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Will pro-independence Lebanese get another chance?
Hussain Abdul Hussain , November 21, 2009
The massive pro-independence protests of March 14 that ended up forcing Syria to leave – for a while. (AFP/Haitham Mussawi)

On July 3, 1982, 20 days into the Israeli siege of West Beirut, then-Prime Minister Shafiq Wazzan and seven other Sunni leaders demanded that Yasser Arafat, chairman of the PLO, and his 6,000 fighters leave Lebanon to spare the country further destruction.

Arafat agreed but suggested a gradual withdrawal, hoping such a move would open the dialogue with Washington Arafat desperately wanted. Wazzan and his Sunni allies insisted on immediate departure, and on August 21, as Arafat led his men into exile in Tunisia, the Israelis lifted their siege.

The 1982 Sunni initiative paralleled in its importance the declaration of Lebanese independence in 1943, when the Sunni leadership turned a deaf ear to pan-Arabism and – together with the Maronites – started practicing sovereignty.

Yet the 1982 sovereignty-in-action was to be undermined through a combination of terror attacks, domestic sellouts and regional deals. President-elect Bachir Gemayel was murdered, signaling, to this day, the end of effective Maronite leadership. For their part, the Sunnis were compromised and replaced by pro-Syrian Shia and Druze “de facto forces.”

In 1990, the shattered Lebanese sovereignty was dealt a final blow when both Riyadh and Washington traded Syrian participation in the coalition war against Iraq for complete Syrian domination over Lebanon.

During Damascus’s “rule”, the pro-sovereignty Maronite leadership was further weakened. Dani Chamoun of the National Liberal Party was murdered with his family in their home, the maverick army commander Michel Aoun sent into exile, and the Lebanese Forces boss, Samir Geagea, was imprisoned for his alleged role in the murder of former Prime Minister Rashid Karami. Thus began what came to be known throughout the 1990s the  “Christian frustration.”

Damascus remained wary of the Sunni leadership, which was reinvigorated by the emergence of the Saudi-backed billionaire, Rafik Hariri. Syria restricted Hariri’s movement. Throughout his premiership he was not allowed to visit the predominantly Sunni north, and his reputation as a man of economic salvation was tainted by wholesale Syrian corruption and embezzlement, while he was told to focus on the reconstruction process and leave the foreign and domestic security policies to Syria.

Starting 1998, Damascus tried to replicate its own police state in Lebanon. It was a bad call. It marginalized allies such as Druze leader Walid Jumblatt and further frustrated an already disillusioned Hariri.

To Syria’s misfortune, however, the world changed after 9/11 and by 2004, a new Middle East coalition had ensured that Syria had lost Saudi consent to rule Lebanon.

Jumblatt, arguably Lebanon’s smartest politician, and Hariri, legendary for his quick mastery of Lebanese politics, saw an opportunity to push for a Syrian withdrawal. They instantly forged a common cause with the still “frustrated” Christians.

The rest, as they say, is history. On February 14, 2005, Hariri was killed and a momentarily shell-shocked Syria withdrew its army from Lebanon in April 2005, ending 29 years of occupation.

For the third time, following the 1943 independence and the Palestinian withdrawal of 1982, harmony between the Sunnis and the Maronites produced immediate results. Lebanon practiced sovereignty and achieved independence. By doing so, it commanded the world’s attention and support.

But also like in 1982, opponents of Lebanon’s sovereignty employed a similar combination of tactics to ensure that the next five years would be blighted by assassinations, conflict and civil unrest that at one point took Lebanon to the brink of civil war.

Earlier, in the beginning of 2006, Damascus hit the jackpot when exiled Maronite leader Michel Aoun agreed to join the ranks of the opposition March 8 coalition, thus dealing the Independence ‘05 movement an early blow by abandoning the traditional Christian pro-sovereignty line.

Even without Aoun, the majority of the Sunnis, Druze and the remaining Maronites – armed with international support for their cause – persisted in their push for a genuinely independent Lebanon.

Running out of options, on May 7, 2008, Syria unleashed its local proxies, who swept onto the streets of Beirut. It was now or never for the regime in Damascus. A few months earlier an exceptionally pro-Lebanon French president had left office, while a pro-Lebanese US administration only had a matter of months in office.

Regional dynamics were also at play. Saudi Arabia had grown wary of a strongly assertive Iraqi cabinet, led by a Shia who Riyadh believed to be close to its archenemy Tehran. Like in 1990, Riyadh went to Damascus for a trade over Iraq in a deal that included Lebanon.

Jumblatt caved, and shortly after, the new Sunni leader, Saad Hariri, despite his best efforts, knew the game was up. Even Geagea and his Christian followers, who until this point had stood defiant against Damascus, accepted that the June 2009 election victory was nothing more than a memory.

A new era of indirect Syrian rule in Lebanon has started again, given the havoc Aoun has wreaked, and the traditional pro-Lebanese sovereignty line has been compromised like never before.

Will the future give the Lebanese a fourth chance to practice sovereignty? No one can tell. But history will certainly remember that the Lebanese, the regionally-dependent leaders and their blind followers missed yet another golden opportunity for self rule, a chance that might not come again in our lifetime.

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Comments ( 17 )
Posted by
sami
November 28. 2009
Shirin,furthermore,you mention making money off arms smuggling and prostitution.I may be aware that HA smuggles arms to fight Israel but not aware at all of the prostitution issue. And while we are at the subject.I passed your massage to the children of the south who went to play in our beautiful fields and had their feet blown away by the cluster bombs.They responded that they cannot live in peace and harmony without any feet.They still suffer and cannot find harmony in tourism as you are asking them to.
Posted by
sami
November 27. 2009
Shirin,thanks for your new and refreshing tone.I agree with and love all you propose,except one cannot love harmony and peace as you propose when his country is occupied,his children are murdered daily by the internationally outlawed cluster bombs,by the daily incursions of Israel into his land,skies and seas.Not to mention the number of spies they employ to harm our coexistence and tranquility.You want tranquility in a sea of storms.The storms are not of our doing;we are peaceful people living next to a murderous country that usurped Palestine and south Lebanon.You are asking me to get tired of defending Lebanon and turn to tourism.This is asking too much if not impossible.Finally ,Shirin ,we are but one people with one aspiration that is a strong,independent and free Lebanon,never weak again.
Posted by
shirin
November 26. 2009
Sami, what i REALLY want, here it is: that we all get along and despite our differences and disgreements- which make lebanon such a rich and unique coutnry- that we agree on ONE thing, the most important being: the interest of Lebanon and lebanese in peace, coexistence and harmony. Let's us enrich ourseleves and our country with the things that make us different and show the world how things that unite us are stronger than our ennemies. sami, why do you criticise tourism? even seychelles need tourism, le tourisme est un gagne pain respectable. it is better that making maoney off arms trafficking or prostitution!! as the youth of lebanon smart and ambitions, channel your energies towards reconciliation because NOONE wants death, blood and destruction. thousands of years ago, empires rose and crumbled and disappeared. life is too short, lets live it peacefully and leave a beautiful country to our childen and the generations to come. i hope you all agree with me.
Posted by
sami
November 26. 2009
Shirin,I can not forget how many times YOU asked me(ordered) me to leave to Syria or to Iran.As a matter of fact I was amazed when you did not ask me to leave in one of your comments.Lebanon's image was not destroyed by HA's arms.Between the years of 1967 and 1985,there was no HA,The isolationists brought the PLO to Lebanon along with its petrodollar and concocted the Cairo agreement that gave away our areas to the PLO while the rest of Lebanon was building and prospering. The South was under the PLO's occupation and the Israeli destruction and no state to be found anywhere to help.We were left all alone under the occupations mercy while you were singing "Lebanon's strength is in its weakness".Now that the south is free and strong and rebuilding you resent it;you want it weak forever.The South does not benefit of your holly tourism because of its decaying infrastructure,lack of education,poverty and the total absence of the state since 1943.Lebanon does not belong to the Shiaa
Posted by
Marco Antonio
November 26. 2009
Your problem will remain, you will not have this website to yourself to spread your propaganda and rehearsed lines from tishreen newspaper. Shirin and I, are staying here and not budging. I usually don't post comments anywhere but I feel compelled to answer the propaganda you post on this site with a little dose of reality and unshakable truth. "Do what as you are told leave", that is what wifaq means in your twisted dictionary, that"s why your type will never achieve majority and we saw that clearly in the last elections.To add, to your comment about your clan's desire to fight and win and continue fighting, I refer you to the book the art of war, which plainly says, those who love war and fighting will not be victorious. It never fails. All this nonsense and bravado you print will not bring any more success to your clan.
Posted by
shirin
November 25. 2009
SAMI I CAN SEE clearly in you and you are not trying to hide it: you want christians to LEAVE LEBANON and you want a lebanon that is homogeneous, only shi3a maybe!!!! ya habibé, we were there thouisands of years ago and thousands years to come from now we will still be there!!! so you might want to become more lvoing and tolerant and if you continue to admire so much the ennemies of lebanon than move!
Posted by
shirin
November 25. 2009
samiEVERYONE IS WELCOME AS A TOURIST IN LEBANON BECAUSE turism will help lebanon adn its people prosper but yes i AM AGAINST ARAB AND PERSIAN FOR THAT MATTER HYPORCRITICAL COWARD POLITICS!!!
Posted by
shirin
November 25. 2009
sami gets everything wrong...marco i know what the world thinks of Lebanon.. they are afraid to visit it!!! HA has destroyed its image!! and yet sami is singing his blablabla he did not se this message i wrote a few days ago , here it is again: lets admit it saudi arabia is no better than iran than syria than israel thanOLP and hypocritical than the US than france then the UK , etc.. and you know what i mean as we witnessed it throughout history and all of these states sing their song and pull for their own interests regardless of human lives...i think lebanon wll be bi kheir if us , you and you and me and all of us lebanese who love lebanon stand for lebanon against the world and have them take their dirty hands off our beloved country.
Posted by
sami
November 25. 2009
The PLO was a foreign entity on Lebanese soil,we fought it as well as you did.The Israelis were also a foreign entity when they entered Lebanon,we fought it for 20 some years .....We also fought the Syrians when you brought them in.We also fought Saad Haddad and General hommos as well.No one in Lebanon loves it as much as we do,no one gave it in blood more than we did. It is ours to keep,you may choose to leave with your so called majority anytime you see fit,take Shirin with you too.
Posted by
Marco Antonio
November 24. 2009
You are right shirin. Don't let any .....tell you that you are isolationist. You are perfectly right in describing our plight with the plo and hizb. Our past is our future unfortunately. From plo to hizb we still don't have a country. I traveled the world over and almost everyone I spoke to said to me that we don't have a country instead we have a bunch of rogues on motorbikes running the show. That's how the outside world sees us and rightly so. Everyone outside Lebanon knows we are being run by shadowy organizations that pledge their allegiance first and foremost to themselves and their pocketbook and secondly to foreign powers who's interests are contrary to the survival of our nation. How can't build a country like that? You"re not being isolationist you're being a realist and that's the first step towards resolving our problems.
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