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By Alan Caruba
“Before the Israeli
attack, Lebanon no longer existed, it was no more than a hologram.” This is what the Lebanese journalist, Michael Behe, wrote on July 30. His
commentary was posted on the website of the Metula News Agency in Beirut.
To understand the
Lebanese situation, it helps to know that, despite a history that dates back to
biblical times, modern Lebanon was literally the invention of Western powers,
England and France, after WWI in 1920. It became independent of France in the
early 1940s.
Then, in the 1970s, the Palestinians, driven out of Jordan and elsewhere, moved in. Doing what they do best, they started a civil war and, in 1978, after a Palestine Liberation Organization attack killed 37 Israeli civilians, Israel launched an offensive to drive them away from its northern border.
In 1982, Israel
again invaded in response to attacks. Christian Lebanese troops entered
Palestinian refugee camps and massacred hundreds. The era of the Palestinians
was over, but by the next decade its successor, Hezbollah, was routinely
shelling Israel, provoking Israeli military responses. After a long occupation
of southern Lebanon, in 2000 Israel decided to withdraw its troops.
On February 14,
2005, Rafiq al-Hariri, a former prime minister of Lebanon, was assassinated in
Beirut. His death points back to Damascus. He had become an outspoken opponent
to the Syrian occupation of Lebanon that had begun 1976, a year after the
outbreak of the civil war. In the years that followed, thousands of Lebanese
were brutally imprisoned or killed by Syrian occupiers.
By 1991, the
domination of Lebanon by Syria had been formalized with a defense and security
agreement. This was followed two years later by an economic agreement in which
Lebanon’s true status as a colony of Syria was made official.
Hariri’s
assassination generated a rally in which the streets of Beirut filled with
anti-Syrian Lebanese. It was dubbed the “Cedar Revolution” and lasted about five
minutes. Days later, on March 8, 2005 Hezbollah was able to put over a
million other Lebanese into the streets. This was followed by an election
that was so gerrymandered only pro-Syrian candidates had any chance of being
elected. Hezbollah had reinvented itself as a political party.
Under intense
international pressure, Syria prudently removed its troops from Lebanon after
the Hariri assassination. An earlier 2004 United Nations Security Council
resolution 1559 demanding this action had been ignored. The various elected
governments of Lebanon had turned a blind eye to the growth of Hezbollah. Funded
and trained by Iran and supplied through Syria, Hezbollah was in charge.
As Behe noted, there
were parts of Beirut where its own citizens, including its police and army, were
forbidden access. “A square measuring a kilometer wide, a capital within the
capital, permanently guarded by the (Hezbollah) army, possessing its own
institution, its schools, its tribunals, its radio, its television and above
all, its government.” It was
precisely this part of Beirut the Israeli air force destroyed. The rest of the
city, as of July 30, was left intact.
The problem for Lebanon is
the problem for the world.
Muslims resist or are restrained
from living in a modern sovereign, secular nation. Iraq was secular
because a dictator made it that way. Turkey was secular because its modern
founder, Ataturk, turned it toward Europe in1925 and away from Muslim traditions
and governance.
Modern Lebanon's problem is demography. In
1943 when its constitution was established, a “national pact” insured
representation by both Christians and Muslims with top offices being allocated
to each group. Today, Muslims are the largest part of Lebanon’s population,
easily 75% or more. The Lebanese government failed its citizens and the Lebanese
who voted Hezbollah politicians into power betrayed their nation.
Lebanon today is an imaginary nation.
Destroyed by the Palestinians led by Yassir
Arafat, occupied by Syria, Lebanon is now nothing more than the tool of Iranians
who are busy preparing their own people for a war with the Israelis, the
British, and the Americans.
Alan Caruba writes a weekly column, “Warning Signs”, posted on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center, www.anxietycenter.com. Merril Press has just published his new book, “Right Answers.”
© Alan Caruba, 2006
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