Why my
landlord is expecting the worst
The Lebanese army is about the only institution still
working in this country
By Robert Fisk
07/28/07 "The
Independent"
-- -- I returned home to Beirut this week to find my
landlord, Mustafa, welding an armoured door on to the
entrance of his ground-floor flat. "There are many thieves
nowadays, Mr Robert," he pleaded with me. "They will come to
my house first - they will not reach your apartment."
Well, I don't really want an armoured door on my home. But
have things deteriorated this far in Beirut? I pondered what
to say to Mustafa. Truly, I could not repeat the latest
mantra of the late Tony Blair - south of the Lebanese border
and talking about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict - that he
had "a sense of possibilities".
All of us in Lebanon have a "sense of possibilities" right
now - and they are all bad. The Lebanese army - still
fighting its way into the Palestinian Nahr el-Bared refugee
camp in the north of the country more than a month after the
minister of defence announced total victory over the army's
"Fatah al-Islam" opponents - is about the only institution
still working in this country. Yesterday morning's Beirut
newspapers carried front-page pictures of Lebanese soldiers
aboard an armoured personnel carrier, all making "victory"
signs to photographers.
But victory over whom? Day after day, we've been watching
the US air force C-130s arriving at Beirut's Rafiq Hariri
International Airport - named after the man whose
assassination on 14 February detonated the latest tragedy of
Lebanon - with their cargoes of weapons for the Lebanese
army. Would that they had arrived a year ago, many Lebanese
say, when Israel was destroying much of Lebanon. But of
course, a year ago, the American air force C-130s were
arriving in Israel with weapons to be used against Lebanon,
including cluster munitions which have contaminated 36.6
million square metres of Lebanon.
The United Nations (my favourite donkey, which always
clip-clops into the killing fields when the United States
get stuck) reports that 23 Lebanese civilians have been
killed by these wretched weapons since last year's war, and
203 wounded. In a truly pitiful remark, the UN
Secretary-General stated last month: "I regret to have to
report that, despite a number of attempts by UN senior
officials to obtain information regarding the firing data of
cluster munitions utilised (sic) during last summer's
conflict, Israel has yet to provide this critical data." To
which my reaction is: why not ask Washington for the
information? Surely a UN official could take the Amtrak out
of New York and pick up the figures from the Pentagon?
But it is all much worse than this. The Lebanese army has
been reporting to the UN a whole series of violations of its
country's sovereignty, from Israelis - whose daily
over-flights are in total contravention of UN resolutions -
to new Palestinian militant bases inside Lebanese territory.
Take, for example, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine-General Command and "Fatah Intifada", two
institutions much loved of Damascus. According to the
Lebanese authorities, the PFLP-GC has set up camps in
Jubayla and Ain al-Bayda - its 100 guerrillas in these
locations dressed in uniforms that look suspiciously like
those of the Lebanese army itself - while in Ossaya, the
PFLP-GC has installed eight rocket launchers (of 12 and 40
barrels) pointing towards Rayak air base, from which the
Lebanese air force has been flying Kiowa helicopters to the
Nahr el-Bared siege. Other Palestinian units have been
reinforcing positions at Wadi al-Asswad, Balta, Helwa and
Deir al-Achayer, with at least 500 men and anti-tank
artillery and anti-aircraft guns. Under UN resolutions,
Palestinians outside the refugee camps should have been
totally disarmed.
The UN's reports to New York are of the deepest pessimism.
The Blue Line - the so-called frontier between Lebanon and
Israel which does not include the Shebaa farms area,
occupied by Israel but originally belonging to Lebanon - is
"tense and fragile". Hizbollah - which provoked last year's
war by capturing two Israeli soldiers on the Israeli side of
the border - continues to monitor the UN peacekeeping army's
activities, "including through the taking of photographs and
filming".
Needless to say, the Syrians - whose strong-boned hand is
seen behind so many acts of Lebanese mayhem - have protested
their innocence, and even asked for European technology to
assist them in preventing arms smuggling from Lebanon into
Syria. Let me repeat this: from Lebanon into Syria. Yet
another UN report states that arms continue to flow in the
other direction and that tribal and family ties between the
authorities in Lebanon and Syria make arms smuggling easy.
So much for the French decision - back in the aftermath of
the First World War - to chop Lebanon off from Syria and
make it a separate country.
And now the latest UN report on the enquiry into Hariri's
assassination talks of the "deterioration in the political
and security environment". The UN cops have now produced
confidential reports of 2,400 pages into Hariri's murder and
other bombings in Lebanon. The crime scene investigation
alone - the roadway outside the derelict Saint Georges hotel
on which Hariri and 21 others were blown to pieces - has
itself produced 10,000 pages of information.
The UN believes that the man who claimed in a videotape that
he was to kill himself in the suicide bombing - Ahmad Abu
Adass - was murdered before the assassination and that
another man, apparently non-Lebanese (from his teeth, the UN
investigators concluded he was born in a more arid country
than Lebanon), drove the Mitsubishi truck containing the
1,800kg of explosives that killed Hariri. The UN knows that
he was aged 20 to 25, that he had short dark hair, that he
lived in "an urban environment" for the first 10 years of
his earthly life and in the country for the rest.
And the UN has discovered much, much more. But the news is
all bad. Across the Middle East, it is all bad. From the
Taliban resurgence in Afghanistan to the hell-disaster in
Iraq, from the mini-civil war in the Pakistani north-west
frontier to the chaos of Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
This is not a time for a "sense of possibilities". My
landlord is right. Weld the iron door to the entrance of our
homes.
© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
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