The Denver Post

Is France helping Lebanon or trying to reconquer it?

- By Angela Charlton and Sarah El-deeb

PARIS » It was almost as if Emmanuel Macron forgot that Lebanon is no longer a French protectora­te.

Visiting explosion-ravaged Beirut last week, France’s leader comforted distraught crowds, promised to rebuild the city and claimed that the blast pierced France’s own heart. “France will never let Lebanon go,” Macron said. “The heart of the French people still beats to the pulse of Beirut.”

His critics denounced the overtures as a neocolonia­list foray by a European leader seeking to restore sway over a troubled Middle Eastern land — and distract from mounting problems at home. A meme circulatin­g online dubbed him Macron Bonaparte, a 21st century Emperor Napoleon.

But Macron’s defenders — including desperate Beirut residents who called him “our only hope” — praised him for visiting gutted neighborho­ods where Lebanese leaders fear to tread, and for trying to hold Lebanon’s politician­s accountabl­e for the corruption and mismanagem­ent blamed for Tuesday’s deadly blast.

Macron’s visit exposed France’s central challenge as it prepares to host an internatio­nal donors conference for Lebanon on Sunday: how to help a country in crisis, where French economic ties run deep, without interferin­g in its internal affairs.

“We are walking on the edge of a precipice. We have to aid, support and encourage the Lebanese people but at the same time not give the impression that we want to establish a new protectora­te, which would be completely stupid,” said Jack Lang, a former French government minister who now heads the Arab World Institute in Paris. “We must find new, intelligen­t solutions to aid the Lebanese.”

France’s ties with Lebanon reach back at least to the 16th century, when the French monarchy negotiated with Ottoman rulers to protect Christians — and secure influence — in the region. By the time of the 1920-46 French mandate, Lebanon already had a network of French schools and French speakers that survives to this day — along with France’s cozy relationsh­ips with Lebanon’s power brokers, including some accused of fueling its political and economic crisis.

A surprising online petition emerged this week asking France to restore its mandate temporaril­y, saying Lebanon’s leaders have shown “total inability to secure and manage the country.”

It’s widely seen as an absurd idea — Macron himself told Beirut residents Wednesday that “it’s up to you to write your history” – but 60,000 people have signed it, including members of France’s 250,000strong Lebanese diaspora and people in Lebanon who said it’s a way to express their desperatio­n and distrust of the political class.

Aside from a show of much-needed internatio­nal support, many in Lebanon viewed Macron’s visit as a way to secure financial assistance for a country wracked with debt.

The French leader also managed to bring the divided political class together, if briefly. In a rare scene, the leaders of Lebanon’s political factions — some of them still bitter enemies from the 1975-90 civil war — appeared together at the Palais des Pins, the French embassy headquarte­rs in Beirut, and filed out after meeting Macron.

But to many, the visit was seen as patronizin­g. Some lashed out at the petition and those celebratin­g “France, the tender mother.”

One writer, Samer Frangieh, said Macron gathered the politician­s as “schoolchil­dren,” reprimandi­ng them for failing to carry out their duties.

There were other, more subtle jabs against France’s show of influence. While Macron was touring neighborho­ods torn apart by the explosion, the health minister in the Hezbollah-backed government toured field hospitals donated by Iran and Russia, major power players in the region.

“I get the people who want the mandate. They have no hope,” said Leah, an engineerin­g student in Beirut who did not want her last name published out of concern for political repercussi­ons. She spoke out strongly against the idea, and against those who see Macron as Lebanon’s “savior.”

She said that risks worsening Lebanon’s divisions, as Maronite Christians and French-educated Muslims embrace Macron while others lean away. “He hasn’t resolved his issues with his country, with his people. How is he giving advice to us?” she asked.

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