Syria is a convenient
fallguy for Gemayel’s death
By Jonathan Cook in Nazareth
11/24/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Commentators and columnists are
agreed. Pierre Gemayel’s assassination must have been
the handiwork of Syria because his Christian Phalangists
have been long-time allies of Israel and because, as
industry minister, he was one of the leading figures in
the Lebanese government’s anti-Syria faction. President
Bush thinks so too. Case, apparently, settled.
Unlike my colleagues, I do not claim to know who killed
Gemayel. Maybe Syria was behind the shooting. Maybe, in
Lebanon’s notoriously intrigue-ridden and fractious
political system, someone with a grudge against Gemayel
-- even from within his own party -- pulled the trigger.
Or maybe, Israel once again flexed the muscles of its
long arm in Lebanon.
It seems, however, as if the last possibility cannot be
entertained in polite society. So let me offer a few
impolite thoughts.
As anyone who watches TV crimes series knows, when there
is insufficient physical evidence in a murder
investigation for a conviction, detectives examine the
motives of the parties who stood to benefit from the
crime. Better detectives also consider whether the prime
suspect -- the person who looks at first sight to be the
guilt party -- is not, in fact, being turned into a
fallguy by one of the other parties. The murderer may be
the person who benefits most clearly from the crime, or
the murderer may be the person who benefits from the
prime suspect being fingered for the murder.
As most of our politicians and the media’s commentators
have deduced, suspicion falls automatically on Syria
because the Christian Phalangists are one of Syria’s
main enemies in Lebanon. Partly as a result, they have
opposed recent attempts by Syria’s main ally in Lebanon,
the Shiite group Hizbullah, to win a greater share of
political power.
They are also -- and this seems to clinch it for most
observers -- part of the majority in the pro-American
government of Fuad Siniora that supports a United
Nations tribunal to try the killers of Rafik Hariri, an
anti-Syria politician and leader of the Sunni Muslim
community, who was blown up by a car bomb more than a
year and a half ago.
After all six Shiite ministers walked out of the Siniora
cabinet two weeks ago, and now with Gemayel’s
assassination, the government is close to collapse, and
with it the tribunal that everyone expects to implicate
Syria in Hariri’s murder. If Syria can “bump off”
another two cabinet ministers and the government loses
its quorum, Syria will be off the hook -- or so runs the
logic of Western observers.
But does this “evidence” make Syria the prime suspect or
the fallguy? How will Syria’s wider interests be
affected by the killing, and what about Israel’s
interests in Gemayel’s death -- or rather, its interests
in Hizbullah or Syria being blamed for Gemayel’s death?
In truth, Israel will benefit in numerous ways from the
tensions provoked by the assassination, as the popular
and angry rallies in Beirut against Syria and Hizbullah
are proving.
First, and most obviously, Hizbullah -- as Syria’s main
political and military friend in Lebanon -- has been
forced suddenly on to the back foot. Hizbullah had been
riding high after its triumph over the summer of
withstanding the Israeli assault on Lebanon and routing
an invasion force that tried to occupy the country’s
south.
Hizbullah’s popularity and credibility rose so sharply
that the leaders of the Shiite community had been hoping
to cash in on that success domestically by demanding
more power. That is one of the reasons why the six
Shiite ministers walked out of Siniora’s cabinet.
Despite the way the Shiite parties’ political position
has been presented in the West, there is considerable
justification for their demands. The system of political
representation in Lebanon was rigged decades ago by the
former colonial power, France, to ensure that power is
shared between the Christian and Sunni Muslim
communities. The Shiite Muslims, the country’s largest
religious sect, have been kept on the margins of the
system ever since, effectively disenfranchised.
With their recent military victory, this was the moment
Hizbullah hoped to make a breakthrough and force
political concessions from the Sunnis and Christians,
concessions that indirectly would have benefited Syria.
With Gemayel’s death, the chances of that now look slim
indeed. Hizbullah, and by extension Syria, are the
losers; Israel, which wants Hizbullah weakened, is the
winner.
Second, the assassination has pushed Lebanon to the
brink of another civil war. With a political system
barely able to contain sectarian differences, and with
the various factions in no mood to compromise after the
spate of recent assassinations, there is a real danger
that fighting will return to Lebanon’s streets.
This will most certainly not be to the benefit of
Lebanon or any of its religious communities, who will be
dragged into another round of bloodletting. Hizbullah’s
underground cadres who took on the Israeli war machine
will doubtless have to come out of hiding and will pay a
price against other well-armed militias.
The benefits for Syria are at best mixed. A possible
benefit is that a bloody civil war may increase the
pressure on the United States to talk to Syria, and
possibly to invite it to take a leading role again in
stabilising Lebanon, as it did during the last civil
war.
But, given the continuing ascendancy of the hawks in
Washington, it may have the opposite effect, encouraging
the US to isolate Syria further.
Conversely, civil war may pose serious threats to Syrian
interests -- and offer significant benefits to Israel.
If Hizbullah’s energies are seriously depleted in a
civil war, Israel may be in a much better position to
attack Lebanon again. Almost everyone in Israel is
agreed that the Israeli army is itching to settle the
score with Hizbullah in another round of fighting. This
way it may get the next war it wants on much better
terms; or Israel may be able to fight a proxy war
against Hizbullah by aiding the Shiite group’s
opponents.
Certainly one of the main goals of Israel’s bombing
campaign over the summer, when much of Lebanon’s
infrastructure was destroyed, appeared to be to provoke
such a civil war. It was widely reported at the time
that Israel’s generals hoped that the devastation would
provoke the Christian, Sunni and Druze communities to
rise up against Hizbullah.
Third, Syria is already the prime suspect in Hariri’s
murder and in the assasination of three other Lebanese
politicians and journalists, all seen as anti-Syrian,
over the past 21 months.
The US exploited Hariri’s death, and the widespread
protests that followed, to evict Syria from Lebanon.
Syria’s removal from the scene also paved the way,
whether intentionally or not, for Israel’s assault this
summer, which would have been far more dangerous to the
region had Syria still been in Lebanon.
Despite the looming threat of the UN tribunal into
Hariri’s death, from Syria’s point of view the
accusations have grown stale with time and threatened to
prove only what everyone in the West already believed.
With the walk-out by the Shiite ministers from the
Lebanese government, the investigations were looking all
but redundant in any case.
Gemayel’s assassination, however, has dramatically
revived interest in the question of who killed Hariri
and brings Syria firmly back into the spotlight. None of
this benefits Syria, but no doubt Israel will be able to
take some considerable pleasure in Damascus’s
discomfort.
Fourth, the Israeli government has been under
international and domestic pressure to engage with Syria
and negotiate a return of the Golan Heights, an area of
Syrian territory it has been occupying since 1967.
With it would be resolved the fraught question of the
Shebaa Farms, still occupied by Israel but which
Hizbullah and Syria claim as Lebanese territory that
should have been returned in Israel’s withdrawal from
Lebanon in 2000. The status of the Shebaa Farms has been
one of the main outstanding areas of dispute between
Israel and Hizbullah.
President Assad of Syria has been hinting openly that he
is ready to discuss Israel’s return of the Golan Heights
on better terms for Israel than it has ever before been
offered.
According to reports in the Israeli media, Assad is
prepared to demilitarise the Golan and turn it into a
national park that would be open to Israelis. He would
probably also not insist on a precise return to the 1967
border, which includes the northern shoreline of the Sea
of Galilee. Traditionally Israel’s leaders balked at
this idea, and provoked popular fears by conjuring up
the vision of Assad’s father, Hafez, dipping his feet in
the lake.
But if negotations on the Golan are desperately sought
by the young Assad, Israel shows no interest in
exploring the option. The Israeli prime minister, Ehud
Olmert, has repeatedly ruled out talking to Damascus.
That is for several reasons:
* Israel, as might be expected on past form, is not in
the mood for making territorial concessions;
* it does not want to end Syria’s pariah’s status and
isolation by making a peace deal with it;
* and it fears that such a deal might suggest that
negotiations with the Palestinians are feasible too.
Peace with Syria, in Israeli eyes, would inexorably lead
to pressure to make peace with the Palestinians. That is
most certainly not part of Israel’s agenda.
Gemayel’s death, and Syria being blamed for it, forces
Damascus back into the fold of the “Axis of Evil”, and
forestalls any threat of talks on the Golan.
Fifth, pressure has been growing in the US
Administration to start talking to Syria, if only to try
to recruit it to Washington’s “war on terror”. The US
could desperately do with local local help in managing
its occupation of Iraq. It is unclear whether Bush is
ready to make such an about-turn, but it remains a
possibility.
Key allies such as Britain’s Tony Blair are pushing
strongly for engagement with Syria, both to further
isolate Iran -- the possible target of either a US or
Israeli strike against its presumed ambitions for
nuclear weapons -- and to clear the path to negotiations
with the Palestinians.
Gemayel’s death, and Syria’s blame for it, strengthens
the case of the neoconservatives in Washington --
Israel’s allies in the Administration -- whose star had
begun to wane. They can now argue convincingly that
Syria is unreformed and unreformable. Such an outcome
helps to avert the danger, from Israel’s point of view,
that White House doves might win the argument for
befriending Syria.
For all these reasons, we should be wary of assuming
that Syria is the party behind Gemayel’s death -- or the
only regional actor meddling in Lebanon.
Jonathan Cook is a journalist and writer based in
Nazareth, Israel. His book
“Blood
and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish State
” is published by Pluto Press. His website
is www.jkcook.net
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