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A community of resistance
Aoun’s blueprint for a defense strategy turns the state into Hezbollah’s subordinate
Hanin Ghaddar , NOW Staff , November 13, 2008
Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah (L) and Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun give a joint press conference in February 2006 (AFP /Joseph Barrak)

It seems that one visit to Iran was enough for Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun to become Tehran’s informal mouthpiece in Lebanon, as last week, during the national dialogue session, the General presented his blueprint for the national defense strategy which would, in effect, empower Hezbollah and turn Lebanon into a giant unified resistance to face off against internal and external threats.  

The strategy

Aoun’s proposed defense strategy, based on his 2005 Memorandum of Understanding with Hezbollah, called for combining the Resistance and the Lebanese army, and establishing a “community resistance” that would command the loyalty and resources of the state along with all its institutions and citizens. This, Aoun pointed out, would require the nation’s unity to rally around the Resistance and form a central front to face the threats against the country.

The opposition would, of course, be the winner in this equation, as with the Resistance controlling the government, Hezbollah and its ally, Aoun, would be the main power brokers. In fact, Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah approved of Aoun’s blueprint in his Martyrs’ Day speech on Tuesday.

Resistance community

But Aoun’s defense strategy proposal seems familiar. In an interview with An-Nahar in June 2007, Hezbollah Deputy Secretary General Sheikh Naim Qassem, when describing his party’s vision of a national defense strategy, called for generalizing the “Resistance model” across Lebanon. Aoun seconded that when he explicitly stated while presenting his blueprint that “the resistance forces [should be] constituted of ordinary Lebanese residents, which is why these forces should cover all Lebanese territories.”
 
What is even more intimidating for moderate Lebanese is that this nationalized resistance would persist as long as Israel, the main external threat, still posed a threat to Lebanon, tying the continuation of Aoun’s defense strategy to the Jewish State’s very existence.

Further, when the General implied that his defense strategy negated the need for UN resolutions 1701 and 1559 during his proposal, and when Nasrallah adopted it during his speech on Tuesday, the dangerous implication of the opposition’s lack of respect for those documents came to light: If the resolutions will not be respected under the new defense strategy, how can Lebanon expect the opposition to respect the national dialogue itself and the upcoming parliamentary elections?

Internal threats

During his proposal, echoing Syria’s recent claims, Aoun suggested that the number-one threat to Lebanon, besides Israel, of course, is terrorism, with the existence of armed Palestinian groups and Lebanese militias following in second and third place, and which his nationalized resistance must face.

But Aoun, without differentiating between Palestinian political factions – whether the Palestinian Authority and Hamas – declined to mention that Syria provides Palestinian groups with weapons, both inside and outside the camps, while also backing the Resistance. He also seemed to forget that disarming the Palestinian factions outside the camps was already agreed upon during the first national dialogue in 2006, just before the July War.

And when describing the threat of Lebanese militias, Aoun did not mention Hezbollah and its arsenal, which he sees as part of the nationalized resistance, regardless of the fact that in May, the opposition turned their guns against other Lebanese, more than half of whom still consider the weapons a threat.

Knowing that there would be no national unity around Hezbollah’s arms, Aoun insisted that “Losing [national unity] might lead to conflict, and arms could then be dragged to be used internally… Instead of defending borders, arms will be used as a tool for civil strife” – a threat of a repeat of the violent attacks of last May.

Constant war

Aoun’s call to militarize the state and its citizens is, in effect, a push to transform the country into a giant militia, which, as MP Boutros Harb said in a press conference Saturday, “would certainly lead to the creation of several armed groups in each and every village, [which] would lead Lebanon to civil wars.”

In an article published by the Progressive Socialist Party’s weekly newsletter al-Anbaa, PSP leader MP Walid Jumblatt wrote that carrying out Aoun’s proposition would transform Lebanon into a “constant war field, which topples stability, torpedoes investment and increases emigration… It is time for stability, prosperity and economic development.”

So at a time when the region is moving in the direction of economic development, and Syria is contemplating direct diplomatic negotiations with Israel to liberate its occupied territories, Aoun’s nationalized resistance and perpetual war on Israel would only guarantee the thwarting of progress and constant internal and external conflict.

Aoun’s blueprint for the national defense strategy crossed many lines. And since he knows that it will not be well received by everyone, it was only meant to be a message from Hezbollah to the Lebanese that the Party of God and its arms cannot be touched.

The counter argument is very simple, however: The state is not a tool; it is the only authority. Any defense strategy that does not respect the state and Lebanon’s pluralism cannot be taken into consideration in any further discussion.

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Comments ( 31 )
Posted by
sami
November 24. 2008
Which part of history you suggest I discuss,Sam?I am not too impressed with GMA but for reasons other than yours,one thing I have to give him is that he never cooperated with Lebanon only declared enemy.He received help from Saddam against Syria and bombed Da7yeh at one time, but tell me, who did not bomb Da7yeh yet?Sam, am I not permitted to discuss any subject I like or am I forbidden as I am forbidden to dream of becoming president of Lebanon based on my sect?If I change my sect will you permit me that choice?Strange world we live in dont you think?
Posted by
sam
November 23. 2008
funny how you only talk about the part of history you want to sami.. and only reply to the part of the email you find suitable. Lets get it straight, i never said what geagea did was right.. I said that geagea was the only one who paid the price for what he believes in, regardless if we agree with what he believes in. what about the other war "leaders" what happened to them? . Aoun told his followers that he would never leave the battle field.. what happened with that? i had great respect and hope for aoun prior to his fleeing. but now i copmpare him to all our politicians. not ONE not a single one of them care for any lebanese. And WE the lebane
Posted by
sami
November 22. 2008
They are convinced,Hannibal, nothing you can write that may change their minds.If you cant beat them then join them:)
Posted by
Hannibal
November 21. 2008
Love the sarcasm Sami :)) Do you think they are bright enough to catch it? They might think you really agree with them, be careful :)
Posted by
Hem
November 20. 2008
Seriously, Hanin, you can hate Hezbollah, but have some mercy with regard to our minds and make arguments that hold the tests of simple logic.
Posted by
le phenicien
November 20. 2008
I respect your comments and point of views about GMA and others . We will soon be fixed after the 09 elections , and will find out who is the one that would have been chosen by the " Lebanese " Christians to represent them with the largest group at the parliament ...! You will then have to ; eighter change your comments and respect him ! or keep on insulting if this is the only way possible you can cure your nerves breakdown .
Posted by
sami
November 19. 2008
I have to agree with Marco and Sam,Jaejae did win the Jabal war and gave his people the best opportunity to live in peace and prosperity in Jabal in their own villages till now.He did not kill any civilians and won his war against Syrian occupier and fought and won against Israeli occupation.Basheer/Ameen were also elected freely by the Parliament and did not come carried on top of the Israeli tanks nor did they cooperate with the invading Israelis.Furthermore Jajae was rewarded by the Lebanese electoral by giving him 14 MP,s in the Parliament and and Ameen was elected in Maten, his own town, while Berri lost in his political elections.The written history we have is all wrong thank you for the corrections.
Posted by
sam
November 19. 2008
i agree with marco.. geagea is the only civil war leader that paid any kind of price, and he was willing to pay the price.was it not the "lebanese" and the syrians that tried to shower him with ministerial positions that he refused? lets get this one thing right. aoun words are bigger than other parts of his body.while geagea was in jail the other war lords were made speakers of parliment and prime ministers and presidents and other high government post. aoun got neither, he got a beating and ran to france and screamed and yelled about one thing which he now seems to have forgoten.Little does he know that he will NEVER see the chair.he will NEVER be more than a toy in other peoples hands.And sami you dont want hizb. to disarm.. that is fine.. then nobody has the right to tell any other group not to arm. what is good for you is good for everyone. and you and your children suffer the fate of that decision.
Posted by
Marco Antonio
November 19. 2008
Sami, that's good, at least you agree with me that pma did run. The rest I don't agree with you and facts show it.Gemayel did not promise to fight till death then ran away. Gemayel stayed in the presidency till the last day of his mandate and then some. He decided to leave Lebanon later on time of his chosing. I also disagree with you on JaJa, who didn''t run, but as history has shown, he stayed put and spent 10++ years in prison for his beliefs. As always, (a true man of his word) he proved himself one more time as a big man for big occasions, he stood up to the evil occupier in a big way and paid for it in a big way. Name me one other Lebanese leader who did what JaJa did. Who among them spent time in prison rather than defy the occupier? He certainly did not run, it is obvious he is not that type of a man. By now, we should know who the " speed runners" are...
Posted by
History
November 18. 2008
WE DON'T WANT CAIRO AGREEMENTS #2 !!! We seek the future, and the future is about tolerance, peace and prosperity. As someone said long time ago : "who kills by the sword. will die by the sword" I have a plan for Israël, Syria, Iran, Palestinians and Hizballah : go and fight each others in hell and let us turn this earth to a dream => shame on you, brothers only seeking revenge and death
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