In Lebanon, France converging to pre-mandate policy
By Nicola Nasser
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Aug 31, 2006, 00:58
In a pattern that
reminds of the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement [1], France seems converging to a
role that belongs to its previous colonial era in Lebanon and Syria, in harmony
with, but under the regional hegemony of the United States� involvement in
other countries of the Arab Levant, in a stark departure from Charles de
Gaulle�s post-Algeria legacy.
Gone are the days
when Paris was briefly perceived early in 2003 as if it were in the shoes of
the former Soviet Union as a balancing world power, trying to halt the U.S.
invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Of course, Paris
doesn�t see eye to eye with Washington over Lebanon.
�During the 34-day
[Israeli] onslaught [on Lebanon] that ended on August 14, the U.S. government
appears to have experienced internal divisions over the extent to which it
should encourage and re-supply the Jewish state, but the end-result was a
policy of unconditional backing for a campaign that primarily destroyed
civilian lives and civilian property. Any suggestion that the current
administration is a "friend" to Lebanon is therefore viewed with
understandable scepticism.� [2]
Ostensibly in
contrast, President Jacque Chirac said on July 27 that France wanted to see an
immediate ceasefire in Lebanon, �accepted by all those involved,� followed by a
political agreement on the basis of U.N. Resolution 1559, which calls for the
withdrawal of all foreign forces from Lebanon and the disbandment of the
Lebanese militias, and then the �deployment of a multinational force� under
U.N. auspices.
This French
position was essentially endorsed on August 12 by the U.N. Security Council�s
Resolution 1701, wherein an integrated and complimentary division of
�influence� in the Middle East was envisioned by the French and U.S. powers.
However the
tactical French-U.S. differences could not smokescreen a strategic
understanding, according to which Paris was satisfied in practice to drop its
previous bitter opposition to the U.S. invasion of Iraq and confine its
influence to Lebanon within the framework of the U.S.-Israeli strategic
hegemonic plans in the region, thus establishing France as a partner thereto,
leaving to the �Great Britain,� the pre-WWII leader of western colonialism, the
secondary role of �subservient� to the White House, in the words of former U.S.
President Jimmy Carter. [3]
True France has
proved itself true to Charles de Gaulle�s independent policy, but only for
Paris to qualify to be incorporated as a partner into the U.S. regional plans.
Only this
interpretation could explain the joint U.S.-French sponsorship of both U.N.
Security Council resolutions 1559 and 1701.
It was noteworthy
that the recent U.S. urgent calls on France to commit more troops to Lebanon
coincided with President George W. Bush�s authorization to recall reservists to
Iraq. How could this be interpreted other than being a division of labour !
Regionally the
French-U.S. strategic understanding also boils down to practically playing in
the hands of Israel to neutralize all Lebanese as well as regional factors that
could make the Israeli occupation of Lebanese, Palestinian and Syrian lands
shorter both in time and space.
A Lebanese-Syrian
coordination on the highest level, the presence of a well-organized grassroots
Lebanese defence militia blessed internally with the support of the Lebanese
government and regionally by neighbouring countries, and a Lebanese national
consensus on identifying who�s the enemy and who�s the friend are some of the
major factors to secure a credible defence for the fragile Lebanon.
All these and other
related factors are targeted by France as well as by Israel and the U.S.,
without securing an alternative other than fitting Lebanon into the
U.S.-Israeli regional plans, which give priority to �their new and greater�
Middle East and not to ending the Israeli and American occupations in the Arab
Levant.
French
preoccupation with Lebanon is self-justified by a historical commitment to preserve
Lebanon�s sovereignty.
But neutral
observers could not detect a similar French preoccupation when Lebanon�s
sovereignty is violated by the Israeli occupation and successive invasions
since 1978 and could easily compare the French passive and very calm policy
vis-�-vis Israel�s occupation with the French tense, impatient and urgent
responses to any Syrian hints of normal, and legitimate geopolitical influence
in the country.
Where was France
when the Syrians flocked politically and militarily into Lebanon to preserve
its sovereignty that was threatened by both Israeli invasions and
Israeli-incited and fomented civil war?
Or how could this
French preoccupation be interpreted in comparison with France�s indifference
vis-�-vis Israel�s 39-year old occupation of Syrian Golan Heights, or with the
absence of any sense of urgency vis-�-vis the Israeli 1967 occupation of the
Palestinian West Bank and Gaza Strip?
France seems to
join the U.S. and Israeli �raise-a-hell� policies in defence of the
�independent� decision-making in individual Arab League countries when this
decision-making is constrained by influences of other member states, but hail
the �independence� of any such country when its decisions are either only
influenced or overtly or covertly dictated to it by the U.S.-Israeli decision
makers !
Replacing the
French preoccupation with �removing� Syria from Lebanon by engaging the Syrian
geopolitical interests and national security concerns, and replacing the French
insistence on "disarming of militias" by removing forever any further
Israeli violation of Lebanon�s sovereignty, are only two factors that would
render credible President Jacque Chirac�s call on Monday for a rapid meeting of
the "Quartet" of Middle East peace brokers -- the U.S., the U.N., the
E.U. and Russia -- to look at ways of resuming peace talks.
Chirac�s warning
that: �To resign oneself to the status quo is to risk being trapped in a cycle
of violence which will get out of control� in the Middle East sounded
contradictory to France�s political orientation under his leadership. [4]
Glimpse of
History
Internally in
Lebanon, the French current �Syria-hands-off-Lebanon� policy is in harmony with
France�s as well as Britain�s historical colonial roles.
A confidential
appendix to the King-Crane Commission Report (August 28, 1919) revealed that
the British [and] French �tendency would be for Christian Syrians to
concentrate in the Lebanon, Jews in Palestine, and Moslem Syrians in the
remainder� of Greater Syria or �Greater Lebanon.� [5]
Paris has ever
since sponsored a French-oriented Christian ruling elite whose survival depends
on French as well as on other foreign presence in the country and has retained
close links with the country, and many Lebanese speak French, live in France,
or have French nationality.
Accordingly, it was
only a normal reaction by Cardinal
Nasrallah Sfeir, patriarch of the Maronite Church in Lebanon, to
say, �If Hezbollah should one day take power in Lebanon, the Christians will
leave the country in droves.� [6]
A wide-ranging
spectrum of the Lebanese Christians disagree with His Highness, including among
many others the emerging influential General Michel Aoun -- possibly Lebanon's next
president -- who has forged an alliance with Hezbollah on a national, not sectarian,
platform.
But a wide-ranging
spectrum of pro-U.S. and former Israeli-linked Lebanese politicians agree with
the patriarch.
What draws
attention here is the fact that the second spectrum of politicians is
essentially representative of the political and social forces that gained or
increased their wealth and power under the French mandate and ruled Lebanon
after its independence in 1943. Thereafter these same forces allied themselves
with western powers to avert the emergence of new political and social forces
inspired by Pan-Arabism and Islamic movements, thus sowing the seeds of civil
war and foreign interference with all the ensuing tragic events.
In a 1920
conference, the Arab Lebanese Shiites rejected a French offer to have their
independent political entity in the south and have ever since struggled
democratically to occupy their place in the national political landscape in
spite of the practical Maronite
monopoly of power and the practically, but not constitutionally, sectarian
political system. They did not even think of �leaving the country in droves.�
Foreign interference was the major factor that historically
threatened the Christian presence in the Arab Muslim countries by focusing on
the sectarian differences that threaten the historical social coexistence
cemented by the ethnic Arab identity of both Muslims and Christians as well as
by the tolerance of Islam, which enshrines a pluralistic religion that views Judaism
and Christianity as an integral part of its monotheistic dogma.
Notes
[1] The Sykes Picot
agreement, concluded in 1916, divided the Middle East into areas of influence
for France, Great Britain.
[2] �The Daily
Star� of Lebanon, editorial, 30 August 2006.
[3] The Associated
Press on 27 August 2006.
[4] Originally
printed in Editor & Publisher, V.55, No. 27, 2nd Section, December
2, 1922.
[5] Der Spiegel online, Tuesday, August 11, 2006.
[6] Agencies quoting President Jacque Chirac�s speech on Monday,
August 28, 2006.
Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist in
Kuwait, Jordan, UAE and Palestine. He is based in Ramallah, West Bank of the
Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
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