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The conspiracy against Lebanon
US officials must make clear that they are not selling out Lebanon to Syria.
By Adib F. Farha

WICHITA, KAN. – As goes Lebanon, so goes the Middle East. That's why Lebanon's
democracy must not be allowed to succumb to Syrian dominance and, more ominous, the
growing influence of Iran's theocracy. Yet many don't recognize just how serious the
situation is. The 2005 Cedar Revolution, which restored democracy to the only Arab country
that has ever truly experienced it, is in great jeopardy.
To the public eye, Lebanon's democratically elected leaders are merely locked in a contest
of wills with mass demonstrations. But these protests are fueled by Hizbullah, the Shiite
militia group sponsored by Iran. That makes this nothing short of a Tehran-backed coup
attempt - a counterrevolution with grave consequences for the region:

In all, the domino theory would become a reality - but not in the order democracy advocates
desired.

To help prevent this course of events, US officials must make clear that they are not selling
out Lebanon by considering talks with Syria and Iran, as recommended by the Iraq Study
Group (ISG). It's also imperative that US senators stop making "fact-finding" trips to Syria
and talking with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, as Sen. Bill Nelson (D) of Florida did
last week.

How Iran fuels Hizbullah

It's worth recalling how this turn of events came about. Emboldened by what the vast
majority of Shiites perceive as a "divine victory" in its war with Israel last summer, Hizbullah
has become a major power broker in Lebanon. With enormous financial and military
support from oil-rich Iran, Hizbullah is said to have restored its military capabilities after
suffering major losses this past July.

Iran's riches are also helping Hizbullah win additional loyalty from Lebanon's Shiite
underclass. With it, Hizbullah mobilizes the masses to call for increasing the opposition's
share in the cabinet. Such a move would give opposition members the power to dissolve
the cabinet and to block UN tribunals that would try those who assassinated former Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri and other democracy advocates. It would also enable them to block
cabinet efforts to disarm Hizbullah, as required by two UN resolutions. If this expansion
isn't granted, counterrevolutionaries threaten to demand Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's
resignation or create their own shadow cabinet.

That's why it's so frustrating to hear some US news reports characterize this
counterrevolution as something akin to America's civil rights movements in the 1960s.
Hizbullah's supporters are wrongly labeled as poor, disenfranchised citizens trying to get
their nonresponsive, non- representative government to notice them.

Mercenaries, not civil-rights activists

While many of the partcipants are poor, the counterrevolution is neither a struggle between
two equally legitimate positions nor is Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah a Muslim Martin
Luther King Jr. Some are fundamentalist Shiite Muslims bent on "Death to America," which
they chant in rallies with fists clenched in anger. The majority of these
counterrevolutionaries are mercenaries who first joined Hizbullah to get on its generous
Iranian-funded payroll and then got ideologically indoctrinated.

Hizbullah has manipulated Lebanon's democracy to serve Iran's agenda. Emerging from
15 years of bloody civil war that resulted in $100 billion in total damages, the Lebanese
central government has been unable to provide its people with a sufficient level of social,
educational, and health services. Enter Hizbullah, with a much bigger social budget - and a
highly effective recruiting campaign: Few turn down a generous monthly salary simply to
stand by for calls to join destabilizing activities when Mr. Nasrallah's trumpet beckons them.

Hizbullah and its cronies have misrepresented Mr. Siniora's attempts to govern by
consensus as weakness. They have also misinterpreted the ISG report, which calls for
talks with Iran and Syria, as a sign of America's "need" for those countries' cooperation.
They see a US "deal" in the offing that would allow them to control Lebanon.

Bush administration officials must appear on Arab media to make it clear that the US is not
selling out Lebanon to Syria, as the pro-Syrians in Lebanon are suggesting. At the same
time, members of Congress must halt travel to Syria right now, as that would embolden the
enemies of democracy in the Middle East.

• Adib Farha is the senior policy adviser for the American Lebanese Coalition. He was an
adviser to Prime Minister Siniora while Siniora was minister of finance.

Original Source:
Christian Science Monitor