result is well-known and General Michel Aoun won through his
    candidate Camille Khoury, but the victory was like a defeat. In fact
    the results have revealed a regression in Aoun's support among the
    Christians whom he is supposed to represent. Two years ago 70% of
    them had lent him support in the parliamentary elections, but now
    this support has receded to 40% of the Christians against 60% for
    Amin Gemayel. I also heard Minister Michel Murr's speech on TV and
    I found most of it true. If we consider that Murr's share is around
    20000 voters, added to the Armenian voters ranging between 7000 and
    9000, and around 5000 Syrian Nationalist voters including Maronites
    from Al-Ashkar family and others, and naturalialized voters, Aoun's
    share drops to 20% or less of Christian votes.

    Yet, Lebanon is not for the Maronites or the Shiites or any other
    community. It is either for all its population or it is for no one in
    particular. After trying to free myself from any personal emotions
    or inclinations, I note that Sheikh Amin committed mistakes in his
    electoral campaign, the least of which is not the underestimation of
    Armenian votes. They voted as a compact group and Sheikh Amin is fully
    aware of this as they had been the Gemayel's allies over consecutive
    elections. In spite of this, it seems to me that Sheikh Amin was
    surprised at their attitude and launched an attack on them after the
    release of the results. But I see them as the best Lebanese community
    since they never carried arms against anyone and never offended anyone,
    though I heard the Tashnag now has an international dimension through
    Armenia's relations with Iran.

    I carry on as much objectivity as possible and I say I wish that Amin
    Gemayel, instead of attacking the Shiites and criticizing General
    Aoun for his ties with Hizbullah and with Syria through this party,
    had submitted a specific platform, and then adhered to what we know
    of him in terms of keeping the lines open with everybody and in terms
    of caution in making statements and weighing up each word he says.

    The results would not have been of the same significance had the
    candidate been Sami Amin Gemayel, not the former president himself. I
    heard the son's name repeated in the initiatives taken by Michel Murr,
    the Armenians and others, yet such initiatives did not meet with
    success. Had this been the case, both parties would have engaged in a
    battle without Amin Gemayel being a candidate, thus keeping his name
    among the candidates for the presidential elections.

    Do I need to say that the country is fractured and agreement is
    indispensable? The readers have reminded me of the extent of divisions
    in the country as half of them were for Sheikh Amin whereas almost
    the other half were against him, along with a small number of neutral
    voices. La'ek Assad said that Amin Gemayel is the most competent
    candidate and he started to raise doubts about the cultural standards
    of the Lebanese people taking into consideration the vile talk by
    Michel Aoun.

    Ahmad Al-Kutami called on Lebanese politicians to listen to reason and
    considered him a safety valve out of fear of going in the direction
    of more threatening forms of disagreement and he saw Amin Gemayel as
    the best candidate.

    Ibrahim Isma'il said that if he had been a Lebanese voter, he would
    have asked for new and young faces in parliament, hoping they would
    mend the disagreements caused by prominent families.

    Aziz Al-Khasawnah said he likes Lebanon and the Lebanese, and he
    is confused at their fondness with warlords and confessionalism,
    as well as their reliance on foreign parties.

    Yasser disagreed with me over my support for Amin Gemayel without
    showing any support for Aoun's candidate. Hassan advised me to be
    neutral and said that my opinion was not objective, and so did Abdo
    Shankir while Mohammad Al-Moftah criticized Amin Gemayel and talked
    about rudeness on the part of some pro-government figures such as
    Walid Jumblat. Hisham Al-Taki welcomed the day of 'great faithfulness
    to General Aoun who did not sign the May 17 Agreement, did not help in
    the coming of Syria and Israel, and was not disloyal to his country.'

    President Amin Gemayel did not sign the May 17 Agreement and the
    by-elections are behind us now while the presidential election is
    scheduled next month unless the process is not disrupted. I do not
    know who will be the holder of the presidency bit I know who will
    not. The future president will not belong to either March 14 or March
    7. A compromise candidate will be elected otherwise no one will.

    While each of the two parties has the power to hinder the process,
    none of them has the ability to impose his views on the other. The
    entire country is at risk if each party believes it can monopolize
    the final say in the presidential election. It will only lead the
    country to a constitutional vacuum that will leave the door wide open
    to evil as if Lebanon now does not have enough of it, if not more.

    Hizbullah has stated that General Michel Aoun is its only candidate
    for the presidency and I heard a confirmation by party leaders in
    this regard. This means that General Aoun will not be the coming
    president, and similarly every pro-March 14 candidate will not be
    elected president. I personally wish that Nassib Lahoud would be
    elected president as he combines a rare blend of abilities, integrity,
    and moderation.

    I will not involve the reader in the social talk on the roles of
    Syria and Iran, or on the vulnerability in the commitment of some MPs
    belonging to the majority, or the final attitude of Michel Murr, his
    allies and Joseph Skaff's parliamentary bloc. I will not fabricate
    options simply to appear as a person who knows what the others are
    not aware of. All I can say is that several names are put forward,
    the most prominent of which are Michel Sleiman, Jean Obeid, Fares
    Boueiz, Ryiad Salameh, and Michel Eddeh. All of these, especially
    General Sleiman, have a known record which makes them eligible for
    the presidency, though I prefer that he stays army commander-in-chief
    for the rare commanding abilities he has displayed so far. As for my
    own choice between Jean Obeid and Fares Boueiz, I wish them a better
    luck than Amin Gemayel's in the by-elections, and I also wish Lebanon
    a better luck.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X