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The Failed Sunni Army Solution; Blowback Across Lebanon

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  • The Failed Sunni Army Solution; Blowback Across Lebanon

    The Failed Sunni Army Solution

    Blowback Across Lebanon

    CounterPunch
    June 15, 2007

    By FRANKLIN LAMB

    Tripoli, Lebanon -- Whoever killed anti-Syrian Lebanese MP Walid Eido
    Wednesday knew Syria would be blamed and that the country would move
    closer to civil war. Pro-government factions turned out in force along
    Beirut's Roauche sea front chanting anti-Syrian and anti-Hezbollah
    slogans but no serious fighting has been ignited yet.

    Another consequence may be to breathe new life into chances for a US
    backed Northern Sunni Army to confront Hezbollah and the Palestinians.
    The Northern Sunni Army, seemed doable-at least a couple of years
    ago-during Plan "B"-then Plan "C" - which became Plan "D" sessions of the
    Welch Club to decide who was going to control Lebanon.
    For the Club, comprised of David Welch, Samir Geagea, (Lebanese Forces)
    Walid Jumblatt (Druze PSP militia) and chaired by Saad Hariri, (Future
    Movement) plus some allies, like current Prime Minister Fuad Siniora,
    the choices were black and white simple: Lebanon's future will be
    controlled by Israel and the US or Lebanon will be controlled by Syria
    and Iran.

    What role will be played by the Lebanese themselves would depend on
    'variables'. Among which were the need for a Bush administration victory
    in Iraq, destroying Hezbollah, leader of the Lebanese resistance and
    nationalist movement, and preventing Israel, increasingly seen in the
    Pentagon as teetering, as history's judgment approaches, from virtually
    collapsing.

    When some bright graduate student writes a Doctoral dissertation
    entitled : Who lost Lebanon? the thesis may well argue that effects of
    the historic events now unfolding including Nahr al-Bared and simmering
    in Ain el Helweh, and Lebanon's other ten Palestinian Refugee Camps.
    This, in addition to the blowback from the debacle of the Bush
    administration's 2003 invasion of Iraq which unleashed a horrific
    Shia/Sunni conflict and civil war. Within 9 months of the invasion of
    Iraq, fear of the 'Shia rising" phenomenon quickly created panic in
    Washington, Riyadh and Amman. Both Kings Abdullah explained to all who
    would listen that a dangerous Shia Crescent was taking form that would
    arc from Iran, across Iraq to Lebanon.

    The Bush administration listened, and never creating a Middle East
    problem it didn't have a solution for, followed the lead of the Neocons
    and Ziocons in their ranks and advised their Sunni allies of yet another
    new project.
    "It was a truly ' epiphanous, spiritual awakening'" one American
    University of Beirut student recently called it. The obvious solution to
    check the increased regional influence of Iran and Syia, was to quickly
    create a Northern Sunni Army to confront a Southern Lebanese Shia army
    (Hezbollah). The murder of Rafic Hariri, and those seven Lebanese
    opinion makers assassinated since, accelerated the project.

    North Lebanon appeared to be the perfect recruiting ground for Lebanon's
    newest army because the area is overwhelmingly Sunni, pro-Hariri, has
    high unemployment with many able young men willing to be recruited and
    the community feels left out of economic advances to their south.

    In addition, North Lebanon has a well situated airport at Keilaat,
    which, according to this scenario, could be converted to US base which
    would include a training facility for the new force.

    From interviews with members of Fatah Intafada, Fatah al-Islam, Jund al
    Sham, Osbat al Ansar, Jund Allah and many PLO factions, plus residents
    in all 12 of Lebanon's Palestinian Refugees Camps, as well as various
    NGO's and long time camp observers, one fact seems quite clear. Those
    who were imported into Lebanon to be the catalyst of the new force
    proved more interested in fighting Israel than fighting Hezbollah or the
    Palestinians and appeared to take seriously the late Abu Musab
    Al-Zarqawi counsel that fighters should go to the border of Palestine
    and fight.

    Moreover, the widely held view here is that Al Qeada has arrived in
    Lebanon with a vengeance and Fatah al-Islam is just the tip of the
    iceberg. The 'cells' are throughout Lebanon and are organizing broadly
    and not just in the Palestinian Camps, where they are resisted by Hamas,
    Fatah Arafat, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, as
    in Shatilla and Burj al-Baraneh Camps.
    Practically every day witnesses Lebanese security forces finding all
    sorts of explosives, car bombs, arms stores( 6/14/07 another large stash
    six blocks from Nahr al-Bared) and receiving information from Fatah
    al-Islam, Jund al-Sham and other Salafist detainees, concerning dozens
    of planned operations from bombing the American Embassy, large hotels,
    malls and attacking UNIFIL forces. As Robert Fisk reported recently,
    Hezbollah officials have assured the French, Spanish and Italian
    Embassy's that Hezbollah will watch UNIFIL's back and try to stop Al
    Qeada from attacking them. A "hit list" with 30 names was reported on
    6/13/07, just hours before MP Wadid Eido,one of the names on the list,
    was murdered.

    The UN, also to be targeted, according to Internal Security reports, is
    on high alert. One reliable source advised this observer on 6/14/07 that
    Hezbollah men are actually discretely leading UN convoys along the 75
    mile blue line, sort of riding shotgun, in front of them and with the
    electronics they are known for. Hezbollah intelligence, which checkmated
    Israel during the July 2006 war, is believed by the UN to be just as
    solid today and the UN appreciates the help.

    Seymour Hersh uses the word 'acute' to describe the concern in the White
    House regarding the Shia renaissance.

    As a result, Hersh claims the Bush administration is no longer acting
    rationally in its policy. "We're in the business of supporting the
    Sunnis anywhere we can against the Shiite. ... "We're in the business of
    creating ... sectarian violence." And he describes the scheme of funding
    Fatah al-Islam as "a covert program we joined in with the Saudis as part
    of a bigger, broader program of doing everything we could to stop the
    spread of the Shiite world, and it just simply - it bit us in the rear".
    That the Bush administration Welch Club Arranged for Al Qaeda affiliates
    and kindred spirits to enter Lebanon and received help from local 'club
    members' is widely believed in Lebanon. The US Embassy in Beirut and the
    CIA will neither confirm nor deny involvement in the plan to use Al
    Qeada to confront Hezbollah

    Everything seemed to be falling neatly into place. Much like the
    US/Saudi supported Osama Bin Laden operation in Afghanistan during the
    Soviet occupation, cash was committed (apparently it did not dawn on the
    Welch Club that history sometimes repeats itself and that their creation
    may not be easily returned to Pandora's Box). In addition there were
    other deep pockets that could be tapped. As Forbes magazine documents,
    the Hariri family fortune skyrocketed from a measly 4.1 billion in 2002
    to 16.7 billion and counting, as of early last year- a stellar
    performance even by Saudi standards.

    Surely some seed money was in order and Bahia Hariri wasted no time in
    funding Fund al Sham in the Taamar neighborhood just outside of Ain el
    Helweh, whose PLO factions objected to the group inside its
    'jurisdiction' while her nephew arranged funding for Fatah al-Islam and
    already existing Sunni Salafist groups including Osbat al Ansar and Jund
    Allah, both mainly staffed by Lebanese and beefed up with outsiders
    brought in for the purpose. Mohammad Kobanni, the Grand Sunni Mufti and
    Hariri aide, is accused of chipping in with "religious scholar visas" to
    ease entry into Lebanon of al Qeada affiliated Salafists
    Hezbollah is the mortal enemy of al Qeada, who considers Shia apostates.
    In return, Hezbollah acuses al Qeada of subverting the Koran and
    conducting terrorism, as they made clear in their denouncements of Al
    Qeada following 9/11. But many observers here do not expect them to
    fight each other.

    When the Welch Club decided to move Fatah al-Islam from the Southern
    Sidon base at Ein el Helweh, to the North Lebanon Nahr al-Bared camp,
    Ms. Bahia Hariri admlits that she paid for the transplantation,
    according to Arab Monitor of 6/6/07. Given the disaster that happened
    when Jund al-Sham's unruly twin ambushed the Lebanese Army on May 20,
    Mrs. Hariri feels awful and has generously arranged with the Army to
    provide full scholarships to all the children of the killed soldiers, 61
    as of June 13, 2007, for an average of 2 per day killed, with five times
    that number wounded and more than 80 civilians killed.

    Both Jund al-Sham and Fatah al Islam are joined together by friendship
    and family with al-Sham supplying some of the initial fighters for
    establishing FAI. It is also why so many checkpoints have now been set
    up along the Sidon to Tripoli road, which funnels men and material in
    both directions. The June 4, 2007 attack by JAS in Sidon's Ein el Helwe
    camp against the army was in direct response to the Army increasing
    pressure on FAI in Nahr al-Bared.
    JAS has admitted ties to the Hariri family and both JAS and FAS were
    funded from the same spigot of Washington/Riyadh/Hariri (Welch Club)
    money. The March 14th group, but particularly Saad Hariri, is now
    calling for the complete destruction of both these Welch Club creations,
    as is the Palestinian Authority envoy, Abbas Zaki, who wants increased
    recognition for Palestinians and better conditions in Lebanon for the
    420,000 Refugees. Zaki also wants policing authority for all of the 12
    Palestinian camps in Lebanon. The Welch Club objects to Zaki's proposal
    because they fear the Palestinians will become too powerful and may even
    demand representation in Parliament!

    On May 22, 2006 the Welch club got orders from the White House to pull
    the plug on the North Lebanon Sunni army project following the horrific
    slaughter of May 20 when it became obvious that the Salafists were out
    of control, more interested in fighting Israel than Hezbollah or the
    Palestinians, and too many questions were being asked about who they
    were, how they got into Lebanon and who arranged and eased their entry
    and for details about one of the strangest " bank robberies" ever to
    occur. On June 11, 2007, Michel Aoun, leader of the largest group of
    Christians in Lebanon demanded a thorough investigation of the whole
    Nahr al-Bared conflict and the involvement of the Siniora government.

    As recently as May 2007, Al-Akbar (Algeria) reminds us, that the Welch
    Club was bad mounting the Lebanese army claiming it was too sympatric to
    Hezbollah, had too many Shia in its rank and file and may not be up to
    the job of protecting Lebanon, not from Israel of course but from '
    internal dangers'.

    The Bush Administration was in no hurry to help the Army. That has all
    changed since the events of May 20 and Fatah al-Islam's attack on the
    army which condemned to futility the Northern Sunni Army project. No way
    could these compromised Sunni Salafist groups be used by their sponsors
    as the catalyst of the Northern Sunni Army, hence the new US interest in
    the Army of the Republic of Lebanon.

    Hence the Bush administration joined every would-be patriotic group in
    Lebanon which supports the army publicly. The Bush administration
    speeded up already paid for spare parts and ammunition for the Lebanese
    army. In the coming months more than $230 million is to be directed to
    Lebanon for the army from Washington with financing available, not gifts.

    The new Bush administration largess for Lebanon's army should be kept in
    perspective and not confused with military and economic aid to Israel .
    Over the past 10 years average US aid to Lebanon (mainly for
    reconstruction following Israeli attacks with US weapons) has been
    approximately $ 33 million per year. Compared with $ 15.1 million per
    day to Israel for an annual average of 5.7Billion. Indeed, Israel ,
    slightly larger than Lebanon, makes up roughly 0.06% of the Worlds
    population but receives more US aid than all of South America, Central
    America and Africa (minus Egypt) combined. Of total US foreign aid to
    the other 195 countries members of the UN, Israel gets more than a
    quarter of the entire US foreign aid budget. Or looked at another way,
    each Israeli family receives approximately $ 6,000 in US aid per year,
    American families $3,300 and Lebanese families $ 12. The Palestinians
    get 29 cents per family.

    According to Beirut press reports of 6/12/07, a Lebanese Army official
    stated during an interview with the Daily Star, "We (the Lebanese Army)
    also suspect that the U.S. is putting pressure on other Western and Arab
    countries to not supply us with weapons, and to only provide us with
    ammunition and vehicles for logistical support."

    He said that a military aid package pledged by Belgium late last year,
    which included 45 Leopard-1 tanks, 70 armored personnel carriers and 24
    M109 self-propelled guns, had suddenly gone to another country with no
    clear explanation from Brussels.

    "Officials in Belgium had made the pledge... and we had made all the
    needed arrangements before they suddenly changed their minds and said
    they sold the weapons to another country," said the official.

    A Belgian Ministry of Defense official said June 8 that ´the donation of
    equipment was canceled because of the Belgian government's worries about
    the political-military situation in Lebanon" Translation: The Bush
    administration worries it may be used against Israel.

    The same Bush Administration shackling of the Lebanese army occurred
    with the nine French Gazelle attack helicopters donated by the United
    Arab Emirates (UAE) which can be seen daily whizzing along the campus of
    the American University of Beirut up the coast to Nahr al Bared. The
    Gazelles arrived with 20mm machine guns but without HOT antitank
    missiles. The Lebanese army states they were told that" the missiles
    were not included because they were old and needed replacing" According
    to former long time UNIFIL, spokesman, Timur Goksel, now lecturing at
    AUB, it's a simple and quick matter to stick on the missiles".
    Nevertheless, without the missiles the LAF sends the Gazelles into
    action against Fatah Al-Islam in the Nahr Al-Bared refugee camp with
    machine guns, basically to chase snipers off rooftops.

    Many in Lebanon believe that the Lebanese army is being designed by
    Washington and Tel Aviv to be an internal Welch Club police force with
    the capability to fight the Palestinians or Hezbollah if need be, but
    definitely not to be given arms necessary to protect Lebanon from Israel.

    The past three weeks have seen numerous arrests of Palestinians by the
    Lebanese army outside of Nahr al Bared and between Tripoli and Beiut
    with reports of torture. Human Rights Watch condemned these practices
    yesterday and if they don't cease the Army may lose much of the goodwill
    it has been receiving from the public.

    Two weeks ago Hezbollah's Secretary-General Hassan Nassrallah warned the
    need to respect a 'red line' on attacks on the Army as well as entry
    into Nahr al-Bared. Criticized at the time in some quarters, Nassrallah
    appears to have been correct in his counsel in light of the high
    casualties and humiliation being suffered by the army and the
    destruction of al-Bared and civilian casualties.

    A just released study by the Fafo Institute for Applied International
    Studies focused on the socio-economic profile of Nahr al-Bared and
    concluded that approximately "half" of the employed residents of Nahr
    al-Bared may lose their jobs and incomes as a result of the conflict.
    "Unlike other refugee camps in Lebanon , the majority of the refugees in
    Nahr al-Bared worked within the camp," Age A. Tiltnes, the study's
    researcher and Middle East coordinator, reported.

    Prior to the conflict, 63 percent of the labor force in Nahr al-Bared
    worked inside the camp. The study lists "physical destruction" as the
    main difficulty refugees will face when trying to resume their previous
    jobs. Two thirds of the businesses will be prevented from functioning
    because of the copious destruction: demolished buildings, including
    offices, workshops and stores, as well as ruined roads and a broken
    sanitation and electricity infrastructure.

    "They will have no jobs and no livelihood once they go back," said
    Tiltnes, adding that "investments and external help" will be needed to
    get the displaced back on their feet. With most of the schools in Nahr
    al Bared destroyed, some 5,000 school children are without classrooms (a
    third of the residents of al Bared are younger than 15 and nearly half
    under 20).

    Further fallout from the failed "Sunni army" project includes increasing
    evidence that the Bush administration is playing the same role in
    Lebanon as it is in Iraq. The Iraqi Shia leader Moktada Sadr claims the
    US is behind the sectarian violence in Iraq and the schism between Iraqi
    ethnic groups and the country's economic hardships. He is calling for a
    "cultural resistance'' against US influences and what he called the US
    attack on Islam.

    Sadr's views are resonating in Lebanon where increasingly the various
    confessions are realizing that the Bush administrations "great support
    for Lebanon's young Democracy" may be short lived and quickly abandoned
    if the Lebanon continues to resist Israel.

    In Iraq , where the Islamic Army is one of the strongest and
    best-organized Sunni armed groups, responsible for dozens of attacks on
    American forces, and at odds with al-Qeada, both groups appear to have
    settled their differences and have united against the Bush
    administration occupation. It appears quite likely that, despite
    yesterdays attack on the Shia Imam el-Askary Mosque Sunni and Shia
    groups in Lebanon will be able to avoid continued internecine warfare.

    In Lebanon , evidence of Sunni, Shia, and Christian mutual tolerance was
    heard in last Sunday's Sermon (6/10/07) by the Maronite Patriach
    Nasrallah Sfeir, in east Beirut.

    The Maronite Patriarch sounded conciliatory towards the Muslim
    population including Hezbollah, appearing mindful of the positive
    Shia-Christian friendship and cooperation which was encouraged by the
    vanished Imam, Musa al-Sadr, who worked with the Christian leadership in
    the Sidon area, sometimes delivering sermons in Churches and
    participating in a Christian wedding. The Maronite Patriach is aware
    that during the July 2006 war there were many occasions when Christians
    gave refuge to Shia neighbors during the Israeli attacks. Cases such as
    in Aita al-Shaab when following days of Israeli artillery and bombing
    some of the residents were able to emerge from shelters and make their
    way to the nearby Christian village of Rmeish where they were sheltered.
    Israel sometimes appears to avoid bombing Christian villages except in
    cases like Qana. Shia protection for Christians includes efforts during
    the 1860's Druze massacres of Christians in the mountains east of Beirut
    to help the latter move to safety in South Lebanon, as well as the Shia
    Fatwa issued at the time of the Turkish massacres of Armenians in 1906
    stating that it was the religious duty of Muslims to aid and protect the
    Christians.

    One of the lasting impressions of some Americans from the July 2006 war
    in Lebanon was the site of Muslim Hezbollah soldiers, protecting
    Christians seeking shelter, from Israel soldiers and bombs, inside their
    Holy Grotto at Qana where according to Christian tradition, the Virgin
    Mary asked her son Jesus to make wine for poor villages who gathered
    from surrounding villages to watch the event.

    Some of us forget the two millennia of close friendships among all
    religions in the "northern holy land" of Lebanon where Jesus frequently
    visited friends to escape the hostility of the Sarihedrin to the South
    and to enjoy the villages and the sea at Tyre and Sidon.

    When Pope Benedict spoke with President Bush the other day and expressed
    his concern over the safety of Iraq's Christians, it included his angst
    over the 18,000 Iraqi Christians estimated to have been killed by US
    bombs and artillery. Many Iraqi Christians are making their way to Syria
    and Lebanon given these countries traditions of religious tolerance.

    And the blowback continues....


    Franklin Lamb's recent book, The Price We Pay: A Quarter Century of
    Israel's use of American Weapon's against Lebanon (1978-2006) is
    available at Amazon.com.uk. Hezbollah: A Brief Guide for Beginners is
    expected in early summer.

    Dr. Lamb can be reached at [email protected].

    http://www.counterpunch.org/lam b06152007.html
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