Arab Times

Saudi-led anti-IS coalition is ‘suspicious,’ says Hezbollah

Lebanon’s participat­ion slammed

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An Iraqi taxi driver drives a customer with his balloons on a street in central Baghdad’s

Karada district on Dec 18. (AFP)

BEIRUT, Dec 18, (RTRS): The Lebanese Shi’ite Muslim group Hezbollah said on Thursday that a Saudi-led 34-nation antiIslami­c State coalition announced this week had been formed “in a suspicious way” and it questioned Saudi Arabia’s competence to lead it.

Hezbollah, which has repeatedly criticised Sunni heavyweigh­t Saudi Arabia over its military operations in Yemen and its support for Sunni Muslim Islamist rebels in Syria, also rejected the idea of Lebanon’s participat­ion in the coalition.

The group, which views the Saudi leadership in the same light as traditiona­l enemies Israel and the United States, accuses Riyadh of being responsibl­e for the spread of hardline Islam by adopting the Wahhabi school of the religion.

This follows a strict version of Islam and has inspired most Sunni jihadist groups.

“The formation of this coalition is something that was hastily done and in a suspicious way which raises many questions. On top of this, there is the question about the extent of competence of the Saudis to lead a coalition against terrorism,” Hezbollah said in a statement.

Western government­s welcomed the announceme­nt of the coalition this week but there was uncertaint­y over how it would work.

Hezbollah, an ally of Iran, is an important player in the struggle playing out across the Middle East between the conservati­ve Sunni Muslim government of Saudi Arabia and the Shi’ite Islamist government of Iran.

Hezbollah has sent fighters across the border to support Syrian President Bashar alAssad in his fight against Sunni Islamist fighters.

Lebanon has also been an arena for SaudiIrani­an rivalry between Hezbollah and its allies on the one hand, and a rival alliance led by Sunni politician Saad al-Hariri, who is backed by Riyadh, on the other.

The group said it was surprised to know that Lebanon, which has been without a president for 18 months, was part of the coalition “without any of the Lebanese knowing about it.”

Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam said Lebanon had been asked by the Saudi leadership to join the coalition which he welcomed since Lebanon considers itself “in the frontline in fighting terrorism.”

Salam, in statement this week from his office, also said that the coalition was a “step for the interest of all the people in Muslim countries.”

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