Lebanon and Syria: The politics of assassination
By Ramzy Baroud
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Oct 3, 2007, 00:52
The assassination of Lebanese politician Antoine Ghanem on
September 19 is likely to be used, predictably, to further US and Israeli
interests in the region.
Most Western and some Arab media have industriously argued
that Syria is the greatest beneficiary from the death of Ghanem, a member of
the Phalange party responsible for much of Lebanon�s bloodshed during the civil
war years between 1975 and 1990. The reasoning provided is that Syria needs to
maintain a measure of political control over Lebanon after being pressured to
withdraw its troops. This political clout could only be maintained through the
purging of anti-Syrian critics in Lebanon, and by ensuring a Lebanese
parliament friendly to Syria. And indeed, with the elimination of Ghanem, the
anti-Syrian coalition at the fractious Lebanese parliament is now left with an
even slimmer majority -- 68 MPs in a 128-member assembly.
Case solved.
Or is it?
The Syrian regime may, in fact, be responsible for the
murder of six Lebanese political figures, including Ghanem, since the tragic
car-bombing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in February 2005.
However, to understand the situation in Lebanon, one needs to refrain from any
simplistic conclusions. This is not an easy task, however, given that media
reports pertaining to Lebanon classify every Lebanese political figure as �pro�
or �anti� Syrian. Such reporting rests on the idea that the Syrian regime --
and only the Syrian regime -- has a keen interest in bringing death and chaos
to a small but strategically important Lebanon. By the same logic, all of
Syria�s allies -- Iran, Hizbollah in Lebanon, and the Damascus-based
Palestinian groups, including Hamas and various socialist factions -- are
regularly implicated by the Western media.
Considering the elaborate politics of assassination in
Lebanon and the many bloody events that were justified on the basis of such
killings -- notwithstanding the rationalization of the Israeli invasion of
Lebanon and the massacre of Sabra and Shatila in 1982 -- one would assume that
media reporters and commentators have learned to become extra cautious before
following official American and Israeli lines.
As a country either fully or partially responsible for
destabilizing Lebanon, Syria may be a probable culprit in Ghanem�s death. This
is a view underscored daily by both those who are either genuinely seeking to
liberate Lebanon from foreign influence and those who wish to dominate the
Lebanese political landscape. But self-interested as it may be, Syria is also
known for being politically savvy and judicious. It has shown this by serving
as a valuable ally in the US �war on terror� since the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001; it willingly collaborated in securing its borders with
Iraq, and even went as far as torturing America�s prisoners in the CIA�s
infamous �extraordinary renditions.�
Why would a country that was willing to sink so low now
provide pretexts for hostilities by carrying out brazen assassinations against
America�s allies in Lebanon? Each such assassination only helps cement the
anti-Syrian cries stemming from Washington, Tel Aviv and Beirut. The Syrian
regime�s past is indisputably cruel, but inanity has hardly been one of its
features.
Could it be plausible that Syria is innocent of the most
recent bloodletting in Lebanon? It is mind-boggling to imagine a country, which
has managed to survive amidst the incalculable hostility stemming from across
all its borders, being so foolish as to carry out such ludicrous crimes with
such harmful consequences at such a critical time. Despite Lebanon�s value in
the Middle East�s ongoing Cold War, Syria, like any other regime under threat,
should be less concerned about dominating a smaller neighbour than in securing
its own survival.
So who are the other possible culprits? Considering
Lebanon�s bloodstained past and the numerous players, sects and factions
operating within its borders, the list seems endless. However, taking into
account the nature of the assassinations (all targeting �anti-Syrian� figures)
and the official line championed by the US and Israel, one can reasonably
include those who wish to drive Syria into a military confrontation, or perhaps
a humiliating political settlement with Israel (which Damascus has refused
since its talks with Tel Aviv broke off in 2000), including a compromise on the
occupied Golan Heights. It would be worth noting here the neoconservative
doctrine prepared by Richard Perle in 1996 for then Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu. Tellingly entitled �A Clean Break: Securing the Realm,� it outlines
plans to subdue Syria through the Lebanese route. Could this help to explain
why the U.S. and Israeli governments are no longer pursuing previously
concerted efforts and publicly declared objectives and instead blaming Israel�s
military setback in Lebanon in 2006 largely on Syria�s -- and Iran�s -- backing
of Hizbollah?
It might also be helpful for those who insist that Syria
alone is capable of inflicting such mayhem in Lebanon to remember that
Netanyahu recently and unsurprisingly admitted that the �mysterious� air strike
inside Syrian territories on September 6 -- clearly an attempt to coerce Syria
into a military confrontation -- was indeed deliberate. US diplomats scrambled
to justify the palpable act of war on the mediocre claim that the Syrian target
bombed by Israeli US-supplied F15 jets �may have had links to North Korean
nuclear arms,� according to the British Guardian. Mediocre or not, a case
against Syria that involves the US, Israel and their allies in the region is
being diligently weaved, and one should not be surprised if the next military
confrontation against Hizbollah will widen to include Syrian territories as
well.
As media and official efforts have conveniently overlooked
all other possible culprits behind the determined efforts to destabilise
Lebanon, the region seems headed for another military confrontation and Lebanon
for a possible civil war. This will most likely be blamed
on Syria, Iran, Hizbollah and Palestinian factions, and Israel will once again
be presented as acting in self-defence and the US as defending the cause of
Israel, democracy and human rights.
Ramzy
Baroud is a Palestinian-American author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has
been published in numerous newspapers and journals worldwide, including the
Washington Post, Japan Times, Al Ahram Weekly and Lemonde Diplomatique. His
latest book is TThe
Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People�s
Struggle (Pluto Press, London). Read more about him on his website: ramzybaroud.net.
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