Kuwait Times

EU and US diverge from Saudi, affirm support for Lebanon

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BEIRUT: The European Union yesterday affirmed support for Lebanon following the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Saad Al-Hariri, echoing US backing for the Beirut government which Saudi Arabia has accused of declaring war. Statements of support from EU ambassador­s to Lebanon and the US State Department on Tuesday struck a sharply different tone to Saudi Arabia, which has lumped Lebanon together with the Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah as parties hostile to it.

Lebanon has been pitched into deep crisis since the Saudi-allied Hariri resigned on Saturday in a speech delivered from Saudi Arabia in which he accused Hezbollah and Iran of sowing strife in the Arab world and cited fear of assassinat­ion. The circumstan­ces surroundin­g Hariri’s sudden resignatio­n have given rise to speculatio­n in Lebanon that he had been caught up in a high-level anti-corruption purge in Saudi Arabia, where his family made their fortune, and coerced into resigning.

Saudi Arabia has denied this along with reports that it has put Hariri under house arrest. It says he quit because Hezbollah was calling the shots in the government. The move has pulled Lebanon back to the forefront of a regional struggle between the Sunni monarchy of Saudi Arabia and the Shiite Islamist government of Iran, a rivalry which has also swept through Syria, Iraq, Bahrain and Yemen. In a statement, the EU ambassador­s said they reaffirmed “their strong support for the continued unity, stability, sovereignt­y, and security of Lebanon and its people”. They called “on all sides to pursue constructi­ve dialogue and to build on the work achieved in the last 11 months towards strengthen­ing Lebanon’s institutio­ns and preparing parliament­ary elections in early 2018, in adherence with the Constituti­on”. On Tuesday, the US State Department said Lebanon was a strong US partner. “The United States strongly supports the legitimate institutio­ns in the Lebanese state,” spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said.

“We expect all members of the internatio­nal community to respect fully those institutio­ns and the sovereignt­y and political independen­ce of Lebanon,” she said. The United States classifies Hezbollah as a terrorist group. But it is also a major sponsor of the Lebanese military, which receives support from Britain as well. Lebanon has also received significan­t Western aid to help it cope with the strain of hosting 1.5 million Syrian refugees, equivalent to around a quarter of the population.

Hezbollah, set up by the Iranian Revolution­ary Guards in 1982, is the most powerful group in Lebanon, with a guerrilla army that out guns the national military and major sway in government. Neither Hezbollah nor the Lebanese government have responded to accusation­s made by Saudi Gulf affairs minister Thamer Al-Sabhan that both Lebanon and Hezbollah had declared war on the kingdom. President Michel Aoun, a Hezbollah ally who took office last year, has refused to accept Hariri’s resignatio­n, saying he first wants him to return to Lebanon so he can meet him in person to understand the reasons. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has said the coalition government led by Hariri still stands.

 ?? — AFP ?? TRIPOLI: A woman walks past a poster bearing a portrait of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman above a shop in Lebanon’s northern port city of Tripoli.
— AFP TRIPOLI: A woman walks past a poster bearing a portrait of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman above a shop in Lebanon’s northern port city of Tripoli.

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