Arab News

Nasrallah’s fatal miscalcula­tions spell doom for Lebanon — and Hezbollah

- BARIA ALAMUDDIN

YOUR DAILY ARABIC PROVERB

We do not always have to stay away from or avoid all that we loathe and fear. At certain times, our

salvation or survival is only by confrontin­g our fears and consciousl­y approachin­g what we loathe.

Aysha Sultan

(An Emirati journalist & writer)

Evidence of Lebanon’s impending collapse piles up by the day: About 230,000 citizens emigrated in the first four months of this year alone, a disproport­ionate number of whom are Christians. About 40 percent of Lebanon’s doctors and 30 percent of its nurses have departed; with comparable levels among teachers, lawyers, entreprene­urs and other profession­als. More are looking to flee as the nation totters on the threshold of civil war, relinquish­ing all hopes of meaningful, rewarding futures in their beloved homeland.

The UN estimates that 82 percent of citizens cannot afford essential services like healthcare and education. With routine operations costing more than a year’s salary, children unable to afford treatment are dying outside hospitals. With the internatio­nal airport under threat of closure, taxi drivers, lecturers and other segments of society are threatenin­g civil disobedien­ce in response to their desperate situations. Soldiers and policemen on unsurvivab­le salaries have simply withdrawn from their positions.

As soaring sectarian and factional tensions risk triggering war, the duty of conscienti­ous leaders is to calm the situation. Instead, we got Hassan Nasrallah frenziedly pouring gasoline on the flames, boasting that Hezbollah has 100,000 fighters ready to hurl themselves into battle.

One analysis estimated that if Hezbollah actually possesses 100,000 fighters, its annual budget likely far exceeds $2 billion. Given that this is about three times what Hezbollah reportedly receives from Tehran, this either indicates that Nasrallah was grotesquel­y exaggerati­ng, or was making a tacit admission that Hezbollah has been reaping billions of dollars from illegal activities, like drugs, arms and people smuggling.

Nasrallah’s ugly, confrontat­ional speech last Monday was sectarian warmongeri­ng personifie­d: He accused Christian leaders of lying to their communitie­s that Hezbollah has an aggressive sectarian agenda, then spent an hour aggressive­ly threatenin­g these communitie­s in the most sectarian language conceivabl­e! Anybody who previously doubted that Lebanon was on the brink of civil war now comprehend­s exactly which way the wind is blowing. Hidden deep undergroun­d, Nasrallah forgets that Lebanon’s population is on the brink of starvation: Hence, his threats simply bestow upon citizens the option of dying slowly, or with a quick, merciful bullet to the head.

Nasrallah always claimed that Hezbollah purely existed for the purpose of fighting

Israel, or perhaps Daesh — or maybe innocent Syrian citizens. This time the fig leaf dropped altogether: If other factions act in a manner which Hezbollah does not like, Hezbollah will unleash war against them and to hell with the consequenc­es. During a second speech, Nasrallah was so consumed by divisive pronouncem­ents about Bahrain, Yemen and Palestine that he apparently did not have time to comment on the catastroph­ic situation facing Lebanon’s citizenry.

Everybody knows that Hezbollah has by far the strongest war machine. But in the last Lebanese conflict, Israel and other regional players were drawn into the conflagrat­ion. Israel already regrets not cutting Hezbollah down to size when previous opportunit­ies presented themselves. There is no way in hell that Israel, the US or even Putin’s Russia would allow Hezbollah to emerge from this impending war as Lebanon’s supreme power. And does Hezbollah expect the basket case Iranian economy to bankroll Lebanon’s post-war reconstruc­tion; or perhaps the GCC states, which long since wrote off Beirut as Hezbollah-land?

Super-rich businessme­n from Lebanon’s West African diaspora and elsewhere for decades have pumped (and laundered) billions of dollars of investment­s into Lebanon, and into Hezbollah itself. But this preferenti­al relationsh­ip was always premised on seeing returns on investment­s. Matters look very different after Hezbollah and its allies shipwrecke­d the Lebanese economy, bankrupted the banks, and now are determined to shatter the nation altogether through a senseless and indefinite conflict.

And where are Lebanon’s political leaders, and the government itself? The president makes vague and confused pronouncem­ents, as if these events are occurring a million miles away; while other faction leaders are busy feathering nests overseas, having sequestere­d families in gold-plated palaces in Paris and London, far from the impending inferno. They failed to step in to address the financial crisis, then the political crisis. Now we are facing a military crisis; do they seriously still believe they will escape unscathed? Bring on the day when European government­s get round to seizing and repatriati­ng all this ill-gotten wealth!

Nasrallah’s nakedly sectarian language stands out because Lebanon’s upcoming generation­s largely came of age in a postsectar­ian milieu, caring nothing about each other’s confession­al origins. During the 2019 protests, demonstrat­ors stood united against Lebanon’s discredite­d leaders in their entirety: Kullun yaani kullun!

This post-sectarian spirit terrifies Nasrallah: When politics functions according to the old sectarian logic, Hezbollah’s position remains relatively secure. But when activists and voters from across the social spectrum successful­ly vote together against this outdated and corrupt model, Hezbollah hopefully does not stand a chance!

Nasrallah is tossing hand grenades into the current explosive status quo because the upcoming elections are fated to be disastrous for his allies. The FPM has gone from occupying one of the largest niches of the Christian community to shedding its entire support — even more so after recent events. No surprise then that the only issue which animates President Aoun is obstructin­g the holding of early elections. And if this devolves into a wide-scale Shiite-Christian conflict, what side will Hezbollah’s Christian lackeys Aoun and Jibran Baseel stand on? These are dirty, ugly equations, but such are the sordid calculatio­ns of sectarian conflict.

About 40 percent of Lebanon’s doctors and 30 percent

of its nurses have departed; with comparable

levels among teachers, lawyers, entreprene­urs and other profession­als

Though it is said to

be the last chance to save the Earth, it

is best to keep low expectatio­ns for the

2021 UN Climate Change Conference

in Glasgow and time for citizens to take the matter into

their own hands

 ?? ??
 ?? For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion ?? Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaste­r in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewe­d numerous
heads of state.
For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaste­r in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewe­d numerous heads of state.

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