The National - News

RETURN OF HARIRI PULLS LEBANON BACK FROM THE BRINK

- HUSSEIN IBISH

It is no surprise, now that he is back in Beirut, that Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri has placed his resignatio­n on hold pending negotiatio­ns with president Michel Aoun and other allies of Hizbollah.

This represents a vital opportunit­y to bring Lebanon back from the brink of crisis, given that all Lebanese parties and the country would suffer if the delicate political balance that had allowed Mr Hariri to cohabitate politicall­y with Hizbollah – which stands accused of assassinat­ing his father Rafiq in 2005 – was upset.

All major Lebanese actors are beholden to foreign patrons, in Mr Hariri’s case Saudi Arabia, with Hizbollah serving Iran’s interests. Riyadh almost certainly approved Mr Hariri’s resignatio­n, which was made by video from Saudi Arabia, and now his return to Beirut and offer to negotiate with rivals.

Riyadh has been a major source of vital support and foreign exchange to the Lebanese state and economy. But Hizbollah’s destabilis­ing regional role has expanded, especially after the fall of Aleppo in January. It now includes not only a crucial role in supporting Iran and Bashar Al Assad in Syria, but also Iran’s proxies in Iraq, Yemen and Bahrain. Saudi Arabia appears no longer willing to fund and underwrite the base that Hizbollah uses to extend its tentacles across the region on behalf of a growing Iranian hegemony.

Matters reached a crisis three weeks ago when Houthi rebels in Yemen fired a missile – allegedly supplied by Iran and probably overseen by Hizbollah – at Riyadh’s internatio­nal airport, and pro-Iran forces seized control of crucial areas along the Syrian-Iraqi border that make an Iranian “land bridge” to Beirut and the Mediterran­ean Sea an emerging reality rather than an aspiration.

Some commentato­rs argue that Riyadh overreache­d in Lebanon and elsewhere in response, but the Saudi message has communicat­ed to all the Lebanese. Even Hizbollah seemed rattled, as evinced by an uncharacte­ristically conciliato­ry speech by its leader Hassan Nasrallah in response to Mr Hariri’s “resignatio­n”.

Riyadh has yet to deploy its biggest weapons in Lebanon: withdrawin­g at least US$860 million (Dh3.16 billion) in deposits with the Lebanese central bank and blocking vital remittance­s from hundreds of thousands of Lebanese expats working in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries. Such moves would devastate Lebanon’s economy, currency and political equilibriu­m.

How much can be accomplish­ed by pressuring other Lebanese to rein in Hizbollah is questionab­le, given their relative weakness. The real battlegrou­nds against Iranian hegemony are Syria and Iraq, where it will take much more than this to shift Hizbollah, not Lebanon and Yemen.

Mr Hariri might convince Hizbollah to stop aiding the Houthis, an imperative for Riyadh. But rolling back Iran in Iraq and, especially, Syria will require co-ordination between Arab countries, the US, Russia, Turkey, and even Israel. Beirut simply can’t and won’t be a key factor in reshaping the regional landscape, despite the key role Hizbollah is playing in Iran’s expanding imperial project.

 ??  ?? Prime minister Saad Hariri at his home in Beirut, Lebanon, yesterday
Prime minister Saad Hariri at his home in Beirut, Lebanon, yesterday
 ??  ?? Lebanese president Michel Aoun, left, prime minister Saad Hariri, right, and parliament speaker Nabih Berri in Baadba
Lebanese president Michel Aoun, left, prime minister Saad Hariri, right, and parliament speaker Nabih Berri in Baadba

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