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Tug of war over Lebanon intervention force
By Peter Schwarz
23 August 2006
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The dispatch of a United Nations military contingent to Lebanon
is meeting obstacles. France, which was originally supposed to
form the backbone of the force and provide its leadership,
has unexpectedly turned down such a role. Now, urged by Israel
and the US, Italy has indicated it is willing to lead the force
and supply its biggest contingent.
Resolution 1701, passed by the United Nations Security Council
on August 11, which forms the basis for the unstable armistice
in Lebanon, envisages the speedy deployment of a 15,000-strong
UN force. Final agreement on the resolution had been preceded
by protracted wrangling between the US and France.
Israel and the US wanted the international force to complete
the task which the Israeli army failed to achieve during its 33-day
attack on the neighboring country: the liquidation of Hezbollah
and the conversion of Lebanon into a powerless protectorate of
the great powers. Originally, Israel and the US sought to assign
the mission to a NATO force with a so-called robust
mandate, which would give it the authority to disarm Hezbollah
by force.
France, which worked closely with the Lebanese as well as with
other Arab and European governments, was also seeking the disarmament
of Hezbollah. In contrast to the US, however, it sought to do
this primarily through political means. According to French plans,
the disarmament was to take place with the mutual agreement and
under the auspices of the Lebanese government, and secured by
the presence of the international force.
When, after a month of aggression, it became clear that the
Israeli army had failed to defeat Hezbollah militarily, the US
finally accepted a compromise in the form of UN Resolution 1701.
Washington dropped its demand for a NATO force and agreed instead
to an expansion of the United Nations Interim Force (UNIFIL) from
its current size of 2,000 troops to 15,000 soldiers.
A strengthened UNIFIL force would have the job of preventing
the supply of weapons to Hezbollah, but not its forcible disarmament.
It is be deployed not under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, but under
the less coercive terms of Chapter 6.
The unanimous vote in the Security Council for resolution 1701
masked over the underlying differences, but did not resolve them.
Israel and the US are continuing to insist on the complete
disarming of Hezbollah. The American ambassador to the UN, John
Bolton, is seeking to introduce a new resolution to this affect,
while Israel is contemptuously ignoring provisions of the cease-fire
that stand in its way.
Five days after the start of the armistice it carried out a
provocative commando action in the Bekaa Valley. Moreover, it
openly vows to murder Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and has
rejected any UN soldiers on its borders from Muslim countries
such as Indonesia, Bangladesh and Malaysia.
France, on the other hand, concluded that any attempt to disarm
Hezbollah through political means was doomed to failure.
Even prior to the recent war, Hezbollah had struck deep roots
in the Shia population of Lebanon. After resisting the US-equipped
Israeli army for 33 days, its popularity grew across religious
and ethnic divides.
Demonstrations took place in numerous cities throughout the
Middle East in which protesters carried portraits of Nasrallah
side by side with images of former Egyptian President Gamal Abdel
Nassar and Sultan Saladdin, the twelfth century Muslim ruler who
led the victory over the Crusaders in Jerusalem.
Millions of Arabs regard every action against Hezbollah as
an attack on their own interests and a blow for Israel and the
US. This is a major reason why France has retreated on its role
in the UN force.
As the former colonial power, France saw the war as a chance
to reestablish its influence in Lebanon. Resolution 1701 was largely
a result of an initiative by the government in Paris and was celebrated
by the French press as a major success for French diplomacy. It
was always assumed that France would constitute the backbone of
the UN force.
But at the so-called troop deployment conference
which took place on August 17 in New York, France offered to increase
its existing UNIFIL contingent of 200 to just 400 soldiers, instead
of the anticipated 3,000. The turnabout was officially justified
with the argument that the tasks and powers of the mission had
not been sufficiently defined. Behind this was Frances fear
that its troops would be trapped between opposing sides and become
embroiled in a military adventure with no clear end in sight.
The French newspaper Libération declared: The
problem is that the Lebanese government has neither the military
nor the political means to achieve from Hezbollah what Washington
and Paris demand, i.e., the handing over of its weapons... Beiruts
hands are tied because of the popularity of the Shia party and
the differences of opinion over this sensitive question in the
Lebanese political elite.
As before the war, the disarmament of Shia militias remains
at the heart of the crisis, Libération continued,
with one major difference: what reason is there for Hezbollah
to give up its weapons when it is able to revel in its victory
over the Zionist enemy and its close ties to a layer of
the population to which it is now delivering immediate assistance?
In particular, the French military command is warning against
any rash deployment in Lebanon and argues that there should no
French blue helmets without a clear mandate. It is not a
question of how many [soldiers ] and when, defense minister
Michèle Alliot-Marie said, but what they should do
and how. An ill-defined mission could turn into a disaster.
The French army is still suffering from the trauma of an earlier
Lebanon deployment, when, in 1983, 58 paratroopers lost their
lives in the Beirut barracks of Drakkar in a suicide attack by
a Shia rebel. France traditionally enjoys close relations to the
Christian Maronite elite in Lebanon and could hardly play the
role of disinterested mediator should war break out again. It
would inevitably find itself caught in the middle of the warring
parties.
Others have also cited the UN deployment in Bosnia, in which
half of the 167 fatalities were French soldiers.
An additional factor in Frances reluctance to get involved
is the stance adopted by Arab regimes, which have increasingly
dissociated themselves from the UN force. Most Arab governments
merely looked on and did not lift a finger as Israel bombarded
Lebanon, killed over 1,000 civilians and forced one million to
flee their homes. Now, however, they are afraid that widespread
anti-American and anti-Israeli sentiments could threaten their
own rule if they identify themselves too closely with activities
directed against Hezbollah.
This was especially clear in the case of Syria, with which
France, along with the US, has no diplomatic relations. It was
left to German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier to fly
to Damascus to win the support of Syria. However, he was rudely
rebuffed.
Before Steinmeier boarded his flight to Damascus, Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad gave a speech in which he sharply attacked Israel
and praised Hezbollah. Steinmeier abruptly cancelled his trip.
Frances retreat has created considerable problems for
Israel and the US. Following the failure of its offensive in Lebanon,
the Israeli government is in deep crisis and needs the support
of UN troops on its border. Both Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
and US President George W. Bush have turned to the Italian prime
minister, Romano Prodi, to take over the leadership of the UN
force instead of France.
Prodi immediately indicated his willingness to comply. Last
weekend, he spoke by telephone with leaders in Germany, France
and Turkey to request their assistance in setting up a joint UN
force. On Monday, he informed UN General Secretary Kofi Annan
that Italy was ready to take over leadership of the force and
provide up to 3,000 troops. The basic condition was a clear
mandate with precise parameters. He maintains that the UN
force should not be responsible for disarming Hezbollah, but merely
supervise a political solution of the conflict.
With Prodi making demands similar to those made by France,
it is possible that the French government will now seek to increase
its contingent, or even revive its bid to assume overall leadership
of the force.
Italy traditionally maintains good relations with most Arab
governments. It was only under Prodis predecessor, Silvio
Berlusconi, that Italian foreign policy sought closer alignment
with the US. Prodis declared aim is to correct this course
and turn Italy into a regional power in the Mediterranean.
His government has been keen to intervene in Lebanon for some
time. Already at the St. Petersburg G8 summit in July, Prodi had
offered to send Italian soldiers to Lebanon. Shortly after the
new UN resolution had been agreed, he sought to make good his
promise, committing his government and the Italian parliament
to his course. He told a press conference last Friday that Italy
was beginning a new phase in Italian foreign policy, a phase
of credibility and responsibility.
At the same time Prodi made clear on what side Italy would
stand. The war was begun by Hezbollah, which attacked Israeli
territory, he said.
Prodis left-center coalition won Italys parliamentary
elections last April, not least because of its promise to withdraw
Italian troops from Iraq. Now his government is intent on undertaking
a new and risky mission in the Middle East aimed at increasing
Italian influence in the Mediterranean.
Italys foreign minister, Massimo DAlema, a member
of the Left Democrats (the successor organization to Italys
Communist Party) has played a leading role in Italys new
foreign policy. Prodi has also been able to rely on support from
the Refounded Communists (Rifondazione Comunista), which played
an active role in mass demonstrations against the Iraq war, but
now supports Italys intervention in Lebanon in both government
and parliament.
See Also:
European powers press to intervene in
Lebanon
[17 August 2006]
Italy prepares to send troops to Lebanon
[16 August 2006]
The "European Left" calls on
European powers to intervene in Lebanon
[15 August 2006]
Manoeuvres and appeasement: Europe's
response to the US-Israeli war against Lebanon
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