From
Lebanese Forces Official Website
Welcome to Hizballahstan
By y Andrew Lee Butters, TIME
May 16, 2008 - 6:31:23 AM

Shi'ite gunmen from Hizballah and its ally Amal fire at Sunni positions.
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Surrounded by a ring of mountains like a concert band shell, Beirut
has great acoustics. So the roiling street battles on May 8 between
Hizballah militiamen and supporters of the Lebanese government echoed
through the city with a drumroll of rocket explosions and a chorus of
machine-gun fire that sounded like the symphonic overture to civil war.
When an early-summer thunderstorm began that night, it seemed as if the
heavens themselves were taking up the ominous theme.
But by the
next morning, the battle for Beirut was mostly over. After just six
hours of all-out fighting, Hizballah militants were in control of areas
of West Beirut that had previously been the government's preserve. This
made for some incongruous scenes. Bearded men with rifles and rocket
launchers secured lingerie shops and a Starbucks in the commercial
Hamra district. Elsewhere, they surrounded the houses of ministers and
members of Parliament and watched buses evacuate students from the
American University of Beirut. "It was like a field trip for us," said
a Hizballah fighter standing on the Corniche, the city's seaside
promenade. "Some [government loyalists] were begging us not to kill
them. They were literally pissing in their pants."
Hizballah's
victory was hardly a surprise. Its Shi'ite militiamen, who number in
the thousands and are armed by Syria and Iran, have survived battle
with the mighty Israeli army, while the supporters of Prime Minister
Fouad Siniora's government are poorly armed amateurs on neighborhood
patrol. Neither the police nor the military--which has received
hundreds of millions of dollars in arms and training from the
U.S.--dared to lift a finger against Hizballah. Long after the
militiamen had withdrawn from the streets, the army said it would
intervene in any ongoing clashes but added that it would not disarm
Hizballah.
Despite the backing of the U.S., Western Europe and
Arab states like Saudi Arabia, Siniora barely clings to power from his
official residence and office in the Grand Serail, a former Turkish
fortress surrounded by rings of barbed wire and riot police. But it is
Hizballah's fire-breathing leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, who's
calling the shots.
Sounds familiar? Think of Iraq, where a
U.S.-backed government is bunkered down in the Green Zone, fighting
fitfully against Shi'ite militias. Or of Palestine, where despite U.S.
support and aid, President Mahmoud Abbas is powerless against the
Iran-backed Hamas in Gaza. When dealing with internecine Arab conflict,
the Bush Administration has never been able to back the winning team;
it invariably attaches unrealistic expectations to moderate parties and
underestimates extremist groups. The lesson, says Bilal Saab, a Lebanon
expert at the Brookings Institution, is that "you can't pick sides in a
civil war."
Power Without Responsibility
Nasrallah
unleashed his fighters on the streets of Beirut after the government
tried to shut down Hizballah's private telecommunications network. But
he has been spoiling for this fight since November 2006, when Shi'ite
parties walked out of Siniora's coalition Cabinet. Although Lebanon is
a democracy, the legitimacy of its government depends on a system of
sectarian quotas; without the Shi'ites--the country's largest,
fastest-growing group--the Prime Minister, a Sunni, has lacked both
validity and street cred. The Shi'ites' price for returning: a greater
share of power, including the right to veto major decisions. Siniora
and other pro-U.S. members of his coalition have thus far refused,
fearing among other things that such power would legitimize Hizballah's
status as a state within a state.
That train has left the
station. The speed and ease with which Nasrallah's fighters took over
Beirut--and the military's reluctance to stop them--suggest that
Hizballah has free rein of the country. Unlike Hamas, which is confined
to poverty-stricken Gaza, Hizballah has at its disposal an entire
country, complete with a sophisticated banking system, an international
airport and a friendly neighbor in Syria. Never has a terrorist
organization had that kind of infrastructure. Saab notes that
Hizballah's leaders can now have their cake and eat it too: "They're in
control in Lebanon without having to actually run the state."
This
is all very bad news for Israel, which was drawn into a war with
Hizballah in 2006 that cost 1,600 lives mainly on the Lebanese side.
"Lebanon," says Israeli Vice Premier Haim Ramon, "is controlled by this
terrorist organization, and its government has become irrelevant."
Israelis point out that behind Nasrallah and his fighters lurks a
possibly greater threat: Iran. Hizballah's dominance in Beirut allows
Tehran to project its power into the Mediterranean Sea, something the
U.S. and its European allies must now factor into their calculations.
(The Pentagon denied reports that the U.S.S. Cole, heading to the
Mediterranean from the Persian Gulf, was responding to the Lebanon
crisis.)
The Bush Administration's response has consisted
largely of hand-wringing. President George W. Bush blamed Iran for
backing Hizballah, while Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
congratulated the Arab League for issuing a statement rejecting the use
of violence in Lebanon. In truth, not for the first time in the Middle
East, the Administration finds itself short of good options. It can no
longer count on Siniora and the Lebanese security forces to halt
Hizballah's growing strength. The only way to achieve that, says Saab,
is to press Israel to give up disputed territory it seized in 1967. "It
removes the pretext Hizballah has for its weapons," he says.
But
Israel has given no indication it will make any such concession, and
few in Lebanon expect Nasrallah and his militia to weaken anytime soon.
That's why some U.S. allies in Siniora's government believe it's better
to engage Hizballah than pretend it can be crushed. On May 11, Walid
Jumblatt, one of the leaders of the governing coalition, placed a call
to Nabih Berri, the speaker of Parliament and a Hizballah ally, while
TIME waited nearby for an interview. "Tell [Nasrallah] I lost the
battle and he wins," Jumblatt said. "So let's sit and talk to reach a
compromise. All that I ask is your protection."
As
the hereditary chieftain of Lebanon's Druze Muslim minority, Jumblatt
earned the nickname "the Weather Vane" for being able to steer his
followers through the ever changing winds of Middle Eastern politics. A
former vassal to the Syrian regime, he switched his loyalties to the
Bush Administration after the invasion of Iraq, when it briefly seemed
as if American military power would transform the region. Now he seems
ready to turn again. Sitting in his garden terrace with a few family
members and loyal retainers, Jumblatt said that he has spoken with the
U.S. embassy to deliver his grim assessment. "The U.S. has failed in
Lebanon," he said. "We have to wait and see the new rules which
Hizballah, Syria and Iran will set. They can do what they want."
With reporting by Brian Bennett/Washington, Tim McGirk/Jerusalem
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Lebanese Forces Official Website