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Nasrallah in the crosshairs
RannieAmiri
11/7/2007 |
By avoiding sectarianism he has made
common cause between Sunni and Shia in the struggle against
Israel and its occupation. And any time there is unity of
the two, alarm bells start ringing in Washington.
It is the one year anniversary of the
"Second Lebanon War" as the Israelis now call it. It took
them nearly as long to finally decide on a name for their
failed campaign against Hezbollah--an understandably
difficult task when you lose in the manner they did last
summer.
Since then, both Israel and the
United States have not stopped seething at the opportunity
lost to vanquish an organization which has proven itself
capable of doing what no other Arab country, party or ruler
has ever done before: precipitating an Israeli retreat from
occupied territory as occurred in 2000 and withstanding the
full onslaught by their lauded military last year, allowing
them to emerge the victor.
Hezbollah and its charismatic leader,
Sayyid Hassan Nasrallah, not only survived but soon became
the toast of the "Arab street" (no small task for a Shia
group in the predominately Sunni Arab world). Because
Nasrallah showed no interest in playing the sectarian card,
his appeal as a nationalist leader was likened to that of
Gamal Abdel Nasser and won him wide acclaim.
For Bush, Olmert and a host of Arab
rulers though, it is a job unfinished.
Since the war, a stalemate developed
and has persisted between the political forces of Hezbollah,
Amal, and Christians backing former General Michel Aoun and
those of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, the Future Movement
of Saad Hariri, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, and allied
Maronite Christians, paralyzing the government.
Recent fighting between the Salafi
group Fatah al-Islam and the Lebanese Army outside Tripoli
in the Nahr al-Barad Palestinian refugee camp has added a
new variable to the already tense Lebanese situation.
Ominously, these and other Sunni militants sympathetic to
al-Qaeda were invited into Lebanon or released from their
prisons by the Hariri family, as detailed by former MI6
official Alastair Crooke, to serve as agitators against
Hezbollah. Although the present conflict in Tripoli is
evidently a deal gone bad, it has still proved useful in
that it provided Siniora with a "terror" excuse resulting in
a quick shipment of US arms.
A few weeks ago, disturbing reports
surfaced from both the Syrian weekly Al-Madar and Qatar's
Al-Watan newspaper. Despite being a bit sensational sounding
and not distributed by the Western media, when the above
context in kept in mind, they seem more than plausible. To
paraphrase the headline:
"Plot to kill Nasrallah by United
States, Israeli and Saudi intelligence foiled."
According to Al-Madar, the
intelligence agencies of these nations attempted to
infiltrate Hezbollah's bunkers in a bid to assassinate
Nasrallah. Collaborators in this effort included former
Saudi ambassador Prince Bandar Bin Sultan ("Bandar Bush")
and Fatah's former security chief in Gaza, Mohammad Dahlan.
Al-Watan likewise reported that
informed Lebanese sources indicated that the Mossad, in
cooperation with other Arab states and officials, sought to
kill Nasrallah. They too named Dahlan and Bin Sultan as
being in touch with the Mossad and CIA.
If the veracity of the stories from
these papers is doubted, adding to their credibility is
Lebanon's own reputable As Safir newspaper, which has
published within the last week similar accounts of plots
against Nasrallah's life.
But why him?
Simply, Hezbollah under his
leadership is perceived as a threat to the order which the
United States and Israel would like to establish throughout
the Middle East: a cadre of docile Arab rulers, deferential
to the West yet authoritarian in controlling their own
"street." The perks and privileges of being in this club
include a life-long term, money, and arms. Its most
prominent members are King Abdullah of Jordan, Egypt's Hosni
Mubarak and King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. Fouad Siniora and
Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas are the
latest recruits.
Hezbollah also stood up to the
Israelis twice and forced them to leave Lebanon twice. Among
the ordinary people, Nasrallah has become one of the most
respected leaders in the Middle East. By avoiding
sectarianism he has made common cause between Sunni and Shia
in the struggle against Israel and its occupation. And any
time there is unity of the two, alarm bells start ringing in
Washington.
All this helps explain why the
leaders of Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia contently watched
as Israel ravaged Lebanon last year, for they too wanted
Hezbollah eliminated as both a political and military force.
Seymour Hersh, after interviewing
Hassan Nasrallah, spoke to radio talk show host Charles
Goyette in February and had this to say:
This time I went to see him [Nasrallah]
about Lebanon. If you remember last summer, he had conducted
something that had never happened before. He had done a war
against Israel--put up against Israel and beat them. The
only Arab country to ever do it. Nobody is more important
right now. This isn't just me talking. This is our
intelligence people in the government saying to me, "the
most important man in the Middle East right now is Nasrallah."
Anyway, so I go to see the guy [Nasrallah]
in December and oh man Look, I know the Israelis have him
under a death threat. They've had him under a death threat
for years, particularly after he won the war--or did well in
the war. So I am in three or four cars. I am searched. I
mean, [it's] black, with all of the shades and the curtains
drawn in the car. I am transferred three or four times in
basements--all bombed out.
I finally get to the guy and say,
"What is going on, man? I didn't know you were that scared
of the Israelis?" He says, "Oh no, it is not the Israelis.
We've got fellow Arabs: Jordanian intelligence, Salafis,
Wahhabis--jihadists. These are the most extreme guys."
What Nasrallah stated then, and what
Hersh has reported since on the efforts of United States and
its Arab client states in arming Sunni radicals, has come to
pass, both in Iraq and Lebanon.
The question is not therefore not
when the Third Lebanon War will begin, but how. Some are
speculating Israel is again gearing up for an assault to
finish what they have been unable to complete for more than
a decade. Although they no doubt have considered this
option, it is unlikely.
The necessary elements to start this
war after all, are already in Lebanon, in the form of
radical Sunni elements who vehemently hate Shia Hezbollah.
Contrary to what most Americans are reading about Syrian
meddling, it is actually the United States, Israel and other
"brotherly" Arab countries who are sowing the seeds of
discord there in a fruitless quest to wipe out Hezbollah.
When this sectarian conflict starts it will thus appear to
be ignited from within, sadly in collusion with the current
prime minister and his allies.
If war is to be ultimately avoided in
Lebanon, people of all political and religious stripes,
irrespective their opinion of Hassan Nasrallah or Hezbollah,
need to send a clear message to the United States, Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, Egypt and the PA that their interference
will no longer be tolerated.
That message can be effectively
delivered by first dumping the Siniora government.
http://www.counterpunch.org/amiri07212007.html
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