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The Fate of Lebanon and the Rest of Us
by Alan Caruba
On July 14 in the chamber of the
United Nations Security Council, the permanent representative from Israel,
Ambassador Dan Gillerman, paused to address his colleague, the ambassador from
Lebanon. “You know that what we are doing is right, and if we succeed, your
country will be the real beneficiary.”
That is the sad truth about
Lebanon. What it has been unable or unwilling to do for itself, will be done by
Israel when it shatters the strongholds of Hezbollah to end the rain of
Iranian-made rockets on its cities. This time, Israel will withdraw to its
borders, leaving Lebanon yet another opportunity to assert its sovereignty.
Am. Gillerman recalled a sunnier
time in Lebanon’s recent history, prior to 1975 “when the Lebanese began their
long descent into oppression and terror. This is a country that has been held
hostage for more than 32 years by tyrants from the north and terrorists from the
south.”
Carved out of the defeated
Ottoman Empire after WWI by the French and English, Lebanon became a unique
place where its large Christian population achieved a successful measure of
governance in cooperation with Muslim citizens. The result was a place that was
often called the Paris of the Middle East, a place that became a modern
financial hub to the region.
With the fall of the Ottoman
Empire after WWI, Lebanon became a French protectorate, while Iraq and Jordan
fell under the influence of the British who also oversaw affairs in desolate
area to the south called Palestine. Following WWII, Jewish refugees from the
Nazi Holocaust and earlier Jewish settlers would establish Israel in 1948.
The “Cedar Revolution” that began
on March 14, 2005 when more than a million Lebanese poured into the streets of
Beirut to protest the February assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq
Hariri was brief. Anger, frustration, and desperation had overcome the fear of
Syrian repression.
On April 26, 2005, the last of
the Syrian army departed, but Hezbollah, a militant Islamic organization
dedicated to the destruction of Israel, ruled southern Lebanon.
The Syrians had moved into
Lebanon obstensively to bring an end to a 15-year civil war (1975-1990) that had
been triggered by an influx of heavily armed Palestinian refugees, driven from
Jordan after their failed effort to overthrow the Hashemite monarchy.
Reduced to its simplest terms, it
was a war between Christians and Muslims. It was, however, more complex because
in Lebanon, everyone is defined by their religion and this includes whether one
is Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Shia, Sunni, Druze or Maronite. The
differences are exaggerated in the hothouse atmosphere of Islamic fantasies.
Israel, in effect, accepted
Syrian control of Lebanon in exchange for control over Hezbollah. Yes, some
rockets might hit northern Israel from time to time, but that was a small price
to pay. Too many rockets put an end to that compromise. In time, Israel moved
troops into the southern part of Lebanon to create a security zone. In 2000 it
withdrew, having suffered too many casualties among its forces from a
low-intensity warfare against them.
Israelis, weary from the endless
attacks on their people, tried to secure peace by ceding land to the
Palestinians in Gaza and promising to withdraw further from the West Bank. The
Lebanese border to the north remained closely guarded against Hezbollah, a
terrorist organization that had invented the suicide bomber and perfected the
taking of hostages.
Am. Gillerman called the Cedar
Revolution Lebanon’s moment of truth. Would it take the opportunity to assert
its sovereignty over southern Lebanon? It did not. In fact, in the elections
that followed Syria’s withdrawal, Hezbollah candidates became a part of
Lebanon’s reconstituted government.
Lebanon remained hostage to a
stateless organization that answered to both Syria and Iran.
Syria’s desire to reclaim Lebanon
and Iran’s desire to destroy Israel forced Hezbollah to demonstrate that the
millions poured into it had been a good investment. In attacks coordinated with
Hamas, both terror groups kidnapped Israeli soldiers. Suddenly the heat was off
Iran as concerns about its ambition to acquire nuclear weapons gave way to the
attention focused on events in Lebanon and Gaza.
There was never any doubt of
Israel’s response. Am. Gillerman told the Security Council that “Hezbollah,
together with Hamas, Syria and Iran, comprise the world’s new and ominous Axis
of Terror, an infamous club, the entry fee to which is the blood of innocents
and the terrorizing of the entire world.”
“The real occupying power in
Lebanon is terror—terror instigated by Hezbollah, but initiated, funded and
perpetrated by Syria and Iran.”
If you want to see what the other
nations of the Middle East will look like if there is no intervention and
preemption, look at Lebanon.
If you want to see what Europe
will look like if subjected to a similar campaign of terror, look at
Lebanon.
The implications for the United
States of America are huge. This is where we secure a large measure of the oil
our economy and way of life requires. This is where we have put our troops in
harm’s way to break the grip of fanatical Islam and replace it with a modern
form of governance.
Failure is not an option, but so
far U.S. diplomacy has only encouraged its enemies.
This is not just about tiny
Israel fighting for its security and survival. This is not about restoring
Lebanon to its former grandeur.
This is about whether Western
civilization has the guts to protect itself against a tyrannical enemy.
—(07/18/06)
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Alan Caruba is a widely syndicated commentator whose weekly column, "Warning Signs", is featured in The National Anxiety Center, a clearinghouse for information about "scare campaigns" designed to influence public opinion and policy. Caruba founded the Center in 1990, having been a business and science writer for many years, in addition to being a public relations counselor who has worked with many leading think tanks, corporations, and trade associations.
Alan is founding member of the National Book Critics Circle; he also posts a monthly report on new books at Bookviews. In addition, he is a longtime member of the Society of Professional Journalists, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, and the National Association of Science Writers.
A popular guest on radio and television, Caruba is available to address groups on the topics about which he writes, including environmentalism, energy, education, national security and sovereignty, property rights, and Islam. He can be reached at:


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