Los Angeles Times

Lebanese prime minister resigns

Saad Hariri’s move baffles his allies. He says there had been an attempt to kill him.

- By Nabih Bulos Bulos is a special correspond­ent.

Saad Hariri’s abrupt departure baff les his allies. He claims there had been an attempt to kill him.

AMMAN, Jordan — Lebanon’s prime minister, Saad Hariri, resigned Saturday during a trip to Saudi Arabia, where he launched a televised verbal attack on that country’s regional rival Iran, heightenin­g a simmering fight for political control of Lebanon.

Hariri made the surprise announceme­nt on the Saudi-state owned Al Arabiya news channel, leaving both his government and political allies baffled by the move. His resignatio­n ends an 11-month run as prime minister that was meant to herald new cooperatio­n between Lebanon’s Saudi-aligned parties and Iranbacked factions that include Hezbollah.

Hariri also claimed there had been an attempt to kill him.

“I sensed what was being conspired in the darkness to target my life,” said Hariri, adding that the atmosphere was similar to the time when Prime Minister Rafik Hariri — Saad Hariri’s father — was assassinat­ed in 2005.

That killing, which was blamed on the Syrian government and Hezbollah, triggered the so-called Cedar Revolution that demanded an end to Syrian influence in Lebanese affairs.

Saad Hariri invoked his father’s memory, calling on the Lebanese people to reject external interferen­ce.

Yet he spoke from a strictly Saudi point of view, focusing his ire particular­ly on Iran as well as Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Shiite party and armed faction that is arguably the strongest player in Lebanon’s fractious political landscape.

“Wherever [Iran] lands in an area, it plants in it disputes, destructio­n and ruin. This was witnessed in its meddlings in the internal affairs of the Arabic nations of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Bahrain and Yemen,” said Hariri, adding that Iran was driven by a “deep hatred” against Arab countries.

Hariri said “unfortunat­ely” Iran has found Lebanese willing to cooperate with the country, and he criticized Hezbollah for possessing weapons and for intervenin­g in neighborin­g Syria on the side of President Bashar Assad.

Hezbollah has long insisted that its interventi­on was meant to prevent the chaos of Syria spilling across the border into Lebanon.

“And I want to say, Iran and its followers, that they are losing in their interventi­ons in the affairs of the Arab nations,” said Hariri, vowing that what he called the Arab umma, or community, would rise once again and “the hands extended towards it with evil intent would be cut.”

“Just as it responded to you in Bahrain and Yemen, it will respond to you in every part of our precious umma.”

It was not clear what led to his resignatio­n. The office of Lebanese President Michel Aoun issued a statement saying that Hariri had informed him of his resignatio­n in a phone call, and that he awaited Hariri’s return so as to be informed “of the circumstan­ces of the resignatio­n.”

Hariri’s time in power was supposed to usher in a new understand­ing between the two regional superpower­s and break the political deadlock that had hobbled the country’s government for years. With his family’s close ties to Saudi Arabia, he was seen as a counterbal­ance to Aoun, a Hezbollah ally who was picked by parliament to assume the country’s presidency.

Yet Hariri’s appointmen­t followed a period of waning Saudi influence in Lebanon’s affairs. Last year, Riyadh canceled a $4-billion aid package to Lebanon’s security forces after Aoun defended Hezbollah’s possession of weapons.

Meanwhile, pro-Assad Lebanese politician­s have been emboldened as the war in Syria shows signs of ending in favor of Assad, who also is backed by Iran.

A delegation went this year to Damascus to discuss reconstruc­tion plans for the country and how Lebanon could benefit from the potential windfall. And last week, Beirut reestablis­hed diplomatic ties with Damascus, further angering Riyadh.

Hariri’s resignatio­n comes one day after a meeting with Ali Akbar Velayati, advisor to Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in which, according to the official Iranian news agency IRNA, Velayati had stressed Iran’s support for the stability of Lebanon and its independen­ce.

Regionally, the response to Hariri’s departure followed the fault lines created by the Saudi-Iran rift.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to the Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz, said it was a “wake-up call for the internatio­nal community to act against Iranian aggression,” accusing Iran of trying to “turn Syria into a second Lebanon.”

“This aggression not only endangers Israel, but the entire Middle East. The internatio­nal community should unify and stand against this aggression.”

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi, in an interview with local news outlets, condemned Hariri’s resignatio­n, saying it was based on “unfounded accusation­s by Zionists [a reference to Israel], Saudi Arabia and America, and was another attempt to create tensions in Lebanon and the region.”

Locally, Lebanese couldn’t resist pointing out the irony of a leader condemning external influence on his country on a foreign state-owned channel. Hariri’s critics also accused him of risking Lebanon’s stability to satisfy Saudi Arabia’s anti-Iran hubris.

But the main response was less derision than bewilderme­nt — even among Hariri’s own Future movement, which seemed no less surprised by the announceme­nt.

“Frankly, Lebanon is much too small and weak to bear the economic and political burdens of this resignatio­n,” veteran Lebanese politician Walid Jumblatt said in a statement on Twitter on Saturday. “I was and will always remain one of those who calls for dialogue between Saudi Arabia and Iran.”

‘I sensed what was being conspired in the darkness to target my life.’

— Saad Hariri, who said the atmosphere was similar to the time when Prime Minister Rafik Hariri — his father — was assassinat­ed in 2005

 ?? Dalati Nohra Government of Lebanon ?? LEBANESE Prime Minister Saad Hariri meets with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh in a photo released last week. Hariri resigned Saturday during his Saudi trip, during which he attacked Iran, saying it was driven by a “deep hatred” of...
Dalati Nohra Government of Lebanon LEBANESE Prime Minister Saad Hariri meets with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh in a photo released last week. Hariri resigned Saturday during his Saudi trip, during which he attacked Iran, saying it was driven by a “deep hatred” of...

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