Beirut waits as Syrian masters send Hezbollah allies into battle
By Robert Fisk
07/13/06 "The
Independent" --- - It's about Syria. That was the
frightening message delivered by Damascus yesterday when it allowed
its Hizbollah allies to cross the UN Blue Line in southern Lebanon,
kill three Israeli soldiers, capture two others and demand the
release of Lebanese prisoners in Israeli jails.
Within hours, a country that had begun to believe in peace - without
a single Syrian soldier left on its soil - found itself once more at
war.
Israel held the powerless Lebanese government responsible - as if
the sectarian and divided cabinet in Beirut can control Hizbollah.
That is Syria's message. Fouad Siniora, Lebanon's affable Prime
Minister, may have thought he was running the country but it is
President Bashar Assad in Damascus who can still bring life or death
to a land that lost 150,000 lives in 15 years of civil conflict.
And there is one certain bet that Syria will rely on; that despite
all Israel's threats of inflicting "pain" on Lebanon, this war will
run out of control until - as has so often happened in the past -
Israel itself calls for a ceasefire and releases prisoners. Then the
international big-hitters will arrive and make their way to the real
Lebanese capital - Damascus, not Beirut - and appeal for help.
That is probably the plan. But will it work? Israel has threatened
Lebanon's newly installed infrastructure and Hizbollah has
threatened Israel with further conflict. And therein lies the
problem; to get at Hizbollah, Israel must send its soldiers into
Lebanon - and then it will lose more soldiers.
Indeed when a single Merkava tank crossed the border into Lebanon
yesterday morning, it struck a Hizbollah mine, which killed three
more Israelis.
Certainly Hizbollah's attack broke the United Nations rules in
southern Lebanon - a "violent breach" of the Blue Line, it was
called by Geir Pedersen, the senior UN official in the country - and
was bound to unleash the air force, tanks and gunboats of Israel on
to this frail, dangerous country. Many Lebanese in Beirut were
outraged when gangs of Hizbollah supporters drove through the
streets of the capital with party flags to "celebrate" the attack on
the border.
Christian members of the Lebanese government were voicing increasing
frustration at the Shia Muslim militia's actions - which only proved
how powerless the Beirut administration is.
By nightfall, Israel's air raids had begun to spread across the
country - the first civilians to die were killed when an aircraft
bombed a small road bridge at Qasmiyeh - but would they go even
further and include a target in Syria? This would be the gravest
escalation so far and would have US as well as UN diplomats
appealing for that familiar, tired quality - "restraint".
And prisoner swaps is probably all that will come of this. In
January 2004, for example, Israel freed 436 Arab prisoners and
released the bodies of 59 Lebanese for burial, in return for an
Israeli spy and the bodies of three Israeli soldiers.
As long ago as 1985, three Israeli soldiers captured in 1982 were
traded for 1,150 Lebanese and Palestinian prisoners. So Hizbollah
knows - and the Israelis know - how this cruel game is played. How
many have to die before the swaps begin is a more important
question.
What is also clear is that for the first time Israel is facing two
Islamist enemies - in southern Lebanon and in Gaza - rather than
nationalist guerrillas. The Palestinian Hamas movement's spokesmen
in Lebanon yesterday denied that there was any co-ordination with
Hizbollah. This may be literally true but Hizbollah timed its attack
when Arab feelings are embittered by the international sanctions
placed on the democratically elected Hamas government and then the
war in Gaza. Hizbollah will ride the anger over Gaza in the hope of
escaping condemnation for its capture and killing of Israelis
yesterday.
And there is one more little, sinister question. In past violence of
this kind, Syria's power was controlled by the Hafez Assad, one of
the shrewdest Arabs in modern history. But there are those -
including Lebanese politicians - who believe that Bashar, the son,
lacks his late father's wisdom and understanding of power. This is a
country, remember, whose own Minister of Interior allegedly
committed suicide last year and whose soldiers had to leave Lebanon
amid suspicion that Syria had set up the murder of Rafik Hariri,
Lebanon's former prime minister, last year. All this may now seem
academic. But Damascus remains, as always, the key.
It's about Syria. That was the frightening message delivered by
Damascus yesterday when it allowed its Hizbollah allies to cross the
UN Blue Line in southern Lebanon, kill three Israeli soldiers,
capture two others and demand the release of Lebanese prisoners in
Israeli jails.
Within hours, a country that had begun to believe in peace - without
a single Syrian soldier left on its soil - found itself once more at
war.
Israel held the powerless Lebanese government responsible - as if
the sectarian and divided cabinet in Beirut can control Hizbollah.
That is Syria's message. Fouad Siniora, Lebanon's affable Prime
Minister, may have thought he was running the country but it is
President Bashar Assad in Damascus who can still bring life or death
to a land that lost 150,000 lives in 15 years of civil conflict.
And there is one certain bet that Syria will rely on; that despite
all Israel's threats of inflicting "pain" on Lebanon, this war will
run out of control until - as has so often happened in the past -
Israel itself calls for a ceasefire and releases prisoners. Then the
international big-hitters will arrive and make their way to the real
Lebanese capital - Damascus, not Beirut - and appeal for help.
That is probably the plan. But will it work? Israel has threatened
Lebanon's newly installed infrastructure and Hizbollah has
threatened Israel with further conflict. And therein lies the
problem; to get at Hizbollah, Israel must send its soldiers into
Lebanon - and then it will lose more soldiers.
Indeed when a single Merkava tank crossed the border into Lebanon
yesterday morning, it struck a Hizbollah mine, which killed three
more Israelis.
Certainly Hizbollah's attack broke the United Nations rules in
southern Lebanon - a "violent breach" of the Blue Line, it was
called by Geir Pedersen, the senior UN official in the country - and
was bound to unleash the air force, tanks and gunboats of Israel on
to this frail, dangerous country. Many Lebanese in Beirut were
outraged when gangs of Hizbollah supporters drove through the
streets of the capital with party flags to "celebrate" the attack on
the border.
Christian members of the Lebanese government were voicing increasing
frustration at the Shia Muslim militia's actions - which only proved
how powerless the Beirut administration is.
By nightfall, Israel's air raids had begun to spread across the
country - the first civilians to die were killed when an aircraft
bombed a small road bridge at Qasmiyeh - but would they go even
further and include a target in Syria? This would be the gravest
escalation so far and would have US as well as UN diplomats
appealing for that familiar, tired quality - "restraint".
And prisoner swaps is probably all that will come of this. In
January 2004, for example, Israel freed 436 Arab prisoners and
released the bodies of 59 Lebanese for burial, in return for an
Israeli spy and the bodies of three Israeli soldiers.
As long ago as 1985, three Israeli soldiers captured in 1982 were
traded for 1,150 Lebanese and Palestinian prisoners. So Hizbollah
knows - and the Israelis know - how this cruel game is played. How
many have to die before the swaps begin is a more important
question.
What is also clear is that for the first time Israel is facing two
Islamist enemies - in southern Lebanon and in Gaza - rather than
nationalist guerrillas. The Palestinian Hamas movement's spokesmen
in Lebanon yesterday denied that there was any co-ordination with
Hizbollah. This may be literally true but Hizbollah timed its attack
when Arab feelings are embittered by the international sanctions
placed on the democratically elected Hamas government and then the
war in Gaza. Hizbollah will ride the anger over Gaza in the hope of
escaping condemnation for its capture and killing of Israelis
yesterday.
And there is one more little, sinister question. In past violence of
this kind, Syria's power was controlled by the Hafez Assad, one of
the shrewdest Arabs in modern history. But there are those -
including Lebanese politicians - who believe that Bashar, the son,
lacks his late father's wisdom and understanding of power. This is a
country, remember, whose own Minister of Interior allegedly
committed suicide last year and whose soldiers had to leave Lebanon
amid suspicion that Syria had set up the murder of Rafik Hariri,
Lebanon's former prime minister, last year. All this may now seem
academic. But Damascus remains, as always, the key.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments -
Click Here For Comment Policy
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us