THE WASHINGTON TIMES EDITORIAL - Make no mistake about it, the quick,
brutal display of raw military power by Hezbollah in the past six days
is a window into the grim future of Lebanon and the broader Middle
East: a future in which Iran and Syria are ascendant and have lost much
of their fear of the United States and Israel. It sends a message to
President Bush, who arrives in Israel Wednesday to commemorate that
nation's 60th birthday: that Tehran and Damascus can project power
whenever they want in places like Lebanon, and the United States and
it's allies can't do anything about it.
At least 44 people were killed and another 128 wounded in the fighting
— the worst outbreak of sectarian violence inside Lebanon since the
1975-1990 civil war. Although domestic Lebanese issues played a role in
the violence, they are inseparable from the larger geopolitical issues.
Ever since the Feb. 14, 2005, assassination of former Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri, which eventually forced Damascus to remove its occupation
troops, Syrian President Bashar Assad has wanted to reclaim power in
Lebanon. So, on Friday, after several days of street clashes between
pro-government forces and opposition forces, all-out warfare broke out
between street gangs loyal to Hezbollah and gangs funded by Saudi
Arabia and loyal to Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, a Sunni Muslim. In
less than seven hours of fighting, Hezbollah forces routed the
pro-government side, occupied much of Western Beirut, and plastered
walls with pictures of the Syrian dictator. Government security forces,
equipped and trained by the United States but paralyzed by sectarian
differences, stayed out of the fighting.
Lebanese newspapers are filled with pictures of bound, blindfolded
members of the defeated loyalist forces who were captured by the
Hezbollah side and masked Hezbollah gunmen swaggering through Beirut,
boasting how they had forced members of the losing side to beg for
their lives. After capturing West Beirut, Hezbollah relinquished the
area to the Lebanese Army — for now. Hezbollah (and by extension, its
backers in Tehran and Damascus) have demonstrated that they and not the
Lebanese government control Lebanon. Do not be surprised if very soon,
an emboldened Hezbollah steps up its harassment of the United Nations
peacekeepers in Southern Lebanon, laying the groundwork for another
battle with Israel.
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Tehran, Damascus ascendant
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