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Army “under tremendous pressure” but still united

The army has remained neutral throughout Lebanon's 18-month crisis, but pledged to use force to keep the peace after six days of clashes left 81 people dead. Adam Pletts/IRIN

The army’s pledge to use force if necessary to impose law and order puts the only fully functioning national institution into the centre of Lebanon’s violent crisis. But although strained, analysts say the military remains united.

[Read this report in Arabic]

“There is no civil authority in the country now, so the army is under tremendous pressure,” said Timor Goksell, a security expert and former spokesman of UN peacekeeping forces who coordinate with the military in south Lebanon.

“If they had used their weapons during the clashes, tomorrow there would be no army and no country.”

The army had previously not intervened in six days of violent clashes - between the Hezbollah-led opposition and Sunni and Druze government allies - that killed at least 81 people and wounded 250, ignoring demands from Prime Minister Fouad Siniora for troops to force gunmen off the streets.

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But Goksell said the army’s pledge as of the morning of 13 May to “halt violations… in accordance with the law, even if that leads to the use of force” represented a more assertive stance.

“The army has done a good job and they continue to enjoy credibility,” he said.

The army stepped up patrols on 13 May, deploying heavily across Beirut and restoring calm to the northern port city of Tripoli after overnight clashes between Sunni loyalists and Allawite fighters allied to Hezbollah.

During last week’s take-over of Sunni strongholds in west Beirut by Hezbollah and its allies and the subsequent fierce weekend clashes with pro-government Druze, the army has been deploying in the areas captured by the opposition.


Photo: Adam Pletts/IRIN
The army stepped up patrols on 13 May, deploying heavily across Beirut and restoring calm to the northern port city of Tripoli
Army “cleaning up after Hezbollah”

“The army has been reduced to the role of cleaning up after Hezbollah, which is not very dignified for a national army,” said Paul Salem, head of the Carnegie Endowment's Middle East Centre in Beirut.

Iranian-backed Hezbollah’s armed take-over of areas of Lebanon held by the Western-backed government has dramatically shifted the balance of power and sent shockwaves through the Sunni-majority Arab world, as well as the USA and Europe.

“Of course, for Iran to back the coup that happened in Lebanon and support it will have an impact on its relations with all Arab countries,” Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said 13 May.

US stance

Ahead of his arrival in Tel Aviv on 14 May to bolster failing US-led peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinians, US President Bush condemned Hezbollah’s armed take-over in Lebanon, calling Iran the “single biggest threat” to peace in the region.

“Their funding of Hezbollah - look what's happening in Lebanon now, a young democracy trying to survive,” Bush told Israel’s Channel 10. The president is due to meet Prime Minister Siniora in Egypt on 18 May.

A US warship, the USS Cole, which was deployed off Lebanon in February in what US officials said was “a show of support for regional stability”, crossed Egypt's Suez Canal on 11 May on its way to the Mediterranean, according to an official with the canal authority.

Hezbollah compromised?

In a press conference on 12 May, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah's political adviser Hussein Khalil tried to play down fears of sectarian strife in Lebanon, casting Hezbollah's actions as a defence against a US attempt to disarm the group.


Photo: Adam Pletts/IRIN
Lebanese soldiers are under tremendous pressure to remain united
“We agree with Siniora that the core problem between us and them is Hezbollah's weapons,” said Khalil. “They have tried to realise an old American dream to turn Lebanon into a country deprived of resistance.”

Despite its combative stance, some analysts noted that, as yet, Hezbollah had failed to translate its significant military gains into major political ones, and that by using their arms in the country - an action they had previously forsworn - the group had tarnished its image as a Lebanese national fighting force aimed at Israel.

“Hezbollah need to restore their image, to dispel the notion they have become a local militia,” said Ousama Safa, director of Beirut's Lebanese Centre for Policy Studies. “We could see a strong attack on Israel in revenge for the killing of Mughniyeh.”

Imad Mughniyeh, a top Hezbollah commander, was assassinated in a car bombing in Damascus in February, prompting Nasrallah to pledge bloody retaliation against Israel.

“This May war will have more far-reaching consequences than the July War [of 2006],” said Hezbollah expert Amal Saad Ghorayeb. “Hezbollah knew it was a trap, but by using their weapons they are running out of cards to play. Both sides are stuck between a rock and hard place.”

hm/ar/cb


This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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