By Charles Recknagel, RFE/RL
Hizbullah takes control of west
Beirut
Hizbullah gunmen today
took control of west Beirut in street battles that left
11 people dead and forced government supporters into
hiding.
The fighting was triggered by the government's demand,
made earlier this week, that the Shia militia group shut
down its private communications network. Hizbullah
described the demand as a "declaration of war".
-Guardian
|
Blindsided, Hezbollah Mulls Its Response
Hezbollah sources concede that they were taken by surprise and some
were shocked, by the intense incendiary bombardment of the last few
days by pro government operatives. As Hezbollah studies 'the
situation' and how to respond this beautiful spring Beirut morning,
there is a real danger things may rapidly spiral out of control. -
Counterpunch |
Several times this year, the United States has
sought to rally its allies in the Arab world against what it calls Iran's
continued meddling in the region.
"Iran's actions threaten the security of nations everywhere," U.S. President
George W. Bush said in a speech in the United Arab Emirates in January. "So the
United States is strengthening our longstanding security commitments with our
friends in the Gulf and rallying friends around the world to confront this
danger before it is too late."
In the same speech, Bush also accused Iran of exporting terror. He did not have
to specify for his audience the destinations. Washington has often charged Iran
and Syria with helping to arm the Lebanese Shi'ite Hizballah and of using it to
destabilize the Western-leaning government in Beirut.
At the same time, Washington repeatedly charges Iran with funding and arming
radical Shi'ite militias in Iraq that attack U.S. forces, complicating U.S.
efforts to stabilize the country. And Washington equally accuses Iran of helping
to arm Palestinian militant groups which oppose the Western-backed Mideast peace
process.
"Iran is today the world's leading state sponsor of terror," Bush said. "It
sends hundreds of millions of dollars to extremists around the world, while its
own people face repression and economic hardship at home."
Crisis Escalates
Despite the U.S. efforts to characterize Iran's strategy, countering it has
proved difficult, however. And the violence in Lebanon is likely to be seen in
Washington as the latest measure of the challenge.
Latest reports from Lebanon indicate Hizballah gunmen have now seized control of
large areas of western Beirut and also shut down a pro-government TV station and
set ablaze the offices of a major newspaper. The unrest has closed Beirut's
international airport, as well as the port. At least 10 people are reported to
have been killed in the fighting so far.
The escalation of the Lebanese crisis comes despite Washington's increasing
efforts to isolate Iran in the region, and even one milestone of success.
That success was the recent boycott by half of the Arab League's 22 heads of
state of the league's Syrian-hosted summit in March. Syria is Iran's closest
ally in the Mideast and the conduit for Iran to project its influence not only
into Syria and Lebanon but also across those states' borders.
The concern now -- for both the United States and its Arab allies -- is whether
the current fighting in Beirut could escalate into a prolonged conflict. And,
even more so, whether Iran might regard Lebanon as a potential second hot front
along with Iraq in its confrontation with Washington.
'Instruments Of Iranian Force'
The U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker, who was a diplomat in Lebanon during
its civil war in the 1970s and 1980s, recently compared the Iranian approach in
both countries.
"Iran is pursuing, as it were, a Lebanonization strategy [in Iraq], using the
same techniques they used in Lebanon to co-opt elements of the local Shi'a
community and use them as basically instruments of Iranian force," Crocker told
a U.S. congressional hearing in April.
He added that in both Iraq and Lebanon, Iran and Syria are working in tandem to
prevent a stable Western-leaning state.
The question of how to respond to the threat of a new combat zone in the Mideast
is sure to dominate policy discussions in many capitals over the coming days. In
Washington, it has already led some reporters to ask whether the United States
intends to send arms to the Beirut government.
"We're obviously concerned about what's going on, but I'm not aware of any
outstanding request we have from the Lebanese armed forces," U.S. Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates told reporters on May 8.
The Hizballah are widely considered to have been fully re-armed by Iran and
Syria following the Shi'ite militia's war with Israel in 2006. Its weaponry
includes Iranian-made guided missiles and Syrian-made rockets. The group has
long controlled large parts of southern Lebanon as a virtually autonomous
territory while participating in the political process in the capital.
As the political process has now collapsed, Hizballah gunmen have moved quickly
to seize control of large areas of western Beirut and have attacked
pro-government media facilities.
Copyright (c) 2008 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
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