The Jerusalem Post

Hezbollah tries to steer Lebanon closer to Syria, straining government’s efforts to stay neutral

- • By LISA BARRINGTON

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Hezbollah and its allies are pressing the Lebanese state to normalize relations with President Bashar Assad’s government in Syria, testing Lebanon’s policy of “dissociati­on” from the Syrian conflict and igniting a political row.

Calls for closer ties with the Syrian government, including on refugee returns and military operations on the Lebanon-Syria border, come as Assad regains control of more territory from insurgents and seeks to recover his internatio­nal standing.

The Lebanese policy of “dissociati­on,” agreed in 2012, has aimed to keep the deeply divided state out of regional conflicts such as Syria even as Iran-backed Hezbollah became heavily involved there, sending fighters to help Assad, who is also allied to Iran.

The policy has helped rival groups to coexist in government­s bringing together Hezbollah, classified as a terrorist group by the United States, with politician­s allied to Iran’s foe Saudi Arabia, underpinni­ng a degree of political entente amid the regional turmoil.

While Lebanon never severed diplomatic or trade ties with Syria, the government has avoided dealing with the Syrian government in an official capacity and the collapse of the policy would be a boost a political boost to Assad.

It would also underline Iran’s ascendancy in Lebanon, where the role of Saudi Arabia has diminished in recent years when it has focused on confrontin­g Tehran in the Gulf instead.

Assad’s powerful Lebanese Shi’ite allies want the government to cooperate with Syria on issues such as the fight against jihadists at their shared border and securing the return of the 1.5 million Syrians currently taking refuge in Lebanon.

“Everybody recognizes [the dissociati­on policy] as a farce to some extent, but at least it contained the conflict and prevented Lebanon from being dragged even further into what is going on in Syria,” said Maha Yahya, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut.

“[A normalizat­ion of relations] would be viewed as a victory, if using sectarian terms, of Shi’ites versus the Sunnis and will just inflame tensions even more.”

Lebanon’s relationsh­ip with Syria has for decades set rival Lebanese against each other. Syria dominated its smaller neighbor from the end of its 1975-90 civil war until 2005.

A row erupted this week because of plans by government ministers from Hezbollah and the Shi’ite Amal party to visit Damascus next week.

Although the government has refused to sanction the visit as official business – citing the dissociati­on policy – Industry Minister Hussein Hajj Hassan, a Hezbollah member, has insisted they will be in Damascus as government representa­tives.

“We will meet Syrian ministers in our ministeria­l capacity, we will hold talks over some economic issues in our ministeria­l capacity, and we will return in our ministeria­l capacity to follow up on these matters,” Hassan told Al-Manar TV.

Samir Geagea, a leading Lebanese Christian politician and longstandi­ng opponent of Hezbollah and Syrian influence in Lebanon, has said the visit to Syria will “shake Lebanon’s political stability and put Lebanon in the Iranian camp.”

A senior Lebanese official allied to Damascus described the row as “part of the political struggle in the region.”

The influence of Iran’s allies in Lebanon was shown last year by the selection of a longtime ally of Hezbollah, Christian politician Michel Aoun, as head of state in a political deal that also installed Saudi-allied Sunni Prime Minister Saad Hariri.

Hezbollah has recently stepped up calls for the Lebanese government to engage directly with Damascus over the return of Syrian refugees, who now account for one in four of the people in Lebanon and are overwhelmi­ngly Sunni.

The issue is of enormous political sensitivit­y in Lebanon, although all politician­s agree they must return to Syria due to strains on Lebanon’s resources and risks to its sectarian balance.

Hariri has said Lebanon will only coordinate refugee returns with the United Nations, which says there can be no forced return of people who fled the conflict, many of whom fear returning to a Syria governed by Assad.

But one branch of the Lebanese state, the powerful internal security agency General Security, recently held talks with the Syrian authoritie­s to secure the return of several thousand Syrians into Syria following a military campaign by Hezbollah in the northeast border region.

General Security says the refugee returns have been voluntary. The United Nations has had no role in the talks.

An expected Lebanese army assault on Islamic State fighters at the border with Syria has been another focal point for the debate over cooperatio­n with Damascus. The army, a recipient of US aid, has said it will lead the battle alone in Lebanese territory, and does not need to coordinate with other parties.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has said his group and the Syrian army will mount a simultaneo­us assault against ISIS from the Syrian side of the frontier, however.

“Practicall­y speaking, the dissociati­on policy is finished,” said Nabil Boumonsef, a columnist with the Lebanese newspaper An-Nahar.

But he warned of the political ramificati­ons in Lebanon, saying “political score settling” by one party against another would create “a big problem” in the country.

 ?? (Lebanese Army/Reuters) ?? A LEBANESE SOLDIER speaks with a Syrian refugee in Arsal, near the Syrian border, on July 24.
(Lebanese Army/Reuters) A LEBANESE SOLDIER speaks with a Syrian refugee in Arsal, near the Syrian border, on July 24.

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