Los Angeles Times

Beirut blast drives conspiracy theories

In Lebanon, with its history of intrigue, the official explanatio­n is just one of many.

- By Nabih Bulos Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Mexico City contribute­d to this report.

BEIRUT — It was a missile strike, one story goes, no doubt carried out by an American drone. No, it was the work of Israeli fighter jets, according to another tale, a strike in the shadow conflict between Israel and Iran. Others swear it was part of a nefarious plot to plunge Lebanon into yet another civil war.

Since a stockpile of more than 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate blew up on the edge of Beirut this month, infuriated residents have been struggling to understand how the blast happened, and just what — or who — is to blame for the explosion that leveled entire neighborho­ods, killed at least 178 people and left thousands injured and homeless.

Many find the prevailing theory — that the blast was the accidental result of chronic mismanagem­ent of Beirut’s port — unconvinci­ng. Lebanese residents made cynical by years of government incompeten­ce and corruption have no trouble believing in those as contributi­ng factors. There are those in the country and beyond, however, who refuse to accept such an explanatio­n, given Lebanon’s long history of intrigue, dirty dealings and manipulati­on by external forces.

It is a matter of profound, and often justified, conviction that hardly anything happens here — whether it’s uncollecte­d garbage, electricit­y blackouts, floods, food shortages or currency nosedives — that isn’t guided by a malevolent outside hand, often working through handsomely paid local proxies. It’s a vision of multiple, sinister puppet masters controllin­g events from behind a screen none can penetrate. The latest confirmati­on of that outlook came just last week when a United Nations-backed tribunal found a militant with Hezbollah, a group sponsored by Iran, guilty of conspiring in the assassinat­ion of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri outside a Beirut hotel in 2005.

“Because of the history of Lebanon and the geopolitic­al situation, the first place people go to is obviously the worst: the theory of thirdstate interventi­on, terrorism, along with all the parties involved in Lebanon’s politics,” said Fabien Tabarly, head of NIGMA Conseil, a Beirut-based security consulting and intelligen­ce firm.

The Aug. 4 blast ranks as a particular­ly opaque event, one that wouldn’t be out of place in a John Le Carre novel.

The story begins in late 2013 with a Russian-owned, Moldovan-flagged ship, the Rhosus, making an unschedule­d stop in Beirut’s port. Its cargo included thousands of tons of highdensit­y ammonium nitrate, a common fertilizer and explosive, to be delivered to an explosives company in Mozambique.

The ship was deemed unseaworth­y and held by Lebanese authoritie­s until it paid its berthing fees. But the ship’s owner abandoned it, and the cargo was transferre­d to a warehouse, parked near a cache of confiscate­d fireworks and left to languish for more than six years in a bureaucrat­ic tangle, officials say.

Three weeks ago, a fire started at the port after what officials said was maintenanc­e activity, though the exact cause has yet to be determined. The blaze spread to the ammonium nitrate stockpile and detonated it.

But conspiracy theorists such as those belonging to the so-called 9/11 truth movement soon contended there was more to this explosion than met the eye.

Gordon Duff, editor of Veterans Today, a website that bills itself as “serving the clandestin­e community” but which many dismiss as peddling fake news, claimed that the ammonium nitrate cache was part of a multiyear setup orchestrat­ed by Israel to obscure its bombing of the port with a “tactical nuclear weapon.” A bevy of self-proclaimed experts pored over the color of the smoke, the mushroom cloud and the destructio­n wrought by the explosion and declared that it couldn’t have been caused by ammonium nitrate.

Videos — later shown to be doctored — emerged on social media depicting a missile striking the warehouse; one even claimed that an episode of “The Simpsons” had predicted the cataclysm.

Meanwhile, many Lebanese insisted that the blast was accompanie­d by sounds of fighter jets. They attributed their familiarit­y with the sound of jet engines to the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, during which south Beirut was pounded by Israeli warplanes.

“No way this material can blow up in this way on its own. I believe it was a missile,” Jimmy Geagea, a coordinato­r at a Beirut-based seminary, said in an interview. “Look, no doubt there was government negligence. But at the same time, there’s something strange.”

Geagea acknowledg­ed, however, that “these are all thoughts that come out of anger, because we’re so frustrated at what happened.”

With 18 different religious communitie­s vying for power in Lebanon’s notoriousl­y fractious state, the assignment of blame for the tragedy is inevitably refracted through sectarian or party loyalties.

The port, one side insists, is under the thumb of Hezbollah, which Washington designates as a terrorist organizati­on. According to this theory, the blast was triggered by a Hezbollah arms depot containing materiel to be used in neighborin­g Syria, where the group is bolstering the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad against his rebel adversarie­s. In this telling, the blast was meant to discredit Hezbollah.

Others say the ammonium nitrate was destined for the rebels in Syria and was brought into Lebanon by Hezbollah’s enemies.

Still another theory sees the blast as a tool of demographi­c change, pointing to the fact that Christiand­ominated neighborho­ods in east Beirut were the hardest hit while other parts of the city were largely spared.

Lebanon’s leaders haven’t helped clarify matters. President Michel Aoun, a Hezbollah ally, told an Italian newspaper it was “impossible” that the port had a Hezbollah weapons cache — but promised all avenues would be explored. Immediatel­y after the blast, Prime Minister Hassan Diab vowed there would be a swift investigat­ion; weeks later, the inquiry is ongoing amid bickering over the involvemen­t of internatio­nal authoritie­s.

Based on past experience, there’s little hope among the Lebanese for either a quick or transparen­t investigat­ion. The inquiry into former premier Hariri’s assassinat­ion took 15 years, concluding last week with a judgment many saw as hopelessly watered down: Although one Hezbollah militant was convicted, three others were acquitted, and no blame was pinned on Hezbollah itself. The assassinat­ions of figures involved in investigat­ing Hariri’s killing haven’t even merited a thorough examinatio­n.

In many ways, stalled justice is the norm here, fostered in the aftermath of Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war, which saw warlords become political leaders — they rule to this day — rather than be held accountabl­e. The mantra among Lebanon’s myriad factions is “la ghaleb wa la maghloub”: No victor and no vanquished.

Meanwhile, legitimate questions around the Beirut blast linger, such as why the cargo remained in the port for six years despite warnings by various state officials of its danger.

By 2015, almost twothirds of the stockpile was compromise­d, according to government communicat­ions reported by local media, with much of the ammonium nitrate strewn on the warehouse floor from ripped bags. A video shot in 2019 shows signs that the bags had been tampered with.

Two weeks before the explosion, the state security apparatus warned the government that the ammonium nitrate was badly stored and poorly guarded. The warehouse had a hole in its wall, and one of its doors had been damaged. Were some of the contents stolen?

Some answers have come from local media, led by figures such as Riad Kobaissi, an investigat­ive journalist who has worked on uncovering malfeasanc­e in the port for almost a decade. A picture has emerged of gross negligence, with various officials trying to find some way to benefit from the stockpile.

Wildf ires:

In the Aug. 24 Section A, an article about California wildfires said more than 2,000 homes and commercial buildings had been destroyed since late July. More than 1,000 structures have been destroyed.

Firef ighting:

In the Aug. 22 Section A, an article about firefighti­ng resources being stretched thin misidentif­ied UC Berkeley professor of fire science Scott Lewis Stephens as Scott Lewis.

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? SOME IN LEBANON remain unconvince­d that the catastroph­ic Aug. 4 blast in Beirut was the accidental result of chronic mismanagem­ent of the port.
AFP/Getty Images SOME IN LEBANON remain unconvince­d that the catastroph­ic Aug. 4 blast in Beirut was the accidental result of chronic mismanagem­ent of the port.

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