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Puppet Regime: As The West Looks Anxiously At Iraq And Afghanistan,

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  • Puppet Regime: As The West Looks Anxiously At Iraq And Afghanistan,

    PUPPET REGIME: AS THE WEST LOOKS ANXIOUSLY AT IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN, DANGEROUS CRACKS ARE OPENING UP IN LEBANON - AND THE WHITE HOUSE IS DETERMINED TO PROP UP FOUAD SINIORA'S GOVERNMENT
    Robert Fisk Columnist

    Belfast Telegraph
    CTY Edition
    March 20, 2007 Tuesday

    The spring rain beat down like ball-bearings on the flat roof of
    General Claudio Graziano's office. Much of southern Lebanon looked
    like a sea of mud this week but all was optimism and light for the
    Italian commander of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon,
    now 11,000 strong and still expecting South Korea to add to his
    remarkable 29-nation international army.

    He didn't recall how the French battalion almost shot down an Israeli
    jet last year - it was before his time - and he dismissed last month's
    border shoot-out between Israeli and Lebanese troops.

    No specific threats had been directed at Unifil, the UN's man in
    southern Lebanon insisted - though I noticed he paused for several
    seconds before replying to my question - and his own force was
    now augmented by around 9,000 Lebanese troops patrolling on the
    Lebanese-Israeli frontier.

    There was some vague talk of "terrorist threats ... associated with
    al-Qa'ida" - UN generals rarely use the word 'terrorism', but then
    again Graziano is also a Nato general - yet nothing hard.

    Yes, Lebanese army intelligence was keeping him up to date. So it
    must have come as a shock to the good general when the Lebanese
    Interior Minister Hassan Sabeh last week announced that a Lebanese
    Internal Security Force unit had arrested four Syrian members of a
    Palestinian "terrorist group" linked to al-Qa'ida and working for
    the Syrian intelligence services who were said to be responsible for
    leaving bombs in two Lebanese minibuses on February 13, killing three
    civilians and wounding another 20.

    Now it has to be said that there's a lot of scepticism about this
    story. Not because Syria has, inevitably, denied any connection to
    Lebanese bombings but because in a country that has never in 30 years
    solved a political murder, it's pretty remarkable that the local
    Lebanese constabulary can solve this one - and very conveniently so
    since Mr Sabeh's pro-American government continues to accuse Syria
    of all things bestial in the state of Lebanon.

    According to the Lebanese government - one of those anonymous sources
    so beloved of the press - the arrested men were also planning attacks
    on Unifil and had maps of the UN's military patrol routes in the south
    of the country. And a drive along the frontier with Israel shows that
    the UN is taking no chances. Miles of razor wire and 20ft concrete
    walls protect many of its units.

    The Italians, like their French counterparts, have created little
    "green zones" - we Westerners seem to be doing that all over the
    Middle East - where carabinieri police officers want photo identity
    cards for even the humblest of reporters.

    These are combat units complete with their own armour and tanks
    although no-one could explain to me this week in what circumstances
    the tanks could possibly be used and I rather suspect they don't know.

    Surely they won't fire at the Israelis and - unless they want to go
    to war with the Hizbollah - I cannot imagine French Leclerc tanks are
    going to be shooting at the Middle East's most disciplined guerrilla
    fighters.

    But Unifil, like it or not, is on only one side of the border,
    the Lebanese side, and despite their improving relations with the
    local Shia population - the UN boys are going in for cash handouts
    to improve water supplies and roads, "quick impact projects" as they
    are called in the awful UN-speak of southern Lebanon - there are few
    Lebanese who do not see them as a buffer force to protect Israel.

    Last year's UN Resolution 1701 doesn't say this, but it does call for
    "the disarmament of all armed groups in Lebanon".

    This was a clause, of course, which met with theenthusiastic approval
    of the United States. For "armed groups", read Hizbollah.

    The reality is that Washington is now much more deeply involved in
    Lebanon's affairs than most people, even the Lebanese, realise.

    Indeed there is a danger that - confronted by its disastrous
    "democratic" experiment in Iraq - the US government is now turning
    to Lebanon to prove its ability to spread democracy in the Middle East.

    Needless to say, the Americans and the British have been generous in
    supplying the Lebanese army with new equipment, jeeps and Humvees and
    anti-riot gear (to be used against who, I wonder?) and there was even
    a hastily denied report that Defence Minister Michel Murr would be
    picking up some missile-firing helicopters after his recent visit to
    Washington. Who, one also asks oneself, were these mythical missiles
    supposed to be fired at?

    Every Lebanese potentate, it now seems, is heading for Washington.

    Walid Jumblatt, the wittiest, most nihilistic and in many ways the
    most intelligent, is also among the most infamous.

    He was deprived of his US visa until 2005 for uncharitably saying that
    he wished a mortar shell fired by Iraqi insurgents into the Baghdad
    "green zone" had killed then- Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz.

    But fear not. Now that poor old Lebanon is to become the latest star
    of US foreign policy, Jumblatt sailed into Washington for a 35-minute
    meeting with President George Bush - that's only 10 minutes less
    than Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert got - and has also met with
    Condi Rice, Dick Cheney, Defence Secretary Gates and the somewhat
    more disturbing Stephen Hadley, America's National Security Adviser.

    There are Lebanese admirers of Jumblatt who have been asking
    themselves if his recent tirades against Syria and the Lebanese
    government's Hizbollah opponents - not to mention his meetings in
    Washington - aren't risking another fresh grave in Lebanon's expanding
    cemeteries. Brave man Jumblatt is. Whether he's a wise man will be
    left to history.

    But it is America's support for Fouad Siniora's government -
    Jumblatt is a foundation stone of this - that is worrying many
    Lebanese. With Shia out of the government of their own volition,
    Siniora's administration may well be, as the pro-Syrian President
    Emile Lahoud says, unconstitutional; and the sectarian nature of
    Lebanese politics came violently to life in January with stonings
    and shooting battles on the streets of Beirut.

    Because Iraq and Afghanistan have captured the West's obsessive
    attention since then, however, there is a tendency to ignore the
    continuing, dangerous signs of confessionalismin Lebanon. In the
    largely Sunni Beirut suburb of Tarek al-Jdeide, several Shia families
    have left for unscheduled "holidays".

    Many Sunnis will no longer shop in the cheaper department stores in the
    largely Shia southern suburb of Dahiya. More seriously, the Lebanese
    security forces have been sent into the Armenian Christian town of
    Aanjar in the Bekaa Valley after a clump of leaflets was found at
    one end of the town calling on its inhabitants to "leave Muslim land".

    Needless to say, there have been no reports of this frightening
    development in the Lebanese press.

    Aanjar was in fact given by the French to the Armenians after they
    were forced to leave the city of Alexandretta in 1939 - the French
    allowed a phoney referendum there to let the Turks take over in the
    vain hope that Ankara would fight Hitler - and Aanjar's citizens hold
    their title deeds.

    But receiving threats that they are going to be ethnically cleansed
    from their homes is - for Armenians - a terrible reminder of their
    genocide at the hands of the Turks in 1915.

    Lebanon likes its industrious, highly educated Armenians who are also
    represented in parliament. But that such hatred could now touch them
    is a distressing witness to the fragility of the Lebanese state.

    True, Saad Hariri, the Sunni son of the murdered ex-prime minister
    Rafik Hariri, has been holding talks with the Shia speaker of
    parliament, Nabi Berri - the Malvolio of Lebanese politics - and
    the Saudis have been talking to the Iranians and the Syrians about a
    "solution" to the Lebanese crisis.

    Siniora - who was appointed to his job, not elected - seems quite
    prepared to broaden Shia representation in his cabinet but not at
    the cost of providing them with a veto over his decisions.

    One of these decisions is Siniora's insistence that the UN goes
    ahead with its international tribunal into Hariri's murder which the
    government - and the United States - believe was Syria's work.

    Yet cracks are appearing. France now has no objections to direct talks
    with Damascus and Javier Solana has been to plead with President Bashar
    Assad for Syria's help in reaching "peace, stability and independence"
    for Lebanon.

    What price the UN tribunal if Syria agrees to help? Already Assad's
    ministers are saying that if Syrian citizens are found to be implicated
    in Hariri's murder, then they will have to be tried by a Syrian
    court - something which would not commend itself to the Lebanese or
    to the Americans.

    Siniora, meanwhile, can now bask in the fact that after the US
    administration asked Congress to approve $770m for the Beirut
    government to meet its Paris III donor conference pledges, Lebanon
    will be the third largest recipient of US aid per capita of population.

    How much of this will have to be spent on the Lebanese military,
    we still don't know. Siniora, by the way, was also banned from the
    United States for giving a small sum to an Islamic charity during a
    visit several years ago to a Beirut gathering hosted by Sayed Hussein
    Fadlallah, whom the CIA tried to murder in 1985 for his supposed
    links to the Hizbollah. Now he is an American hero.

    Which is all to Hizbollah's liking. However faithful its leader,
    Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, may be to Iran (or Syria), the more Siniora's
    majority government is seen to be propped up by America, the deeper
    the social and political divisions in Lebanon become.

    The "tink thank" lads, as I call them, can fantasise about America's
    opportunities. "International support for the Lebanese government
    will do a great deal for advancing the cause of democracy and helping
    avoid civil war," David Shenker of the "Washington Institute for Near
    East Policy" pronounced last week.

    "... the Bush administration has wisely determined not to abandon the
    Lebanese to the tender mercies of Iran and Syria, which represents
    an important development towards ensuring the government's success,"
    he said.

    I wouldn't be too sure about that. Wherever Washington has supported
    Middle East "democracy" recently - although it swiftly ditched Lebanon
    during its blood-soaked war last summer on the ridiculous assumption
    that by postponing a ceasefire the Israelis could crush the Hizbollah -
    its efforts have turned into a nightmare.

    Now we know that Israeli prime minister Olmert had already pre-planned
    a war with Lebanon if his soldiers were captured by the Hizbollah,
    Nasrallah is able to hold up his guerrilla army as defenders of
    Lebanon, rather than provokers of a conflict which cost at least
    1,300 Lebanese civilian lives.

    And going all the way to Washington to save Lebanon is an odd way of
    behaving. The answers lie here, not in the United States.

    As a friend put it to me, "If I have a bad toothache, I don't book
    myself into a Boston clinic and fly across the Atlantic - I go to my
    Beirut dentist!"
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