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Bush administration endorses anti-Palestinian, anti-Syrian
offensive in Lebanon
By Chris Marsden
25 May 2007
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The Lebanese government of Fuad Siniora is threatening to send
the army into the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr el Bared to
crush the terrorist Fatah al Islam group. Such a move threatens
a loss of innocent civilian lives that would dwarf the dozens
that have been killed already during the five-day siege of the
camp, north of Tripoli.
The shelling of Nahr el Bared has had a devastating impact
on the 30,000 to 40,000 residents, forcing 15,000 to 20,000 to
seek refuge in the neighbouring refugee camp at Bedawi. Those
who remain, deprived of water, electricity and short of food,
include many aged and infirm residents.
The Bush administration shares responsibility with the Lebanese
government for what amounts to collective punishment of the Palestinians,
which echoes in microcosm last years devastation of Lebanon
by Israelwrought on the flimsy pretext of the seizure of
two its soldiers by Hezbollah fighters.
Washington stands four-square behind Sinioras actions.
The White House has accepted and regurgitated the claims made
by the Lebanese government that Fatah al Islam is sponsored by
Syria. The aim once again is to ratchet up tensions in the Middle
East in order to pursue the Bush administrations long-term
aim of securing its own hegemony over the region and its oil resources.
The Lebanese government insists that Syria has sponsored bus
bombings, bank robberies and attacks on Lebanese troops by Fatah
al Islam in a campaign of destabilisation. The objective, it claims,
is to deflect attention from the United Nations investigation
into the assassination of the former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri in 2005, which Syrian officials are accused of organising.
Linking Syria with the terrorist group, White House spokesman
Tony Snow said in a statement that the Bush administration will
not tolerate attempts by Syria, terrorist groups or any others
to delay or derail Lebanons efforts to solidify its sovereignty
or to seek justice in the Hariri case.
Lebanons offensive is presumed to deal with an organisation
of 150-200 fighters, including Saudis, Syrians, Yemenis and Moroccans,
with no popular support in the Palestinian camps. Some residents
of the camp put the groups numbers at fewer than 50. The
actual balance of forces involved is indicated by reports of Fatah
al Islam militants attempting to flee the camp in inflatable dinghies
being sunk by the Lebanese navy.
Yet, the massively disproportionate assault on the camp has
been unconditionally endorsed by US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice. The Siniora government is fighting against a very
tough extremist foe, Rice said. But Lebanon is doing
the right thing to try to protect its population, to assert its
sovereignty and so we are very supportive of the Siniora government
and what it is trying to do.
Lebanon has used the police action against this tiny group
to ask the US for $280 million in military assistance to help
put down what it grandiosely calls an uprising. State
Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the request for funds,
$220 million of which would go to the Lebanese Armed Forces and
another $60 million to security forces, was being considered by
Washington. The US gave $40 million in military aid to Lebanon
last year and an additional $5 million so far this year.
The United Nations Security Council on Wednesday echoed the
US position, reiterating member states unequivocal
condemnation of any attempt to destabilise Lebanon and underlining
their readiness to continue to act in support of the legitimate
and democratically elected government of Lebanon.
Many informed Middle East commentators have argued that the
emergence of Fatah al Islam is in reality an example of blowbacksimilar
to the growth of Al Qaeda as a result of US sponsorship of the
Mujahedin in Afghanistan.
There is in fact no evidence linking Fatah al Islam to Syria.
The group is Sunni and shares the Salafist (sometimes referred
to as Wahabbist after its founder) ideology of Al Qaeda, which
provides the ideological basis for the regime in Saudi Arabia.
The argument for Syrian involvement is that Fatah al Islam
emerged from a split with Fatah Intifada in 2006, a group supported
by Syria as a counterweight to the secular Fatah organisation,
which played a part in driving Yasser Arafat out of Tripoli in
1983. But there is no reason for Syria to back such a group, when
it supports the much more substantial Shiite Hezbollah. In addition,
the groups founder, Shaker al-Absi, spent three years in
a Syrian prison before being released last year.
The European Union foreign policy envoy, Javier Solana, was
unconvinced by the Lebanese argument, stating after a meeting
with Siniora in Beirut on Tuesday that he had seen no evidence
of Syrian involvement. I am hoping very much for calm,
he said.
Robert Fisk of the Independent was also sceptical. In
a May 21 article, he asks, Was it really a Syrian plot,
as Fouad Sinioras government suggested? He draws attention
to the claims by Seymour Hersh in the New Yorker that Saad
Hariri, son of the former prime minister, was indirectly
helping to funnel Saudi money to Fatah al Islam.
Expanding on his article in the New Yorker in an interview
on CNN Internationals Your World Today, Hersh
himself again insisted that Fatah al Islam was being funded by
the Saudis. What I was writing about was sort of a private
agreement that was made between the White House, were talking
about RichardDickCheney and Elliott Abrams, one of
the key aides in the White House, with Bandar [Prince Bandar bin
Sultan, the Saudi national security adviser]. And the idea was
to get support, covert support from the Saudis, to support various
hard-line jihadists, Sunni groups, particularly in Lebanon, who
would be seen in case of an actual confrontation with Hezbollahthe
Shia group in the southern Lebanonwould be seen as an asset....
He noted: The American role is very simple. Condoleezza
Rice, the secretary of state, has been very articulate about it.
Were in the business now of supporting the Sunnis anywhere
we can against the Shia, against the Shia in Iran, against the
Shia in Lebanon, that is [Hezbollah leader Hassan] Nasrullah.
Civil war. Were in a business of creating in some places,
Lebanon in particular, a sectarian violence.... There is a supreme
overwhelming fear of Hezbollah and we do not want Hezbollah to
play an active role in the government in Lebanon and thats
been our policy....
A similar position is taken by Professor Charles Harb, of the
American University of Beirut, in an op-ed piece in the May 24
Guardian. He, however, stresses that Fatah al Islams
main backers include forces within the Lebanese government.
Noting that the impoverished Sunni city of Tripoli became
fertile territory for the proselytising of Salafist and radical
Sunni groups, he insists that this alone is not enough to
explain their rapid empowerment in recent years: Political
cover was neededand was provided by pro-government forces.
In the 2005 national parliamentary elections, Saad al Hariri,
the son of slain prime minister Rafik Hariri, appealed to Sunni
sentiment to woo northern voters. Significant efforts were made
to bring the Sunnis of Tripoli and Akkar under his wing and away
from the areas traditional leaders. Fulfilling an electoral
pledge, the new parliament pardoned jailed Sunni militants involved
in violence in December 2000.
Harb continues, The invasion of Iraq has inflamed the
Sunni-Shia divide and is changing the dynamics of the Middle East.
Fear of Shia influence in Arab affairs has prompted many Sunni
leaders to warn of a Shia crescent stretching from
Iran, through Iraq, to south Lebanon. Several reports have highlighted
efforts by Saudi officials to strengthen Sunni groups, including
radical ones, to face the Shia renaissance across the region.
However, it is entirely possible that something more than blowback
is at work in Lebanon.
At the very least, Washingtons positive response to Lebanons
offensive shows that Siniora acted only after having been given
a green light to do so by the Bush administration. It should be
noted that the Lebanese media has been filled with denunciations
of the Fatah al-Islam for weeks, indicating that an attack was
in preparation for some time. But if the reports of extensive
relations between Sunni militants, the US and Siniora governments
are true, the conflict with Fatah al Islam could have been deliberately
encouraged in order to justify what is now underway:
* A brutal attack on the Palestinian refugee camps that takes
the form of collective punishment and coincides with a major Israeli
military offensive against Hamas in Gaza.
* The ratcheting up of propaganda against Syria, which is second
only to Iran as the favoured target of the Washington neoconservatives.
Syria is also being blamed for the bombings carried out by Fatah
al Islam and the three bombs that have exploded while the shelling
of Nahr el Bared has been ongoing.
* A major build-up of Lebanons armed forces, facilitated
by money from the US that can then be used against Hezbollah.
The Palestine Liberation Organisation dominated by Fatah and
Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh both agreed to Lebanon
entering the camps, ending a four-decade agreement that they stay
out. A PLO representative in Lebanon stated, We have declared
that the country is for Lebanon and sovereignty is for Lebanon,
and whatever Lebanon decides or considers its higher interests,
we support it. PLO executive committee member Zakariyya
Al-Agha described Fatah al Islam as an intruding organisation,
which based itself in Nahr al Bared to involve the refugees in
the heinous terrorist actions in Lebanon.
Haniyeh also supported maintaining the sovereignty of
Lebanon and upholding its security.
But both organisations are sitting on a powder keg. The camps
residents have stated they were deliberately targeted by the army,
and there have been angry demonstrations in many of the 12 camps
where more than 215,000 of the 400,000 Palestinian refugees in
Lebanon live. Fatah has warned that the continued shelling of
the camp could provoke an uprising across Lebanon. An all-out
assault would have even more incendiary consequences. Sultan Abul
Aynayn of the PLO in Lebanon has stated, No Palestinian,
or Palestinian faction in Lebanon will accept seeing the Palestinian
people slaughtered in a collective punishment as is happening
in Nahr el Bared.
See Also:
US officials guilty of sociocide
in Iraq must be held accountable
[24 May 2007]
Lebanese army lays siege to Palestinian
refugee camp
[22 May 2007]
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