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In a ridiculous game,
Lebanese politicians are warning that dark days are lurking in the shadows. Their
statements were straightforward and report-like, with an objective “innocence.”
Perhaps they have grown bored of the longstanding and open crisis that is
dividing Lebanon.
Perhaps they have realized the sterility of this division, and its inability to
generate any results able to provide changes to the balance of power or offer
anything towards realizing some sort of solution or settlement.
Thus, they beat on the
drums of war.
The current vertical
division is balanced in terms of power, and, therefore, neither side can
override the other—each rallying around their own ideological base, repeating stale
rhetoric without addition or subtraction.
The power balance is not
only attributable to their quantitative size—this has been amply proven by
repeated popular demonstrations, which challenges any assumptions of
circumstantial coincidence—but also proves that the Lebanese’s loyalties are
distributed equally between the two major camps. No, it is also attributable to
the weight of external alliances that each side maintains and to the legitimacy
each says comes from this. Hence, on the one side there is the United States and Europe, on the other Iran and Syria, while the Arab bloc tries to
maintain its middle ground and prevent any explosion. The potential to cause harm
that each of these players possess should not be underestimated. And this
potential, which has intensified in Lebanon, is also expanding to the
wider region. It constitutes one of the major engines of the current
international conflict.
There is also a level of
balance regarding the moral justifications of each party. In exchange for
calling for retribution for the spilled blood of President Hariri and all the
other assassinated people—which is no doubt a legitimate call—the blood of the
resistance is also boiling after it successfully confronted the Israeli
occupation, overthrowing it in 2000 and finally confronting it in the most
recent Israeli aggression, for which it paid the price for its steadfastness.
In contrast to the questions
of international legitimacy that surrounded the Lebanese situation in terms of
various UN resolutions, the most famous being 1559 and 1701—resulting in a
decision to create an international court—the bitter regional experience with
these international resolutions is clear, which is that they are discriminatory
in nature and are either applied or not according to the interests of the dominating
power rather than towards maintaining the status of the UN. The most jarring
examples of the impotence of international resolutions are those on Palestine. Further, there
is the incompetence of the international community and the outright lies regarding
Iraq.
These tragic examples provide complete credibility to those who doubt the
importance of respecting international resolutions or for those who intend to
evade them.
There are a variety of forms
of legitimacy around the world, some legal and others social. However, along
with these, in Lebanon
there is another component that confers exclusive legitimacy and leads to the
rhythmic beat of the country’s political structure. And, even though this has
been a source of admiration to some (who consider it a Lebanese stroke of
genius that produced its structure, laws and mechanisms), it is also a point of
contention to others of this politically sectarian system, and through crises
of varying intensities, this periodically endangers the existence of Lebanon. In
terms of Lebanese legitimacy, based on the continuous search for a point of
conciliation, we can say that all parties in the current Lebanese division are
actually involved in the crises and not striving for conciliation. They are joined
by those Arab or international leaders who speak lightly about the “negotiation
train reaching a dead end.” Does this mean the only option in Lebanon is to allow
the violent civil conflict to explode, allowing this conflict to be defined by
force, and to bypass all the various and balanced legitimacies?
This is the current
state. There are three issues that impose themselves: the first is related to
the boundaries of power. If the mutual show of power did not succeed, then
neither will violent force solve the problem. There is no room in Lebanon for a
victory through violence. This has been proven throughout its history,
including the most recent horrifying episodes still fresh in our minds, particularly
most recent civil war. And neither internal violence nor outside intervention
will bring about victory. The latter will actually create more complications that
cannot be controlled.
More precisely, what is
the value of approving the convening of the international court under Chapter
VII of the UN Charter, except to obstruct the court itself or to grant the
defendants an excuse to be less embarrassed in rejecting it? Or it is a resort
to blackmail vis-à-vis the threat of international intervention, considering this
as a way to scare the other side, which it assumes would, “accept the heat
instead of death.” This logic is extremely lacking.
Furthermore, if the memo
sent by 70 parliamentarians to the UN and all of the positions that accompanied
this action were aimed to intimidate, by way of Chapter VII, then this is a
failed tactic. This is because the possible outcomes of this tactic are
restricted. There is nothing to indicate that there are components capable of
intimidating this or that party or to the possibility that the crisis could be
solved through the retreat of one party through intimidation. However, using
intimidation to grant the UN Security Council a justification to take the
decision to hold the court according to Chapter VII only further complicates
the crisis and adds increasing tension. The
same applies to the current visit of international envoys to Lebanon and the
region and the statements issued here and there, which immediately fall in line
with the present conflict.
The second issue is
related to possible ways out, the first being the actual desire for this, which
until today is in itself unclear. How can we fathom a way out or possible
settlements to a situation this tense and complex if we have not started to work
on the existence of a bloc, in part formed by people who belong to the
authority, whether they are from the opposition or the ruling party. The others
would be those with varying affiliations and positions, the elite, the
intellectuals and ordinary people who do not want war and do not accept the
destruction it entails. They would all be seeking to cause a sort of shake up in
this stagnant and barren division.
The need to develop such
a position starts from an extremely ambition point, which rejects the political
sectarian system and proposes alternatives that could be implemented; that is,
they are realistic and not revolutionarily, rhetorical or theoretical. It ends
at a point that rejects the logic of violent confrontation as a means of
solving disputes. There are voices, but they have not yet turned into a power
with the ability to polarize as opposed to simply paying lip service. There are
approaches close to this position. However, the situation is bleak to the point
that the slow and minimalist rhythm dominating it cannot endure. This is at the
Lebanese level. As for the Arab responsibility in this regard, it is of another
diplomatic nature and is also pressing.
Third, and finally, we
should inquire about what is being planned for Lebanon and the region as a
whole in terms of the multi-faceted Israeli and American aggressions, which
seem to all be helping to maintain this state of crisis—not only in Lebanon but
in the entire region. The worst possible solutions to the region’s problems
include: pushing towards more breakdown; reconsidering the arrangements
resulting from the Sykes-Picot treaty, which organized the situations in the
area—that is, a return to the theory of “creative chaos” but in different
frameworks.
Finally, there are the
possibilities that we should not disregard with the excuse of being sidetracked
by certain statements from local politicians. Nor should it be assumed these
possibilities are non-existent or that they are in line with local aspirations.
What does the United States
want from the region? And what does Israel want from it?
This article was
originally published in Arabic in al-Hayat, and translated into English
by the Alternative Information Center (AIC) by request
of the author.
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