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Analysis : Middle
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Western powers accuse Iran and Syria of masterminding Lebanese
general strike
By Chris Marsden
25 January 2007
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Lebanese opposition parties and the trade unions called a halt
yesterday to a general strike that had resulted in violent clashes
with supporters of the government of Prime Minister Fuad Siniora.
Three people were killed and 133 wounded in fighting in Lebanon
on Tuesday, January 23, as hundreds of thousands of demonstrators
answered a call by trade unions backed by Hezbollah and Amal,
both Shia parties, and the Christian Free Patriotic Movement (FPM).
The media focused attention on sectarian aspects of the conflictwith
crowds of mainly Shia oppositionists facing off against supporters
of Sinioras government, which is composed of Sunni, Druze
and Christian parties. Sharp tensions were apparent in the armed
clashes, fistfights and stone-throwing that took place. But sole
blame for this was routinely placed on Hezbollah, which was accused
of acting as a proxy of Iran and Syria against a supposedly democratic
government. Siniora told Japans Kyodo News that Lebanon
has been paying the price of imposed decisions coming from
outside countries, like Iran and Syria.
The decisions made by the opposition in Lebanon are decisions
coming from outside, like Iran and Syria, he reiterated.
What is happening is a revolution and a coup attempt,
Christian leader and former warlord Samir Geagea told Al Jazeera.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack made similar claims,
declaring that Lebanese factions allied with Syria are blocking
roads, preventing people from reaching their jobs and schools,
and obstructing the work of the security services.... These factions
are trying to use violence, threats, and intimidation to impose
their political will on Lebanon.
In reality, Hezbollah was almost alone in publicly opposing
sectarian violence. Moreover, it has come to the head of what
is in fact a mass popular social and political protest of mainly
impoverished Shias against a pro-Western regime that has no real
mandate to govern. The government has been kept in power with
the assistance of thousands of European troops and is intent on
implementing an economic programme that is plunging all of Lebanons
workers and peasants ever deeper into abject poverty.
Hezbollah, Amal and the Free Patriotic Movement withdrew their
combined total of six ministers from the government in November
last year and are demanding that it step down and call fresh elections
for a national unity government. On December 1, 800,000 protested
in Beirut and a picket of government buildings in Beiruts
commercial centre involving thousands has been maintained ever
since.
The Siniora government has rejected all the demands placed
on it and instead sought to impose austerity measures dictated
by the Western powers. This in a country that having barely recovered
from the impact of the 1975-1990 civil war was then largely destroyed
by Israels 34-day bombing campaign, ground invasion and
blockade that began July 12 last year. Israeli aggression resulted
in over a thousand casualties, the displacement of a million Lebanese
and massive damage to roads, bridges, buildings, power stations
and other vital infrastructure. Combined with economic dislocation,
the United Nations estimated that the war cost Lebanon $15 billion.
Lebanons public debt stands at a massive $41 billion.
An international donors conference in August last year
pledged a paltry $1.2 billion. But this was accompanied by the
demands of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank
that the Lebanese government reduces its international debts by
raising taxes, cutting spending, and privatising state owned industries
such as the electricity network, telecommunications and water.
As well as the job losses this entails, there are also demands
for greater labour market flexibility under conditions
in which many workers still have no roofs over their heads.
The trade unions and the opposition parties rejected proposed
tax increases, a rise in fuel prices and the planned privatizations
and demanded wage increases for low-income employees.
Sheikh Naim Qassem, Hezbollahs deputy secretary-general,
said on the eve of the strike that the opposition was not only
facing the government, but an international conspiracy against
us. For the US is in charge of every detail of the government.
That same day, Hezbollahs leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah
asked his followers to avoid insults and sectarian slogans,
adding that if they kill 1,000 of us, we will not use our
weapons against them.
The Independents veteran Middle East reporter
Robert Fisk described the protests as a violent sectarian
battleground. He noted that Sunni supporters of the government
had held up pictures of Saddam Hussein in order to goad Shia oppositionists.
He also acknowledged that the Hezbollahs tens of thousands
of fighters were by far the most disciplined men on the streets
of Beirut.
I walked three miles to the (airport) terminal, only
to find the Hezbollah protecting both the airport and the Lebanese
troops who were guarding it, he continued.
Opposing what he described as a simplistic claim that what
is taking place is an attempted coup détat
by the forces of Syria and Iran, Fisk wrote, The Shias
are the downtrodden, the poor, the dispossessed, those who have
always been ignored by the dons and patriarchs of the Lebanese
governmentfor in one sense this is also a social revolutionand
on the other were the Sunni population so beloved of [assassinated
former Prime Minister Rafik] Hariri and the Druze and the Christians
still loyal to the Lebanese forces who were Israels allies
in 1982 and who massacred the Palestinians in the camps of Sabra
and Chatila, as well as a majority of Lebanese innocents who voted
Sinioras government into power.
The strike was called off as Siniora flew to a second international
donors conference in Paris that begins today (Thursday).
Over 30 mainly Western and Arab donor countries as well as international
institutions are in attendance. Siniora had described the strike
as an attempt to sabotage the meeting, which he portrayed as Lebanons
best hope for survival.
It is nothing of the sort.
Analysts expect that an aid package of around $5 billion will
be assembled. But only a fraction of this will be spent on reconstruction
projects. Most will go towards servicing Lebanons short-term
debt and therefore back into the coffers of the imperialist governments
and financial institutions, while leaving Lebanons long-term
debts to climb ever higher. The rest will go to paying the wages
of the Lebanese army in order that it can suppress opposition
in the Shia areas in the south of the country. And once again
any money given will be made conditional on the government implementing
the reforms demanded by the IMF and World Bank.
Speaking on Tuesday, Frances President Jacques Chirac
said that said the Paris conference was urgent because
there are things to pay: the Lebanese army that now, fortunately,
occupies southern Lebanon needs to be paid; weapons must be bought;
the full operation of Lebanon must be ensured.
Chirac also echoed the claims that the opposition to the Lebanese
government was being engineered or at least exploited by Iran
and Syria.
I dont interfere in Lebanons domestic affairs,
said the leader of the country with the most foreign troops in
Lebanon, but there are those who take advantage of certain
situations to create social problems.
The international community wants Lebanons neighbours
to stop interfering in its affairs and treat it as an independent
and sovereign country, he said.
The denunciations of Iranian and Syrian interference in Lebanon
come amidst constant US provocations against Iran and a major
military build-up in the Gulf.
Washington gave its full backing to Israels bombing and
subsequent invasion of Lebanon last year. The aim of both the
US and Israel was to smash Hezbollah, possibly annex southern
Lebanon and reduce the country to the effective status of a US
protectorate. But this was conceived of as only an initial stage
in a wider war drive aimed at regime change in Iran and Syria.
As far as the Bush administration is concerned that aim remains
to be fulfilled, in part due to the failure of Israels Lebanese
offensive in the face of the massive resistance that was led by
Hezbollah. And the same holds true for Israeldespite revelations
last week that the governments of both Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert
had sought a settlement with Syria in secret talks that continued
into the first days of the July 2006 war even as the US was urging
a direct attack on Damascus.
Israel has said it is closely following events
in Lebanon and accused Hezbollah of serving the interests of Iran.
The day before the Lebanese general strike began Israeli soldiers
performed a combat exercise against troops dressed as Hezbollah
fighters in a mock Arab village at a military base near Tzeelim,
southern Israel.
The political crisis created by the setbacks Israel suffered
in Lebanon last year led to last weeks resignation of Lieutenant-General
Dan Halutz as the armed forces chief of staff.
He was replaced on Monday by Gaby Ashkenazy, a veteran infantry
commander who Olmert and Defence Minister Amir Peretz stated would
successfully implement the lessons of the Lebanon war.
The main criticism within Israeli ruling circles of Halutz,
a former air force commander, was that he relied too heavily on
an air campaign against Hezbollah and should have mounted a (better-planned)
ground invasion much earlier.
Ashkenazy has acted as director of the Defence Ministry since
he was passed over in favour of Halutz in 2005. But his combat
experience includes serving as a deputy brigade commander in the
1982 Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon and heading the elite
Golani infantry brigade from 1994 to 1996, one of the most highly
decorated infantry units in the Israeli Defence Forces. He also
headed the armys northern command in the final years before
Israeli troops withdrew from Lebanon in 2000.
See Also:
Lebanese regime approves
US-backed tribunal directed against Syria
[27 November 2006]
Major powers offer
devastated Lebanon a pittance in aid
[4 September 2006]
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