|
||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
Lebanon:
Some Perspective from the Arab World
By Asher
Susser
Anyone
following the war in Lebanon in the Israeli media could not but come away
engulfed in deep depression. Israelis and their media tend to focus obsessively
on themselves, their own losses and failings. In contrast to the uniform and
self-centred discussion in Israel, the war with Hezbollah and its consequences
are being discussed in Lebanon and the broader Arab world in a more diverse and
more sophisticated debate.
In the Arab
world, views vary from the one extreme, which sees the ultimate victory of the
Arabs in more missiles and rockets that will surely bring Israel to its knees
in the not too distant future, to those at the other end of the spectrum,
according to whom Hezbollah, Lebanon and the Arabs have, in fact, been
defeated.
At the
height of the war, as Hezbollah rockets regularly sent hundreds of thousands of
Israelis scurrying to the shelters like “rabbits and mice,” as some of the Arab
media noted with undisguised gratification, the mood tended to be militantly
euphoric, buoyed by the widely broadcast images of Israeli suffering and
humiliation. But as the war came to its conclusion and life in Israel returned
pretty much to normal, opinion in the Arab world has shifted to more sober
analysis, as Lebanon, Hezbollah and the Shi’ites face the daunting task of what
will probably be years of multi-billion dollar reconstruction.
Even a
cursory perusal of the Arab press will reveal that Hezbollah’s status in
Lebanon has changed for the worse, as many Lebanese come to the rather shocking
realisation that the south of their country, unknown to them, had in fact been
transformed into an Iranian and Syrian launching pad against Israel, posing an
existential threat to their own livelihoods and to their entire country.
Hezbollah is now on the defensive, trying to protect its political assets
against a more assertive Lebanese domestic majority that seems more determined
than ever to contain Hezbollah’s “state within a state,” so that they are not
drawn again into a destructive war with Israel.
Many in
Lebanon, especially non-Shi’ites, but also some important Shi’ite spokespersons,
are calling for an end to the armed phase of Hezbollah’s development and its
integration into the Lebanese political system, like all other political
parties. In other words, they are demanding the disarming of Hezbollah.
Muna
Fayyad, a Shi’ite professor at the University of Lebanon, and the Mufti of
Tyre, Sayyid Ali al-Amin, for example, both questioned the right of Hezbollah
to bring disaster on the Shi’ites of Lebanon by dragging them into an ill
considered adventure they never wanted, in the interests of a foreign power
like Iran, about whom they were never consulted.
Nasrallah
now has to contend with his newly constructed image as the destroyer of Lebanon
rather than its protector, as he himself regularly claimed before the war as a
main justification for the very existence of his militia. His post-conflict
interview explaining that he would not have ordered the abduction of the two
Israeli soldiers had he expected such a ferocious Israeli response is
indicative of this new predicament.
Arab
commentators are considerably less impressed with Nasrallah’s strategic genius
than some of their Israeli counterparts seem to be. They question the wisdom of
his decision-making, as they wryly ridicule his claims of victory. A poll
conducted in Lebanon in late August revealed that two thirds of the non-Shi’ite
public believed that Hezbollah had actually been defeated in the war.
Hazim
Saghiya, writing in al-Hayat, questioned whether victory could be celebrated on the ruins of Lebanon
by a leader who had to remain in hiding. Another commentator in al-Hayat, Hasan Haydar, compared Nasrallah’s
interview of apology to Egyptian President Gamal Nasser’s admission of defeat
in 1967. The Arabs, he noted, were still paying for the defeat in 1967, and he
wondered for how long the Lebanese and the Arabs would be paying for
Nasrallah’s “ill-considered ‘victory.’”
Abd
al-Mun’im Sa’id, the Director of the al-Ahram’s Centre for Political and
Strategic Studies, urged the Arabs to follow Israel’s example and set up a commission
of inquiry to establish how Nasrallah could have dragged Lebanon into war
without the country and the home front having being at all prepared. Abd
al-Mun’im questioned why Hezbollah had failed to fire its long-range rockets
after Israel had repeatedly bombed Beirut, even though Nasrallah had vowed to
do so. And what about the relative ineffectiveness of the short range rockets?
The damage they caused was limited, and a significant proportion of the Israeli
casualties were actually Arabs.
All of the
above has emboldened the Lebanese Government to deploy its army in the South,
which it had not done for over 30 years, and to accept the stationing of a more
robust international force there as well. Neither of these had hitherto been
acceptable to Hezbollah. These forces will not disarm Hezbollah, which will no
doubt make every effort to rearm and replenish its depleted stocks. All the
same, they do serve the purpose of reasserting the sovereignty of the Lebanese
state in all of its territory. This in turn adds to all the other factors
seeking to reduce Hezbollah’s freedom of action to operate militarily against
Israel from the South.
None of
this would have happened had it not been for the severe damage Israel inflicted
upon Hezbollah’s civilian, political and military infrastructure. The civilian
backbone of Hezbollah, the Shi’ite community of Lebanon, has incurred heavy
loss of life and enormous property damage, which will take years to repair. The
period of reconstruction might not be free of criticism for the leadership that
led the community to this disaster.
And once
rehabilitated would the Shi’ites of Beirut and the south be ready to endanger
everything and go through their recent ordeal all over again, for what
Hezbollah might feel required to do in the service of Iran and Syria? Moreover,
a new Shi’ite middle class has emerged during the last generation and they are
eager to integrate into the mainstream if Lebanese politics, something they
might not be able to achieve as long as Hezbollah is perceived to be serving
the interests of foreign powers.
In direct
military terms, Hezbollah’s losses were heavy and will not be easily
replenished either. Key installations and command and control centres were
totally destroyed in the Dahiya area of southern Beirut and in the south of the
country. Fortified positions, bunkers and stores in close proximity to the
border with Israel have been demolished, and it is highly unlikely that Israel
will allow their reconstruction under any circumstances.
The
organisation lost between a quarter to a third of its fighting men. Bravado
aside, in numerous encounters Hezbollah fighters fled the field of battle,
leaving their equipment behind, to avoid direct confrontation with Israeli
ground forces.
Much of
Hezbollah’s long and medium range rocketry has been destroyed. They still have
large stocks of the short-range rockets, which were the great majority of the
over 4,000 rockets fired during the war into northern Israel. But their
effectiveness is limited. It is true that the north of the country was almost
brought to a standstill and the trauma of hundreds of thousands of Israelis in
shelters or living as internal refuges in other parts of the country will not
be forgotten. But in terms of loss of life the thousands of rockets were less
effective than a pair of suicide bombers.
The Iranian
strategic outpost that had been built up for future use against Israel has been
defanged, at least for the meantime. It must have cost hundreds of millions to
construct and has been lost prematurely, spent not very effectively and not at
a time of Iran’s choosing. Moreover if intended to deter Israel from taking
action, it achieved quite the opposite result.
Hezbollah,
at this stage, is observing the ceasefire. They do not want a second round now.
Nasrallah needs a breather, and has no choice but to accept the hitherto
unacceptable in the form of the restoration of Lebanese state sovereignty to
the south. The euphoria in the Arab media has also subsided. Nasrallah’s
references to Israel as a society as flimsy as “cobwebs” seem somewhat less
appropriate from the ruins of south Beirut.
An Egyptian
commentator, Ali al-Ibrahim, noted recently that the Arabs had learned to
differentiate between victories on television and real victories in the field.
How long will it take the Israelis to do likewise?
Israel’s
achievements in the war should not be underestimated, all the more so because
they were attained despite the incompetent and indecisive handling of the
military campaign by the triumvirate of Olmert, Peretz and Halutz.
The
courageous citizens of Israel, who endured patiently in the shelters, and the
brave and resourceful fighting men and women of the IDF, regulars and
reservists, who put their lives on the line, deserve much better.
Whether the
achievements of the war prove lasting or not is another question. Can the
Lebanese led by Fuad Siniora’s Government build on the new political realities
that the war has created? Will they be able to withstand the pressure that is
bound to come from the Iran-Syria-Hezbollah axis that will seek to undo the
consequences of the war and re-establish the status quo ante? Only time will
tell, but these are questions that would not even have been asked had it not
been for the war against Hezbollah.
Professor Asher Susser is Director of the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University. © Jerusalem Post, all rights reserved, reprinted by permission. |
|||||
|
|
|
Copyright
© AIJAC 2006 |