[lbo-talk] Howard Dean: "Now That We're There We Can't Leave"

C. G. Estabrook galliher at alexia.lis.uiuc.edu
Thu Jul 3 09:25:30 PDT 2003


ZNet Commentary

Iraq 2003, Lebanon 1982

June 18, 2003

By Charles Glass

People cheered when the United States Marines marched into the capital. At last, someone would restore order, remove the thugs and murderers from the streets and force an end to the chaos. Then a new government arrested and tortured dissidents. The U.S. ordered the dissidents' outside backers, Syria and Iran, to stay away. Britain joined the U.S. in policing the streets. With Washington supporting the government and training its army, the opposition strategy meant removing the Americans and the British.

Syria and Iran helped the rebels. American soldiers shot and killed Shiite Muslims. American and British planes bombed their neighborhoods. Soon, the American embassy and the Marine headquarters were rubble. American and British civilians were taken hostage and displayed on television. Then, the American warships sailed away and took the Marines with them. The experiment in nation-building was over.

This has already happened. The time: August 1982 to February 1985. The place: Lebanon. Can it happen again, on a larger scale, in Iraq?

The forces that drove the conflict in Lebanon are duplicated in Iraq. About forty per cent of Lebanon's three million people were Shiite Muslims, the poorest and most desperate people in the country. Of Iraq^Òs sixty twenty-three million people, sixty per cent are Shiite. Most of them, after Saddam Hussein's discrimination against them and twelve years of sanctions, are also impoverished and angry. Shiite Muslims of both countries look to their clergy for leadership in troubled times.

There are strong family links between the Shiah of Iran and of Lebanon. Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Lebanon's Hizballah, was born in the Iraqi holy city of Najaf. The mother of Mohammed Bakr al-Hakim, who heads the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, is from a prominent south Lebanese family. Mullahs from both countries receive spiritual guidance, financial aid and military support in Iran. In Lebanon, the United States antagonized Iran and Syria. In Iraq, the U.S. appears to be doing the same, with American officials suggesting that both Iran and Syria are ripe for American-sponsored changes of regime. In Lebanon, the Lebanese -- as well as the Americans, French, British and Italians of the Multi-National Force -- paid for U.S. foreign policy errors in blood.

Iran is, if anything, closer to the Shiites of Iraq than they were to those in Lebanon. Iran has a long border with Iraq, all the way from the Gulf up to Kurdistan. Iran's leadership knows the country intimately. Iraqi exiles, some of whom worked with the CIA for years, said they were impressed on a recent visit to Tehran that the Iranians' knowledge of Iraqi society and culture was far superior to the Americans'. The U.S., they said, had a few agents in Iraq. The Iranians, on the other hand, had allies among both the Kurds and the Shiites.

To understand how America became involved in Lebanon, recall the summer of 1982. The Israeli army was bombing and besieging Beirut. Philip Habib, the diplomat sent by President Ronald Reagan to negotiate between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel, believed that the only means to save Beirut from total destruction was to arrange the evacuation of PLO fighters. Israel demanded that the U.S. oversee the evacuation. Thus, Marines came to Beirut to guide the Palestinian fighters onto ships and to protect the unarmed Palestinian civilians left behind in the refugee camps. The PLO withdrew. A short time later, the Marines left under a banner that proclaimed, "Mission Accomplished."

In September, after the assassination of the Lebanese president-elect whom General Ariel Sharon had imposed by force in an earlier instance of regime change, Israel violated its undertakings to Habib and invaded defenseless west Beirut. Its army delivered Christian militiamen under a thug named Elie Hobeika (assassinated in 2001, one week before he was due to give testimony against Ariel Sharon in a Belgian court) to the gates of the Palestinian Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. The ensuing massacre, condemned by an Israeli commission of inquiry, forced the U.S. to return the Marines to Beirut. Britain, France and Italy joined them. There, they all became pawns of U.S. policy and hostage to anyone who wanted to attack the United States.

Hizballah did not exist, when Israel invaded Lebanon. Within a year, it had become the most powerful guerrilla force in the Middle East. It became the first Arab armed force to drive the Israeli army out of occupied territory. Israel took almost twenty years and many casualties to discover that the expense of occupying Lebanon was too high to pay forever. Hizballah's expulsion of the Marines and the Israelis from Lebanon relied on Iranian and Syrian help.

In 1990, the first Bush administration put the final touches on Syria's domination of Lebanon, when it agreed -- in exchange for Syrian participation in the war over Kuwait -- not to oppose Syria's entry into Christian east Beirut and its take-over of Lebanon's governing institutions. Lebanon has been effectively a Syria colony ever since.

The younger Bush, however, could not persuade Syria to support a new American coalition against Iraq. Colin Powell came to Damascus at the end of the Iraq invasion to read the riot act to Syria's young president, Bashar al-Assad: close down the Palestinian offices in Damascus, stop Hizballah attacks on the Israelis from south Lebanon, cut all military links between Iran and Hizballah, make sure no money goes from Syria to Hamas in Gaza, move the Lebanese army into south Lebanon and accept the fact that American troops are four hundred miles from Damascus.

Syria's economy is already faltering with the loss of its massive trade with Iraq since the war: from now on, American rather than Syria products will be sold in Baghdad. Syria has also lost its discounted oil from Iraq. With a weak economy, a weaker army and both Americans and Israelis pointing their heavy weapons at him, Assad is said to be complying. Compliance may be the only way to ensure his survival. But compliance may not be enough.

Among the more outspoken, and thus more frank, proponents of regime change in both Iran and Syria are Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute and Richard Perle, recently discredited associate of the Defense Policy Board. Perle has said again and again that Syria should be next on the American hit list. Ledeen calls Iran "the creator of modern Islamic terrorism." In The Australian newspaper, Ledeen writes, "We are in a regional struggle, and we are compelled to deal with it. Now what? The short answer is: regime change." But is it only democracy that the U.S. seeks to impose? If so, what about the unelected governments of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and a hundred other countries around the world? The characteristic that distinguishes Syria and Iran from the rest is their effective opposition to the Israeli occupation of Lebanon in the early 1980s and their half-hearted supported of Palestinians under occupation now. They are also supporting Iraqis who do not want America to become a long-term occupying power in the country. Just as Israel urged Washington to undertake regime change in Iraq, it is the loudest cheerleader for repeating the operation in Syria and Iran. In the end, the cost of this policy will be borne by the American military and the people of Iraq, Syria and Iran.

© Charles Glass 2003



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