Arab News

77 years later, Lebanon faces a grim reality

- DR. DANIA KOLEILAT KHATIB

Nov. 22 was Lebanon’s 77th Independen­ce Day. While the country is supposed to have been celebratin­g its birth, Lebanon is facing a grim reality: Like many failed states it is held hostage by a corrupt elite. Alvarez & Marsal, the firm mandated with conducting a forensic audit of the Central Bank of Lebanese, pulled out of the deal due to the reluctance of Lebanese officials to provide necessary informatio­n. Its withdrawal puts the last nail in the coffin of aid for Lebanon by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) or any other organizati­on.

Though the Lebanese president rushed to say that he would revive the audit to fight “corruption,” any sane observer knows that any audit and any reform is not possible with the current political configurat­ion.

The political class, currently in survival mode, was faced with two choices. The first was the audit to expose corrupt politician­s; the other path was to let the country sink. They chose the second option, under the lame excuse that the audit breached banking secrecy laws.

While foreign analysts naively divide Lebanese politician­s into “good guys” and

“bad guys,” in reality they are all one and the same, bound by a power-sharing agreement. This is why, though Saad Hariri is supposedly in the opposite camp to Hezbollah, the Shi’ite group has tacitly supported his candidacy by saying it would facilitate his government’s formation without directly nominating him. They know he will cover their back. Their ally, the Amal Movement, explicitly nominated Hariri for the job. The political elite is still hanging on to power as they know that there is no way out for them. The only guarantee for their survival is to remain in power. The corruption and embezzleme­nt they have committed over 30 years will come back to haunt them if they ever leave.

On this, France and the US have diverging policies. The French want a quick fix in which the same political structure is reproduced with cosmetic reforms. The Americans, on the other hand, have had enough of the useless elite that has done nothing but blackmail the internatio­nal community. They want them gone. The problem is that the elite has no scruples, and will take the entire country with it should they fall. They see poverty spreading, people struggling, the state institutio­ns losing their ability to provide the minimum level of services to the

Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on lobbying. She is co-founder of the Research Center for Cooperatio­n and Peace Building, a Lebanese NGO focused on Track II. She is also an affiliate scholar with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and Internatio­nal Affairs at the American University of Beirut. average citizen, but they don’t care.

Saad Hariri has the designatio­n in his pocket and is showing no rush to form a government of specialist­s, which he promised the Lebanese people. He is guaranteed his slice of the pie and he is just waiting for some regional dynamics to flip the cards in his favor.

The Lebanese political elite knows it is in a checkmate position. However, it wants to delay its departure as long as it can. They are threatenin­g the Lebanese, as well as the internatio­nal community, with chaos, but neither seems convinced. Despite the fatigue, the Lebanese people still reject them. Lebanon is deadlocked as the elites remain unmoved by popular discontent.

The proper way to effect change is for civil society to get organized and prepare itself for the upcoming elections in two years. But Lebanon is nearing a total social and economic collapse. It cannot wait for another two years. The World Bank is disbursing a small amount of money for the severely affected people. This is like putting a Band-Aid on a wound that requires major surgery.

The nongovernm­ental organizati­ons are also active in helping the Lebanese people, but again, those small initiative­s cannot replace major reforms that the country needs in order to stand on its feet again, and there is no guarantee that they will be able to sustain the country for another two years. Hence, the country needs a transition­al government from outside the traditiona­l political elite that will conduct reforms, restore stolen public funds, and prepare for new parliament­ary elections. The million-dollar question is: How can this transition be achieved? The solution comes when the politician­s realize that they have nowhere left to turn. In this respect, internatio­nal pressure is essential. US sanctions have already hit three politician­s and more are to come. But though vital, that pressure alone is insufficie­nt. Pressure on the street is necessary to make change happen.

Amid all this, the most difficult obstacle remains Hezbollah. It is backed by Iran and by the Assad regime; it is the most organized group, and is sufficient­ly armed to start a civil war. Unless the regional dynamics change, it will be close to impossible to outmaneuve­r Hezbollah. Hence, the crux of the matter boils down to the type of pressure that should be imposed on it and its patrons, and the deal that should come with it to compel the group to allow such a transition.

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