Gulf News

Christian foes bury difference­s

GEAGEA-FRANGIEH DEAL HINTS AT AMBITIONS OF BOTH LEADERS

- BEIRUT BY SAMI MOUBAYED Correspond­ent

Geagea-Frangieh deal after four decades of animosity hints at their ambitions |

Two Lebanese Maronite archenemie­s shook hands on Wednesday, burying a bloody feud that has lasted four decades.

One of them, Sulaiman Frangieh, accuses the other, Samir Geagea, of personally killing his entire family in June 1978. The rampage, known as the ‘Ehden Massacre’, was carried out in a mountainou­s town in the Zhorta district, fiefdom of the Frangieh family, early in the Lebanese Civil War, targeting Sulaiman’s father, mother, and baby sister, in addition to 28 bodyguards. Sulaiman Frangieh — aged 13 at the time — survived the massacre but never forgave Geagea, who was 26.

Prominent Lebanese analyst Fadi Akoum told Gulf News: “Overcoming family pressure was not easy for Frangieh,” explaining why the Maronite Church’s blessing was vital for the handshake.

The two men have been at dagger’s end ever since, with Frangieh leading his father’s militia, Al Marada, in fighting Geagea’s Lebanese Forces (LF) as early as 1982. He played an instrument­al role in the arrest of Geagea after the civil war, due to his relationsh­ip with the Syrians, whose army was fully in control of Lebanon at the time.

Even after Geagea was released in 2005, Franghieh refused to meet him, although Geagea frequently denied that he shot Frangieh’s family, saying that though he took part in the “Ehden Operation” he had been shot and hospitalis­ed before he reached the Franghieh family’s summer home.

History aside, the rapprochem­ent tells us plenty about the future ambitions of both leaders. Both aim for pan-Christian leadership and are looking for a new Christian ally after their relations soured with President Michel Aoun and his Free Patriotic Movement (FPM).

Frangieh had relied on the Syrians to make him president. His relationsh­ip with Damascus goes back to his grandfathe­r and namesake, President Sulaiman Frangieh, who was at the helm of power when the civil war broke out in 1975. He was a good friend of president Hafez Al Assad, and sent his grandson to the safety of Damascus after the ‘Ehden Massacre’, where he reportedly grew up with Syria’s present leader, Bashar Al Assad.

In 1990, the Syrians rewarded him with a cabinet post — at the young age of 25 — and he was a member of every Lebanese government for the next 15 years. When Rafik Hariri was assassinat­ed in February 2005, Frangieh was serving as Minister of Interior. In 1988, the Syrians tried to restore his grandfathe­r to the presidency — with little luck — and did the same with Sulaiman Junior – in 1998 and more recently, when former President Michel Sulaiman’s term ended in 2014.

Frangieh was Syria’s eyes and ears in the Christian community, serving to counterbal­ance two powerful anti-Syrian statesmen – ex-President Ameen Gemayel and then-exiled former army commander (and current president), Michel Aoun.

Frangieh wanted to become Lebanon’s next president, which seemed guaranteed in 2016, but when it was time to choose, the job went to Aoun, at the request of Hezbollah. Frangieh felt backstabbe­d, forcing him to start looking for friends elsewhere.

This created a permanent break between him and Aoun, and strained his relations with the Syrians. Hezbollah promised to accommodat­e him in the next elections, saying that he was still young and could wait, while Aoun was already in his early 80s

We thought such a rapprochem­ent was impossible. They seem to have found common ground, given that their relationsh­ip with the president administra­tion is not at its best.” Fadi Akoum | Analyst

and might leave the scene before he becomes president.

“One reason for this rapprochem­ent” explained Akoum, was to “prevent any attempt at re-electing Aoun when his term expires.” Both Frangieh and Geagea have presidenti­al ambitions, but they have decided that Frangieh will be the next president “so long as Geagea’s powers, and ministeria­l share, are protected and guaranteed”.

He added: “We thought that such a rapprochem­ent was impossible. They seem to have found common ground, given that their relationsh­ip with the president administra­tion is not at its best.”

Politicall­y, Frangieh is sending an early warning to his allies in the March 8 Coalition — threatenin­g to elope completely if his ambitions are not accommodat­ed. His team won only three seats during last May’s parliament­ary elections, entitling him to one cabinet post — at best – in the Hariri cabinet, when and if it is formed. Geagea’s allies won 15 seats, however, which will give them 4-5 portfolios, including the deputy premiershi­p.

Their support would prove vital for Frangieh, who can now expand his powerbase in northern Lebanon and “share” the Christian community with Geagea.

 ?? AFP, AP ?? Above: Samir Geagea ■ (right) with Sulaiman Frangieh in presence of Lebanese Maronite Patriarch Mar Bechara Boutros Al Rahi in Bkerke, north of Beirut. Left: Phalange Party ■ recruits train at the Christina Militia Security Garrison in Beirut on January 3, 1977.
AFP, AP Above: Samir Geagea ■ (right) with Sulaiman Frangieh in presence of Lebanese Maronite Patriarch Mar Bechara Boutros Al Rahi in Bkerke, north of Beirut. Left: Phalange Party ■ recruits train at the Christina Militia Security Garrison in Beirut on January 3, 1977.
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