From the Los Angeles Times
Lebanon reaches out for international help
Pro-Western
parties seek diplomatic or even military intervention amid Hezbollah's
military onslaught, but the West appears unwilling to respond.
By Borzou Daragahi
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 13, 2008
BEIRUT —
Shaken by a Hezbollah military offensive in recent days, Lebanon's
pro-Western parties have launched an intensive campaign to lobby allies
in Washington, Europe and the Arab world to intervene diplomatically or
even militarily on their behalf, officials here said.
But there was little sign Monday that the West was prepared to
intervene.
Six days of fighting had left at least 58 dead and 198 injured, and
unsettled the delicate political and sectarian balance in one of
Lebanon's worst outbreaks of unrest since the 1975-90 civil war.
The ruling political coalition was dealt a major blow late last week
when gunmen with Hezbollah, the Iranian- and Syrian-backed Shiite
Muslim militia, swarmed into the western half of the capital and
crushed fighters loyal to a leading Sunni Muslim faction. The offensive
was sparked when the government decided to fire the pro-Hezbollah head
of security at the country's international airport and shut down the
group's secure phone network.
The government stepped back from the decision, and the Shiite militia
quickly receded, handing over formal control of mostly Sunni West
Beirut to the Lebanese army over the weekend. But clashes between pro-
and anti-government factions erupted around the country and reportedly
continued in northern Lebanon on Monday.
The Lebanese army, which stood back from the fighting for fear of
exacerbating sectarian differences, issued a statement late Monday
declaring that it would begin using force to halt sporadic outbreaks of
violence.
The coalition of pro-Western Christian, Sunni and Druze politicians
under the so-called March 14 banner has embarked on an effort to draw
international backers into the conflict, said coalition leaders and
Western diplomats. They fear Hezbollah is trying to use its military
strength to cow the government into submitting to its demands, which
include noninterference with the militia's drive to build up its
arsenal to confront Israel.
The coalition's arguments appear aimed at playing on Western and Arab
officials' fears of growing Iranian power. The Lebanese officials want
other countries to pressure Iran and its ally, Syria, by seeking
condemnation of and perhaps new economic sanctions against the two
nations at the U.N. Security Council.
One official went so far as to suggest unspecified attacks on Damascus,
the Syrian capital, to punish Hezbollah's backer and restore a regional
balance of power.
"Iran took a decision to take Lebanon hostage, and from Lebanon, come
back to the Mediterranean Sea to be able to infiltrate much more easily
the whole Arab world," said another official, Nayla Mouawad, a minister
in the government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora. "It is very obvious
that we're not getting a clear-cut reaction from the U.S., Arabs and
the international community which is sufficient to the gravity of the
situation."
The faction's officials have telephoned contacts in the White House and
the State Department and deployed lobbyists in Washington to press the
U.S. government, Mouawad said. They have also canvassed diplomatic
contacts in Beirut and abroad to ask for more forceful condemnations of
Hezbollah's move, said officials in the March 14 camp.
According to one March 14 official, the president of Tunisia called
Syrian President Bashar Assad to seek an assurance that Hezbollah would
stay away from the Lebanese prime minister's palace, the Grand Serail.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice joined a telephone conference
Monday of March 14 lobbyists and the foreign ministers of European and
Arab nations as well as European Union, Arab League and United Nations
officials, news agencies reported.
Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa is set to lead a delegation of
regional foreign ministers to Lebanon in an attempt to defuse the
crisis. Both French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Rice have called
Siniora to express support for the Lebanese government, a measure that
most analysts considered minor.
But despite words of support from Washington, there was little sign it
would forcefully rescue its Lebanese allies. The U.S. Embassy in Beirut
did not respond to an interview request.
"The Americans are telling March 14 they have to resist," said one
Western diplomat in Beirut. "But they're not bringing much operational
support."
The White House said President Bush would address the Lebanese
situation more forcefully during his trip to the region later this week.
On Monday, Bush said: "I strongly condemn Hezbollah's recent efforts,
and those of their foreign sponsors in Tehran and Damascus, to use
violence and intimidation to bend the government and people of Lebanon
to their will."
But the use of force appeared unlikely. The Pentagon squashed rumors
that the U.S. warship Cole, steaming to the Mediterranean Sea from the
Persian Gulf, was responding to the Lebanon crisis.
"Yes, we are maintaining a watchful eye on the area, but not any
more than we have been recently," a Defense official in Washington told
The Times, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Israel bombed Hezbollah for 33 days in 2006 without significantly
reducing the militia's fighting power or audacity.
Unlike Iraq or the Persian Gulf, Lebanon is devoid of strategically
vital oil and gas reserves. But March 14 supporters hope the Americans
and others will come to their aid.
"We're not asking them to fight our fight for us," said Mouawad, the
minister. "But at least don't let us be slaughtered by total
indifference."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times