Conflict in the Middle East is
Mission Implausible
The UN troops claim they are in Lebanon to protect the Shia.
The Shia think they're there to protect Israel from
Hizbollah. Is this because the peacekeepers are really a
Nato army in disguise?
By Robert Fisk
11/15/06 "The
Independent" --- - The blue and white UN flag
looks good in the morning over these soft, pale hills. For
all of 28 years, it has flown beside Irish battalions,
Nepalese battalions, Senegalese battalions, Finnish
battalions, all kinds of battalions, from every worthy
neutral nation you can imagine. But now the flag snaps over
French battalions, Spanish battalions, Italian battalions,
German naval units, over the offices of four Nato generals,
two French, one Spanish and one Italian.
Unifil, the United Nations - wait for it - Interim Force in
Lebanon, is now in effect a Nato force which has all this
power and anti-aircraft missiles and tanks and artillery
spread over these beautiful hills. It is a "buffer" force,
so it claims to the Shia villages among whom it lives. It is
there to "protect" them from the Israelis who bombarded them
so savagely after the Lebanese Shia Hizbollah army captured
two Israeli soldiers and killed three others last July - and
then fought off the Israeli army for 34 devastating days in
which almost a hundred Israeli civilians and well over a
thousand Lebanese civilians were killed (10 to one being a
normal casualty count around here).
But life has changed. The Unifil force is not the friendly,
neutral, soft army it used to be, backed up by Indian troops
(among the best) and Nepalese (among the worst) and Fijian
(among the friendliest) and Ghanaian soldiers, but a
"robust" army - to use Tony Blair's distinctive un-robust
semantics - with Nato soldiers trained to fire back and to
take no nonsense from the militias of southern Lebanon or
from the Israeli army. To which one can only say: ho hum.
A few days ago, for example, French troops got to within
"two seconds" of firing their anti-aircraft missiles at an
Israeli pilot who was making mock attacks on their battalion
headquarters at Bourj Qalawiyeh. This, at least, is what the
French Defence Minister said when she objected to Israel's
continued over-flights of Lebanon. The reality is somewhat
different. Ever since they took casualties from a helicopter
in Ivory Coast, the French government will not deploy troops
without 155mm artillery, Leclerc tanks and anti-aircraft
missiles. The rockets are programmed to fire when a
non-transponder attack aircraft approaches French positions;
French troops - desperately trying to prevent their own
missiles from firing at an indisciplined Israeli pilot -
were two seconds short of allowing their rocket to shoot at
the Israeli when they managed to pull the computer disk out
of the firing mechanism.
But these are incidents, not politics. The reality is that
the people of southern Lebanon - Shia Muslims and a few
Christians - know very well that the new force is there for
Israel's protection, not for theirs. If it was to protect
Lebanon as well as Israel, it would be on both sides of the
border - in Israel as well as in Lebanon - which it is not.
It is, in the words of one Lebanese landowner who stands to
profit from the UN's presence, "placed here to do what
Israel failed to do during its military operations - to keep
the Hizbollah away from the frontier".
Only, of course, that is not the case. General Alain
Pellegrini, the French commander of what the French like to
call Finul Plus, makes it clear that it is not his job to
disarm the Lebanese guerrilla army which fought off the
Israelis last summer. UN Security Council Resolution 1701
requires him only to assist the Lebanese army in performing
such a task. And since the Lebanese army - more than half of
whose troops are themselves Shia - will not be doing this,
the UN contingent will not be taking missiles off the
Hizbollah. Indeed, the only weapons moving across Lebanon
which the Lebanese army have come across were rockets being
sent back to Syria from here for safe-keeping - which is not
exactly the Israeli version of reality.
So what is Unifil here for? As a symbol of the West's
earnest desire, no doubt, to bring "peace" to the Middle
East (whatever that means). As an attempt to "defang" Iran
by disarming its protégés in the Hizbollah. But it will not
do that. "You mustn't have this fixation about asking all
the time if Unifil is going to disarm the Hizbollah,"
Pellegrini snapped at a Lebanese reporter this week.
Hizbollah remains well-armed, south of the Litani river,
and, according to its leadership, ready to fight the next
war against Israel. Which is why Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, the
Hizbollah commander, is demanding more seats in the Lebanese
government.
Pellegrini now talks about the dangers of "deterioration" in
his UN zone, and he is right. One of the wisest owls in
Lebanon, Timur Goksel - the Turkish former assistant to
Unifil's force commander - once made a dangerous, accurate,
prediction of UN mission capability. "If a UN mission begins
well, it might work," he said. "If it begins badly, it will
fail." He was talking about Unprofor in Bosnia, but he might
have been talking about Unifil. And this mission is not
beginning well. The Israelis are daily over-flying Lebanon
because, they say, they want to know what Unifil is doing to
prevent the flow of arms to Hizbollah. The French have asked
George Bush to end the flights, but Mr Bush hasn't the
political will to do this. So the Lebanese Shias are asking
why Unifil does not protect them from the Israeli aircraft
which killed so many of their loved ones this summer. But
there are other, more dangerous signs for Unifil.
In the Sunni Lebanese cities to the north - in Sidon and in
Tripoli - there are families who have sent their sons and
cousins to Iraq to fight the Americans. They have videotapes
of these young men as they set off to car-bomb - to
suicide-bomb - the US occupation forces in Iraq. They have
shown these videos to me. They, too, see the "new" Unifil as
a Nato force. In the Palestinian refugee camp of Ein el-Helweh,
for example, there is now a rumour. That "if you can drive
well, you are at the top of the list". In other words, if
you can drive well, you are the next in the list for suicide
bombing.
The French take this seriously. They should. Which is why
they are using concrete stockades to surround their camps -
Baghdad-style - from the bombers. Al-Qa'ida has already
threatened Unifil's new army in southern Lebanon. "We are
not occupiers," Pellegrini has repeatedly announced. But why
did he have to say this?
With good fortune - something the UN should worship at a
special altar in New York - its army in southern Lebanon
might just survive. If it can prevent Italian troops from
shoplifting in the village of Haris - the relevant soldiers
have been sent home in disgrace - and stop Israeli troops
from recrossing the Lebanese border, their "mission" might
be accomplished. But the political barriers to success are
high. The United States, for instance, is still keen to
blame Syria for the murder of ex-prime minister Rafik Hariri
last year, but the Syrians are insisting that President
Bashar al-Assad had nothing to do with this.
The UN's inquiry into the assassination is slowly
disintegrating. The latest judge - a Belgian - is tacking
away from the Syrians. Assad is no longer mentioned in UN
reports. The finger is being pointed at the late Syrian
minister of the interior who mysteriously killed himself
last year. His brother, according to anti-Assadists, has
also now killed himself. Is the way being cleared for
Syria's assistance to America in Iraq? Does Damascus have
enough power over the resistance to US forces in Iraq to
make it powerful again in Lebanon? Answer: probably, yes.
Down here in southern Lebanon, of course, there are other
arguments. The French and the Spanish and the Italians and
even the Irish, who have returned to their beloved southern
Lebanon with 160 men, are creating a new economy, buying up
the milk, souvenirs, camouflage jackets and cedar trees on
sale - a good enough reason to maintain Unifil in the eyes
of the Shias.
And the Hizbollah - here is a fact which will not sit
happily with the John Boltons of this world at the UN - are
watching every car that drives south of the Litani river.
For they know that if a suicide bomber attacks the French,
they - the Hizbollah - will be blamed. They will not be to
blame. It will be the Sunni Muslim al-Qa'idists to the north
who wish to attack Nato. So Hizbollah will be the most
powerful defenders of the European armies in southern
Lebanon. Now there's something to think about.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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