From
Lebanese Forces Official Website
Lebanon May Attract Sunnis Seeking to Wage Jihad
By USNEWS - By Mitchell Prothero
May 16, 2008 - 6:44:26 AM
BEIRUT—Hezbollah's recent moves to settle by force Lebanon's 18-month-old
political crisis might have done more than just subvert the American-backed
government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora. It also seems to have made Lebanon
the next "can't miss" destination for Sunni Muslim radicals seeking a
violent summer.
Hezbollah and its mostly Shiite allies faced little resistance earlier this
month as they moved to capture and neutralize offices and media outlets
supporting the mostly Sunni "Future Movement" in west Beirut. It was
a violent step in the progressive deterioration
of civil society that began after Syrian troops were forced out of Lebanon
in the wake of former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri's 2005 assassination.
But their efforts to preserve Hezbollahs
military autonomy from Lebanon's pro-western government—as well as to push
for what they consider a more fair allocation of political
power—might have backfired because the move has been widely seen by the
Arab world's Sunni majority as tantamount to a coup by Iranian-backed Shiite
militias.
Lebanon's sectarian strife is starting to resemble Iraq's religious
conflicts in the eyes of Sunni proponents of Salafist Islam, a conservative
ideology espoused by al Qaeda that considers Shiites to be part of a heretical
cult. Lebanon offers a budding jihadist almost everything: sectarian tensions,
a weak central government and security services, and what many al Qaeda
followers would consider the best neighborhood imaginable, right on Israel's
northern border.
And while Lebanon's Sunnis tend to be fairly moderate outside of a few
communities of radicals in the north and east, the estimated 400,000
Palestinian refugees, many of whom live in a series of heavily armed and poorly
policed camps, have shown significant
support for al Qaeda thinkers, most notably Abu Musab
Zarqawi, the slain leader of the group Al
Qaeda in Iraq, who drew followers from Lebanese refugee camps.
Lebanese security officials have long been warning that militants trained
and radicalized in Iraq pose a serious threat, a warning proved true last
summer when the Lebanese Army battled Fatah
al-Islam—an assortment of militants led by Iraq veterans—in the Nahr
al-Bared refugee camp for over three months.
By this week, websites and chat rooms serving virtual al Qaeda buzzed with
information on the Lebanon situation, and, according to Jihadica.com, which tracks
such sites, postings detailing how to operate in Lebanon were up in hours. One
such post referred to Abu Bakr Naji's work "The Management of
Savagery," a tome that postulates that aspiring militants should seek out
religiously tense places with a security vacuum. There was also ample chatter
about the need to fight off Iran and the Shiite influence, leaving Lebanese
officials concerned that Sunni governments in the region, namely Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, and Jordan, might turn a blind eye to militants headed to
Lebanon in an effort to see Hezbollah and Iran's control of the country
usurped.
Hezbollah, for its part, is nervously watching. The group has long
prohibited Sunni militants from operating in south Lebanon or from conducting operations
against Israel from Lebanon, in no small part to keep them from establishing a
foothold from which to later attack Lebanon's Shiite community. Even as they
celebrated their victory against poorly trained and equipped Sunnis in Beirut,
Hezbollah fighters were on the lookout for better-motivated and experienced
fighters headed for what many are calling Lebanon's new civil war.
"We are worried about this and watching very closely," a Hezbollah
ground commander said this week. "We know they will be coming here
now."
Hezbollah, according to the commander, has plans in place for such attacks,
including a security plan to close off Shiite neighborhoods from the rest of
the city. It also has a formidable intelligence service already tasked with
watching for Iraq veterans trying to illegally enter from Syria.
But while such groups have received little support from Lebanon's Sunnis in
the past, their humiliating defeat last week by Hezbollah and the tensions that
led to the clashes already had Beirut's urbane and unarmed Sunni population
looking to religious conservatives and rougher men from outlying regions like
Tripoli, Akkar, and the Bekaa Valley, which all have significant militant
communities.
"We know that the Future Movement has been working with some groups and
that new groups have been forming in Tripoli," one top security official
not cleared to speak to the media said early this year. "These groups have
similar ideas to al Qaeda and can offer weapons and training to the Sunnis
here. We are also seeing support from some Saudi princes concerned about Iran's
influence."
Are they sending jihadist fighters? "We're not sure yet, but these are
the same people who have sent them in the past," he said. "I'm not
sure the country could take this new threat. It's already so weak."
The nearly perfect conditions for an al Qaeda-like outbreak of violence in
Lebanon have not been missed by the group's senior leadership. On April 22, al
Qaeda No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri suggested the Middle East's most liberal and
diverse nation could play an important role in the ongoing conflict with the
West. "Lebanon is a Muslim frontline fort," he said. "It will
have a pivotal role, God willing, in future battles with the Crusaders and the
Jews.
"I call upon the jihadist generation in Lebanon to prepare to reach
Palestine and to banish the invading Crusader forces which are claimed to be
peacekeeping forces in Lebanon," he said, in reference to the United
Nations peacekeepers on Lebanon's southern border with Israel.
© Copyright 2008 by
Lebanese Forces Official Website