
Not since the 2006 war with Israel
have Beirut residents been so cautious. A widely disseminated U.S.
State Department travel alert warning American citizens to avoid
“western style” venues has only added to the sense of unease. Even the
old downtown souks, that most Arab of outdoor shopping experiences,
features brands like Adidas, Zara, H&M and a brand new multiplex
cinema. In a city with a reputation for partying during war time—the 2006 World Press Photo of the year
summed up local attitudes with a group of young Lebanese blasting past
crumpled buildings in a red convertible—the violence is finally taking
its toll. The wealthy speak of relocating to Europe or the U.S. A film festival
was canceled. Middle class families are staying closer to home, and
making them safer. “Usually it’s banks and embassies that install blast
film,” says Khoury. “Now it’s families worried about their children.” To
Khoury, it’s starting to feel a lot more like 1982, when she
established her company three years into Lebanon’s 15-year civil war.
The tit-for-tat bombings that have struck rival religious sects have
many fearing Lebanon is headed for a repeat. Not so, says Lebanese
analyst Sami Nader,
director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs: It’s likely to
be much worse. Lebanon is at risk of being subsumed into a far larger
and potentially even more devastating sectarian proxy war brewing
between Sunni Muslims backed by Saudi Arabia and Shiites backed by rival
Iran, one that could rip the entire Middle East apart. That war already
has deep roots in Iraq and Syria, says Nader, and Lebanon is next.
“Syria, Iraq and Lebanon aren’t three different conflicts, but one war
fought on three territories.”
As if to underscore the threat, suspected car bomb attack in the northern Lebanese town of Hermel killed four on Thursday morning and fourteen rockets
fired from Syria hit the outskirts of a Lebanese town on Tuesday. The
country is also reeling from the influx of Syrian refugees, which are
now estimated to make up more than a quarter of the population,
straining resources and an already crumbling infrastructure. But it is
Lebanon’s internal instabilities that make it so vulnerable to external
influence. For ten months, Lebanon’s parliament, largely divided among
supporters of a Saudi-backed Sunni party and supporters of the
Iranian-backed Shiite group Hizballah, has been unable to form a
government. Meanwhile, an international tribunal, convened by the UN at
the Lebanese government’s request, is trying four Hizballah members in
absentia for their involvement in the 2005 suicide bomb assassination of
former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri near The Hague. Hizballah, whose
armed militia is said to be stronger than the Lebanese army, has long
claimed to Lebanon’s defender against Israel. But if the group is
charged with killing a Lebanese leader, it could see an erosion of
support. The group’s leadership has dismissed the trial as politically
motivated and tensions are high. A specific bomb threat against a Beirut
hotel popular with U.N. employees over the weekend may have been linked
to the trial, say security officials, but no one knows for sure, adding
to the unease.
Hizballah’s growing role in the Syrian war threatens Lebanon even
further, says Nader. The group has sent thousands of fighters to help
President Bashar Assad in his battle against a wide spectrum of Sunni
rebels. Once described by the leadership as a preemptive war designed to
keep radical Sunni fighters from advancing on Lebanon, Hizballah’s
presence in Syria has incited anti-Shiite militants to attack the group
where it is weakest: at home. Hizballah’s Lebanese stronghold, says
Nader, “will make Lebanon the center of gravity in the sectarian war.”
Radical Sunni groups in Lebanon, once marginalized, have swelled with
newly radicalized recruits eager to take on Shiites in Syria. It’s only a
matter of time before they bring the war back home. Three car bomb
attacks have taken hundreds of lives in the Shiite enclaves south of
Beirut since August. On Wednesday, the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, a
virulently anti-Shiite al-Qaeda offshoot that claimed responsibility for
November’s suicide attack on the Iranian Embassy in Beirut, vowed, via Twitter, to continue its attacks on Iranian and Hezbollah targets in Lebanon.
Syria may have brought long standing regional and sectarian tensions
to a boil, but it could also instigate a lasting solution, keeping
Lebanon safe from continued spillover, says Nader. Ongoing tensions
between Saudi Arabia and Iran, Iran and the United States, and the
United States and Russia are the substrate upon which the sectarian
proxy war feeds. But the escalating risks of the Syrian conflict may
force a recalibration of those toxic relationships. Already the U.S. and
Russia have cooperated on a plan to eliminate Syria’s chemical weapons
arsenal, and the U.S. and Iran are moving towards an agreement on Iran’s
nuclear ambitions. Bridging the vast chasm between Saudi Arabia and
Iran will be far more difficult. But as long as they keep fighting,
Beirut is likely to keep up its demand for Khoury’s blast film.
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