Arab News

Lebanon risks being the loser amid political divisions

- KHALED ABOU ZAHR

The continued deteriorat­ion of living conditions in Lebanon has been catastroph­ic. The Lebanese first lost their savings, then in Beirut they lost their homes in the explosion, and they are now losing security, food and medicine. They are also losing their future, with the youth looking for permanent exile. It has hence become a recurrent question among them: Will Lebanon survive as a country or will it plunge into total chaos and obliterati­on?

There is also the risk we sometimes forget to consider, which is the complete transforma­tion of the current political system into a new one built and organized by Hezbollah. This is, in my view, unfortunat­ely becoming more and more probable. The current political debate around the formation of a new government headed by Saad Hariri has brought even more division to the once-unified March 14 Alliance.

Many question how Hariri’s renewed premiershi­p could do anything to change the balance in the current situation and how it seems highly unlikely he will be able to impose the people’s views on a daily basis against Hezbollah’s control of the state. People are now clearly stating that the old formula of “no winner and no loser” will no longer work. They are stating that, this time, there will be a winner and a loser. It certainly does not help to see clear divisions between Hariri and the Lebanese Force’s Samir Geagea and even, to a certain extent, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt.

This makes it easier for Hezbollah to be the winner.

It is terrible, as we can understand all those opposing parties’ fears and positions. Hariri, as he has expressed it, wants to avoid escalation and armed confrontat­ion, while his former allies see his appeasemen­t as validation of Hezbollah’s continued steps toward full control of Lebanon.

Exactly one year on from the start of the protests, we are back to square one — as many commentato­rs have described it — with the nomination of Hariri as prime minister. It also seems that Hezbollah is not in a hurry to move forward either, as it would prefer to wait until after the result of next month’s US presidenti­al election is known so that the Iranian regime can determine its strategy.

We are, hence, back once again to an empty prime minister’s office. The prime

Khaled Abou Zahr is CEO of Eurabia, a media and tech company. He is also the editor

of Al-Watan Al-Arabi. ministersh­ip, for those who still do not know, is a Sunni post in this sectarian state. There is, in my view, a consistent and focused Hezbollah policy to erode and ridicule this post. It is a sectarian move by a sectarian organizati­on that is empowered by the sectarian Iranian regime.

At this stage, it seems the Iranians are waiting for a signal to enact their final play; not only in Lebanon but also in Iraq and their other vassal states. Many analysts consider the US election result to be this signal. So Hezbollah, backed by its masters in Tehran, believes it can force a regime change in Lebanon whenever it wants and build something new regardless of whether the prime minister’s post is occupied or vacant.

I was recently reminded on Twitter that the Taif Agreement has not even been fully implemente­d. One example is the forgotten senate and bicameral system that was supposed to help end sectariani­sm. In fact, it was not forgotten but rather executed by the Syrian regime and buried by Hezbollah.

There is a simple reason for that: Hezbollah’s plan is to choose the same titles as in the Taif Agreement but pervert them. It will claim to pursue the end of sectariani­sm but will do so without building the processes and institutio­ns that protect all minorities. It will leave the state in its decrepitud­e to bring about a solution that allows it to shift into a new regime and its own system.

Its current arrogance in the face of the situation tells us that the time for this shift is coming closer.

Yet, in a strange way, Lebanon might be saved not by the voice of its people but by geopolitic­al shifts. Lebanon is strangely linked to what is happening in Europe, Syria and Libya, plus the situation with Turkey’s growing influence and now the ArmeniaAze­rbaijan confrontat­ion. Iran is involved too, particular­ly as it is an active meddling power. The latest crisis in the Caucasus has placed Tehran in an ambiguous situation, as it does not want to antagonize its sizable Azeri population, while it also aims to maintain good relations with Armenia. Like Hezbollah’s involvemen­t in Syria and other contradict­ions, this discredits the regime and shows that there is no real ideology or true belief, rather only the interests of a small circle. It is also a sign that, in the face of all these difficulti­es, Lebanon is not lost if there are voices ready to defend it, as they will also find friends to help them.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia