Unfinished journey (94)
(Part ninety-four, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 18
September 2014, 1:22 pm)
Lately countries in the Middle East preoccupied with the
crisis in Iraq and Syria, and its impact has spread to Lebanon, the country
that directly borders with Syria:
This led to the Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam
visited the Qatari capital Doha and held talks with senior officials there.
Qatar is a major supporter of the rebels in Syria
Obama: No combat mission in Iraq DI opponents
Obama said he would not do "another ground war in
Iraq".
President Barack Obama said in front of the United States
troops that their partners are facing Daulah Islamiyah militias in Iraq will
not perform combat missions.
President Obama said it would not do the "ground war
again in Iraq".
But he said the United States has a "unique
ability" in the face of Click IN, including the ability to provide air
support to Iraqi and Kurdish fighters on the ground.
The United States has conducted 162 attacks on the group,
also known as ISIS is in Iraq since mid-August.
But Obama's new strategy allows the same attack in Syria,
a coalition of 40 countries and asked to deal with the militants.
Collateral president to soldiers in MacDill Air Force
Base in Tampa, Florida, delivered after a senior general said the United States
in front of the Senate that the business world is currently facing IN
"stepped forward as required".
Nonetheless Gen. Martin Dempsey said, "If it is
proved to be unsuccessful, and the United States threatened, then of course I
would go back to the president and a number of recommendations can also be the
use of military ground forces."
The FBI arrested ISIS supporters in New York
Elfgeeh trying to recruit people to join ISIS, police
said
Courts in the United States was formally charged a man who
plans to help the Daulah Islamiyah militants or ISIS and trying to kill
American soldiers.
Mufid A Elfgeeh, 30, a naturalized citizen from Yemen,
was arrested last May through a joint covert operations.
Elfgeeh, of Rochester, New York, trying to buy two
firearms from an informant of the Federal Bureau of Investigators (FBI), the
court papers said.
He plans to kill the Shia Muslims and American military
personnel who have recently returned from the Middle East.
Court documents also say that Elfgeeh closely monitored a
year ago when he began writing support for militant DI on Twitter.
He asked people to donate money to the militants, up to a
third of their income.
He also tried to persuade the FBI informant and two other
people to go to Syria and "fight" for DI. (bbc)
Militants holding Lebanese soldiers release video
An Al-Qaeda-linked militant group holding Lebanese
soldiers and police released a video of the captive men on Sunday, as officials
continue mediation to release the men.
The ongoing captivity of some 20 Lebanese security men by
militants in Syria has emerged as one of the most serious spillovers of
violence from the neighboring conflict, now in its fourth year. Militants from
Syria seized the men when they overran the border town of Arsal, killing and
kidnapping soldiers and police.
At least eight of the men are being held by the Syrian
Al-Qaeda affiliate, the Nusra Front, which has a history of releasing detainees
unharmed. Others are being held by the extremist Islamic State group, which has
decapitated two Lebanese soldiers in their captivity. The men’s beheadings
outraged Lebanon and sparked days of violence against Syrian refugees in the
country.
The urgency of the Lebanese men’s situation was
underscored by the Sunday release of a video showing the beheading of a British
aid worker by Islamic State group fighters. David Haines was abducted in Syria
last year.
In the two-part, 20-minute video released Sunday by the
Nusra Front, one Lebanese soldier enquired after his mother, and another burst
into tears as he spoke to his family.
The video was spliced with montages of dead Syrian
children and others suffering from hunger, as the words “Who will pay the
price?” flashed across the screen.
Lebanon is negotiating for the men’s release through
mediation by officials from Qatar. The Nusra Front is demanding the release of
accused Islamic militants from Lebanese detention, as well as money. They are
also demanding that the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah stop fighting in Syria
alongside the forces of President Bashar Assad.
On Sunday, Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam traveled
to the Qatari capital of Doha and held talks with senior officials there. Qatar
is a major backer of Syrian rebel groups.
History of Lebanon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The history of Lebanon covers the history of the modern
Republic of Lebanon and the earlier emergence of Greater Lebanon under the
French Mandate for Syria and Lebanon, as well as the previous history of the
region, covered by the modern state.
Prehistory[edit]
Ksar Akil 10 km northeast of Beirut is a large rock
shelter below a steep limestone cliff where excavations have shown occupational
deposits reaching down to a depth of 23.6 metres (77 ft) with one of the
longest sequences of Paleolithic flint industries ever found in the Middle
East. The first level of 8 metres (26 ft) contained Upper Levalloiso-Mousterian
remains with long and triangular Lithic flakes. The level above this showed
industries accounting for all six stages of the Upper Paleolithic. An Emireh
point was found at the first stage of this level (XXIV), at around 15.2 metres
(50 ft) below datum with a complete skeleton of an eight-year-old Homo Sapiens
(called Egbert, now in the National Museum of Beirut after being studied in
America) was discovered at 11.6 metres (38 ft), cemented into breccia. A
fragment of a Neanderthal maxilla was also discovered in material from level
XXVI or XXV, at around 15 metres (49 ft). Studies by Hooijer showed Capra and
Dama were dominant in the fauna along with Stephanorhinus in later
Levalloiso-Mousterian levels.[1]
It is believed to be one of the earliest known sites
containing Upper Paleolithic technologies including Aurignacian. Artifacts
recovered from the site include Ksar Akil flakes, the main type of tool found
at the site, along with shells with holes and chipped edge modifications that
are suggested to have been used as pendants or beads. These indicate that the
inhabitants were among the first in Western Eurasia to use personal ornaments.
Results from radiocarbon dating indicate that the early humans may have lived
at the site approximately 45,000 years ago or earlier. The presence of personal
ornaments at Ksar Akil is suggestive of modern human behavior. The findings of
ornaments at the site are contemporaneous with ornaments found at Late Stone
Age sites such as Enkapune ya muto.[2][3][4]
Ancient antiquity[edit]
Canaanite period[edit]
The earliest prehistoric cultures of Lebanon, such as the
Qaraoun culture gave rise to the civilization of the Canaanite period, when the
region was populated by ancient peoples, cultivating land and living in
sophisticated societies during the 2nd millennium BC. Northern Canaanites are
mentioned in the Bible as well as in other Semitic records from that period.
Northern Canaanites are commonly thought to develop into Phoenicians by the 8th
century BC - a claim which has recently been verified by genetic comparison
analysis of ancient Canaanite and Phoenician burial sites in modern
Lebanon.[citation needed]
Canaanites were the creators of the oldest known
24-letter alphabet, a shortening of earlier 30-letter alphabets such as
Proto-Sinaitic and Ugaritic. The Canaanite alphabet later developed into the
Phoenician one (with sister alphabets of Hebrew, Aramaic and Moabite), influencing
the entire Mediterranean region.
Phoenicia[edit]
Main article: Phoenicians
Map of Phoenicia.
The coastal plain of Lebanon is the historic home of a
string of coastal trading cities of Semitic culture, which the Greeks termed
Phoenicia, whose maritime culture flourished there for more than 1000 years.
Ancient ruins in Byblos, Berytus (Beirut), Sidon, Sarepta (Sarafand), and Tyre
show a civilized nation, with urban centres and sophisticated arts. Phoenicia
was a cosmopolitan centre for many nations and cultures.
Its people roamed the Mediterranean seas, skilled in
trade and in art, and founded trading colonies. The ancient Phoenicians set
sail and colonized overseas. Their most famous colonies were Cadiz in today’s
Spain and Carthage in today’s Tunisia.
Phoenicia maintained an uneasy tributary relationship
with the neo-Assyrian and neo-Babylonian empires.
Antiquity[edit]
After gradual decline of its strength, Phoenician
city-states on the Lebanese coast were conquered outright by the Achaemenid
dynasty of Persia, which organized it as a satrapy, though many of Phoenician
colonies continued their independent existence - most notably Carthage. The
region of northern Canaan was subsequently merged into the empire of Alexander
the Great, who notably conquered Tyre (332 BC) by extending a still-extant
causeway from the mainland in a seven-month effort. After Alexander's death the
region was absorbed into the Seleucid Empire.
With the rise of the Roman Empire and the decline of the
Seleucids, the area was conquered by the Roman Empire in 63 BC. During the
Herodian dynasty rule, the area has become part of Judaea. It was ruled by
Herodian descendants also when Judea itself became a Roman Province in 6 AD, up
until the death of Agrippa II in the year 92. Agrippa II was a Roman ally
during the Great Judean Revolt of 66–73 AD, supporting Roman armies with
Iturean troops. Following Agrippa II's death, his kingdom was divided between
Roman Syria and Roman Judea. In the final consequences of the Jewish-Roman
Wars, the region of modern Lebanon became part of Syria Palaestina since 135.
Christianity was introduced to coastal plane of Mount
Lebanon from neighboring Galilee, already in the 1st century. The region, as
with the rest of Syria and much of Anatolia, became a major center of
Christianity. In the 4th century it was incorporated into Christian Byzantine
Empire. Mount Lebanon and its coastal plane became part of the Diocese of the
East, divided to provinces of Phoenice Paralia and Phoenice Libanensis (which
also extended over large parts of modern Syria).
During the late 4th and early 5th century, a hermit named
Maron established a monastic tradition, focused on the importance of monotheism
and asceticism, near the mountain range known as Mount Lebanon. The monks who
followed Maron spread his teachings among the native Lebanese Christians and
remaining pagans in Lebanon mountains and coast. These Lebanese Christians came
to be known as Maronites and moved into the mountains to avoid religious
persecution by Roman authorities.[5]
Middle Ages[edit]
Arab rule[edit]
Main article: History of Lebanon under Arab rule
During the 7th century AD the Muslim Arabs conquered
Syria soon after the death of Muḥammad establishing a new regime to replace the
Romans (or Byzantines as the Eastern Romans are sometimes called). Though Islam
and the Arabic language were officially dominant under this new regime, the
general populous still took time to convert from Christianity and the Syriac
language. The Maronite community in particular clung stubbornly to its faith
and managed to maintain a large degree of autonomy despite the succession of
rulers over Syria. Muslim influence increased greatly in the seventh century
when the Umayyad capital was established at nearby Damascus.
During the 11th century the Druze faith emerged from a
branch of Islam. The new faith gained followers in the southern portion of
Mount Lebanon. The Maronites and the Druze divided Mount Lebanon until the
modern era. The major cities on the coast, Acre, Beirut, and others, were
directly administered by the Muslim Caliphs and the people became more fully
absorbed by Arab culture.
Crusader kingdoms[edit]
Following the fall of Roman/Christian Anatolia to the
Muslim Turks, the Romans put out a call to the Pope in Rome for assistance in
the 11th century. The result was a series of wars known as the Crusades
launched by Latin Christians (of mainly French origin) in Western Europe to
reclaim the former Roman territories in the Eastern Mediterranean, especially
Syria and Palestine (the Levant). Lebanon was in the main path of the First
Crusade's advance on Jerusalem. Frankish nobles occupied these present-day
Lebanon as part of the southeastern Crusader States. The southern half of
present-day Lebanon formed the northern march of the Kingdom of Jerusalem; the
northern half was the heartland of the County of Tripoli. Although Saladin
eliminated Christian control of the Holy Land around 1190, the Crusader states
in Lebanon and Syria were better defended.
One of the most lasting effects of the Crusades in this
region was the contact between the crusaders (mainly French) and the Maronites.
Unlike most other Christian communities in the region, who swore allegiance to
Constantinople or other local patriarchs, the Maronites proclaimed allegiance
to the Pope in Rome. As such the Franks saw them as Roman Catholic brethren.
These initial contacts led to centuries of support for the Maronites from
France and Italy, even after the later fall of the Crusader states in the
region.
Mamluk rule[edit]
Muslim control of Lebanon was reestablished in the late
13th century under the Mamluk sultans of Egypt. Lebanon was later contested
between Muslim rulers until the Turkish Ottoman Empire solidified authority
over the eastern Mediterranean.
Ottoman control was uncontested during the early modern
period, but the Lebanese coast became important for its contacts and trades
with Venice and other Italian city-states.
The mountainous territory of Mount Lebanon has long been
a shelter for minority and persecuted groups, including its historic Druze
majority along with Maronite Christians, local Shi'a and Sunni Muslims. It was
an autonomous Druze region of the Ottoman empire.
Ottoman rule[edit]
The Ottoman Turks formed an empire starting from the 14th
century which came to encompass the Balkans, Middle East and North Africa. The
Ottoman sultan, Selim I (1516–20), after defeating the Persians, conquered the
Mamluks. His troops, invading Syria, destroyed Mamluk resistance in 1516 at
Marj Dabaq, north of Aleppo.[6]
During the conflict between the Mamluks and the Ottomans,
the amirs of Lebanon linked their fate to that of Ghazali, governor (pasha) of
Damascus. He won the confidence of the Ottomans by fighting on their side at
Marj Dabaq and, apparently pleased with the behavior of the Lebanese amirs,
introduced them to Salim I when he entered Damascus. Salim I, whose treasury
was depleted by the wars, decided to grant the Lebanese amirs a semiautonomous
status in exchange for their acting as "tax-farmers". The Ottomans,
through the two main Druze feudal families, the Maans who were Druze and the
Chehabs who were Druze converts to Sunni Muslim Arab converts to Maronite
Christianity, ruled Lebanon until the middle of the nineteenth century. During
Ottoman rule the term Syria was used to designate the approximate area included
in present-day Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Israel/Palestine.[6]
The Maans, 1120-1697[edit]
The Maans came to Lebanon from Yemen sometime in the 11th
or 12th centuries. They were a tribe and dynasty of Qahtani Arabs and settled
on the southwestern slopes of the Lebanon Mountains and soon adopted the Druze
religion. Their authority began to rise with Fakhr ad-Din I, who was permitted
by Ottoman authorities to organize his own army, and reached its peak with
Fakhr ad-Din II (1570–1635). The existence of "Fakhr ad-Din I" has
been questioned by some scholars.[6][7]
Fakhreddine II[edit]
Fakhreddine II
Born in Baakline to a Druze family, his father died when
he was 13, and his mother entrusted her son to another princely family,
probably the Khazens (al-Khazin). In 1608 Fakhr-al-Din forged an alliance with
the Italian Grand Duchy of Tuscany. The alliance contained both a public
economic section and a secret military one. Fakhr-al-Din's ambitions,
popularity and unauthorized foreign contacts alarmed the Ottomans who
authorized Hafiz Ahmed Pasha, Muhafiz of Damascus, to mount an attack on
Lebanon in 1613 in order to reduce Fakhr-al-Din's growing power. Professor
Abu-Husayn has made the Ottoman archives relevant to the emir's career
available. Faced with Hafiz's army of 50,000 men, Fakhr-al-Din chose exile in
Tuscany, leaving affairs in the hands of his brother Emir Yunis and his son
Emir Ali Beg. They succeeded in maintining most of the forts such as Banias
(Subayba) and Niha which were a mainstay of Fakhr ad-Din's power. Before
leaving, Fakhr ad-Din paid his standing army of soqbans (mercenaries) two years
wages in order to secure their loyalty. Hosted in Tuscany by the Medici Family,
Fakhr-al-Din was welcomed by the grand duke Cosimo II, who was his host and
sponsor for the two years he spent at the court of the Medici. He spent a
further three years as guest of the Spanish Viceroy of Sicily and then Naples,
the Duke Osuna. Fakhr-al-Din had wished to enlist Tuscan or other European
assistance in a "Crusade" to free his homeland from Ottoman
domination, but was met with a refusal as Tuscany was unable to afford such an
expedition. The prince eventually gave up the idea, realizing that Europe was
more interested in trade with the Ottomans than in taking back the Holy Land.
His stay nevertheless allowed him to witness Europe's cultural revival in the
17th century, and bring back some Renaissance ideas and architectural features.
By 1618, political changes in the Ottoman sultanate had resulted in the removal
of many of Fakhr-al-Din's enemies from power, allowing Fahkr-al-Din's return to
Lebanon, whereupon he was able quickly to reunite all the lands of Lebanon
beyond the boundaries of its mountains; and having revenge from Emir Yusuf
Pasha ibn Siyfa, attacking his stronghold in Akkar, destroying his palaces and
taking control of his lands, and regaining the territories he had to give up in
1613 in Sidon, Tripoli, Bekaa among others. Under his rule, printing presses
were introduced and Jesuit priests and Catholic nuns encouraged to open schools
throughout the land.
In 1623, the prince angered the Ottomans by refusing to
allow an army on its way back from the Persian front to winter in the Bekaa.
This (and instigation by the powerful Janissary garrison in Damascus) led
Mustafa Pasha, Governor of Damascus, to launch an attack against him, resulting
in the battle at Majdel Anjar where Fakhr-al-Din's forces although outnumbered
managed to capture the Pasha and secure the Lebanese prince and his allies a
much needed military victory. The best source (in Arabic) for Fakhr ad-Din's
career up to this point is a memoir signed by al-Khalidi as-Safadi, who was not
with the Emir in Europe but had access to someone who was, possibly Fakhr
ad-Din himself. However, as time passed, the Ottomans grew increasingly
uncomfortable with the prince's increasing powers and extended relations with
Europe. In 1632, Kuchuk Ahmed Pasha was named Muhafiz of Damascus, being a
rival of Fakhr-al-Din and a friend of Sultan Murad IV, who ordered Kuchuk Ahmed
Pasha and the sultanate's navy to attack Lebanon and depose Fakhr-al-Din.
This time, the prince had decided to remain in Lebanon
and resist the offensive, but the death of his son Emir Ali Beik in Wadi
el-Taym was the beginning of his defeat. He later took refuge in Jezzine's
grotto, closely followed by Kuchuk Ahmed Pasha. He surrendered to the Ottoman
general Jaafar Pasha, whom he knew well, under circumstances that are not
clear. Fakhr-al-Din was taken to Constantinople and kept in the Yedikule (Seven
Towers) prison for two years. He was then summoned before the sultan.
Fakhr-al-Din, and one or two of his sons, were accused of treason and executed
there on 13 April 1635. There are unsubstantiated rumors that the younger of
the two boys was spared and raised in the harem, later becoming Ottoman
ambassador to India.
Although Fakhr ad-Din II's aspirations toward complete
independence for Lebanon ended tragically, he greatly enhanced Lebanon's
military and economic development. Noted for religious tolerance, the Druze
prince attempted to merge the country's different religious groups into one
Lebanese community. In an effort to attain complete independence for Lebanon,
he concluded a secret agreement with Ferdinand I, grand duke of Tuscany.
Following his return from Tuscany, Fakhr ad-Din II, realizing the need for a
strong and disciplined armed force, channeled his financial resources into
building a regular army. This army proved itself in 1623, when Mustafa Pasha,
the new governor of Damascus, underestimating the capabilities of the Lebanese
army, engaged it in battle and was decisively defeated at Anjar in the Biqa
Valley.[6]
Portrait of Fakhreddine while he was in Tuscany, stating
"Faccardino grand emir dei Drusi" translated as "Fakhreddine:
great emir of the Druze"
In addition to building up the army, Fakhr ad-Din II, who
became acquainted with Italian culture during his stay in Tuscany, initiated
measures to modernize the country. After forming close ties and establishing
diplomatic relations with Tuscany, he brought in architects, irrigation
engineers, and agricultural experts from Italy in an effort to promote
prosperity in the country. He also strengthened Lebanon's strategic position by
expanding its territory, building forts as far away as Palmyra in Syria, and
gaining control of Palestine. Finally, the Ottoman sultan Murad IV of Istanbul,
wanting to thwart Lebanon's progress toward complete independence, ordered
Kutshuk, then governor of Damascus, to attack the Lebanese ruler. This time
Fakhr ad-Din was defeated, and he was executed in Istanbul in 1635. No
significant Maan rulers succeeded Fakhr ad-Din II.[6]
Fakhreddine is regarded by the Lebanese as the best
leader and prince the country has ever seen. The Druze prince treated all the
religions equally and was the one who formed Lebanon. Lebanon has achieved
during Fakhreddine's reign enormous heights that the country had and would
never witness again.
Fakhreddine II Palace in Deir el Qamar
The Shihabs, 1697-1842[edit]
The Shihabs succeeded the Maans in 1697 after the Battle
of Ain Dara, a battle that changed the face of Lebanon back then, where a clash
between two Druze clans broke up: the Qaysis and the Yemenis. The Druze Qaysis,
led back then by Ahmad Shihab, won and expelled the Yemenis from Lebanon to
Syria. This has led to an enormous decrease to the Druze population in
Mount-Lebanon, who were a majority back then and helped the Christians overcome
the Druze demographically. This Qaysi 'victory' gave the Shihab, who were
Qaysis themselves and the allies of Lebanon, the rule over Mount-Lebanon. The
Druze overlords voted for the Shihabs to rule Mount Lebanon and the Chouf by
the threat of the Ottoman Empire who wanted the Sunnis to rule Lebanon. The
Shihabs originally lived in the Hawran region of southwestern Syria and settled
in Wadi al-Taym in southern Lebanon. The most prominent among them was Bashir
Shihab II. His ability as a statesman was first tested in 1799, when Napoleon
besieged Acre, a well-fortified coastal city in Palestine, about forty
kilometers south of Tyre. Both Napoleon and Al Jazzar, the governor of Acre,
requested assistance from the Shihab leader; Bashir, however, remained neutral,
declining to assist either combatant. Unable to conquer Acre, Napoleon returned
to Egypt, and the death of Al Jazzar in 1804 removed Bashir's principal
opponent in the area. The Shihabs were originally a Sunni Muslim family, but
had converted to Christianity.[6]
The rise and fall of Emir Bashir II[edit]
In 1788 Bashir Shihab II (sometimes spelled Bachir in
French sources) would rise to become the Emir. Born into poverty, he was
elected emir upon the abdication of his predecessor, and would rule under
Ottoman suzerainty, being appointed wali or governor of Mt Lebanon, the Biqa
valley and Jabal Amil. Together this is about two thirds of modern day Lebanon.
He would reform taxes and attempt to break the feudal system, in order to
undercut rivals, the most important of which was also named Bashir: Bashir
Jumblatt, whose wealth and feudal backers equaled or exceeded Bashir II – and
who had increasing support in the Druze community. In 1822 the Ottoman wali of
Damascus went to war with Acre, which was allied with Muhammad Ali, the pasha
of Egypt. As part of this conflict one of the most remembered massacres of
Maronite Christians by Druze forces occurred, forces that were aligned with the
wali of Damascus. Jumblatt represented the increasingly disaffected Druze, who
were both shut out from official power and angered at the growing ties with the
Maronites by Bashir II, who was himself a Maronite Christian.
Bashir II was overthrown as wali when he backed Acre, and
fled to Egypt, later to return and organize an army. Jumblatt gathered the
Druze factions together, and the war became sectarian in character: the
Maronites backing Bashir II, the Druze backing Bashir Jumblatt. Jumblatt
declared a rebellion, and between 1821 and 1825 there were massacres and
battles, with the Maronites attempting to gain control of the Mt. Lebanon
district, and the Druze gaining control over the Biqa valley. In 1825 Bashir
II, helped by the Ottomans and the Jezzar, defeated his rival in the Battle of
Simqanieh. Bashir Jumblatt died in Acre at the order of the Jezzar. Bashir II
was not a forgiving man and repressed the Druze rebellion, particularly in and
around Beirut. This made Bashir Chehab the only leader of Mount-Lebanon. However,
Bashir Chehab was depicted as a nasty leader because Bashir Jumblatt was his
all-time friend and has saved his life when the Keserwan peasants tried to kill
the prince, by sending 1000 of his men to save him. Also, days before the
Battle of Simqania, Bashir Jumblatt had the chance to kill Bashir II when he
was returning from Acre when he reportedly kissed the Jezzar's feet in order to
help him against Jumblatt, but Bashir II reminded him of their friendship and
told Jumblatt to "pardon when you can". The high morals of Jumblatt
led him to pardon Bashir II, a decision he should have regretted.
Bashir II, who had come to power through local politics
and nearly fallen from power because of his increasing detachment from them,
reached out for allies, allies who looked on the entire area as “the Orient”
and who could provide trade, weapons and money, without requiring fealty and
without, it seemed, being drawn into endless internal squabbles. He disarmed
the Druze and allied with France, governing in the name of the Egyptian Pasha
Muhammad Ali, who entered Lebanon and formally took overlordship in 1832. For
the remaining 8 years, the sectarian and feudal rifts of the 1821–1825 conflict
were heightened by the increasing economic isolation of the Druze, and the increasing
wealth of the Maronites.
During the nineteenth century the town of Beirut became
the most important port of the region, supplanting Acre further to the south.
This was mostly because Mount Lebanon became a centre of silk production for
export to Europe. This industry made the region wealthy, but also dependent on
links to Europe. Since most of the silk went to Marseille, the French began to
have a great impact in the region.
Sectarian conflict: European Powers begin to
intervene[edit]
Lebanon Troops |
1862 map drawn by the French expedition of Beaufort
d'Hautpoul[8]
Black dashed line shows the borders of the 1861–1918
Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate
The first map, drawn by the French in 1862, was used as a
template for the 1920 borders of Greater Lebanon.[9] The second map shows the
borders of the 1861–1918 Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate, overlaid on a map of
modern day Lebanon showing religious groups distribution
The discontent grew to open rebellion, fed by both
Ottoman and British money and support: Bashir II fled, the Ottoman empire
reasserted control and Mehmed Hüsrev Pasha, whose sole term as Grand Vizier ran
from 1839 to 1841, appointed another member of the Shihab family, who styled
himself Bashir III. Bashir III, coming on the heels of a man who by guile,
force and diplomacy had dominated Mt Lebanon and the Biqa for 52 years, did not
last long. In 1841 conflicts between the impoverished Druze and the Maronite
Christians exploded: There was a massacre of Christians by the Druze at Deir al
Qamar, and the fleeing survivors were slaughtered by Ottoman regulars. The
Ottomans attempted to create peace by dividing Mt Lebanon into a Christian
district and a Druze district, but this would merely create geographic
powerbases for the warring parties, and it plunged the region back into civil
conflict which included not only the sectarian warfare but a Maronite revolt
against the Feudal class, which ended in 1858 with the overthrow of the old
feudal system of taxes and levies. The situation was unstable: the Maronites
lived in the large towns, but these were often surrounded by Druze villages
living as perioikoi.
Christian refugees during the 1860 strife between Druze
and Maronites in Lebanon
In 1860, this would boil back into full scale sectarian
war, when the Maronites began openly opposing the power of the Ottoman Empire.
Another destabilizing factor was France's support for the Maronite Christians
against the Druze which in turn led the British to back the Druze, exacerbating
religious and economic tensions between the two communities. The Druze took
advantage of this and began burning Maronite villages. The Druze had grown
increasingly resentful of the favoring of the Maronites by Bashir II, and were
backed by the Ottoman Empire and the wali of Damascus in an attempt to gain
greater control over Lebanon; the Maronites were backed by the French, out of
both economic and political expediency. The Druze began a military campaign
that included the burning of villages and massacres, while Maronite irregulars
retaliated with attacks of their own. However, the Maronites were gradually
pushed into a few strongholds and were on the verge of military defeat when the
Concert of Europe intervened[10] and established a commission to determine the
outcome.[11] The French forces deployed there were then used to enforce the
final decision. The French accepted the Druze as having established control and
the Maronites were reduced to a semi-autonomous region around Mt Lebanon,
without even direct control over Beirut itself. The Province of Lebanon that
would be controlled by the Maronites, but the entire area was placed under
direct rule of the governor of Damascus, and carefully watched by the Ottoman
Empire.
The long siege of Deir al Qamar found a Maronite garrison
holding out against Druze forces backed by Ottoman soldiers; the area in every
direction was despoiled by the besiegers. In July 1860, with European
intervention threatening, the Turkish government tried to quiet the strife, but
Napoleon III of France sent 7,000 troops to Beirut and helped impose a
partition: The Druze control of the territory was recognized as the fact on the
ground, and the Maronites were forced into an enclave, arrangements ratified by
the Concert of Europe in 1861. They were confined to a mountainous district,
cut off from both the Biqa and Beirut, and faced with the prospect of
ever-growing poverty. Resentments and fears would brood, ones which would
resurface in the coming decades.
It is estimated that more than 4,000 Christians were
killed in the conflict, with another 4,000 dying of destitution. Furthermore,
more than 100,000 were made homeless.[12]
Lebanese soldiers, 1861-1914
Rising prosperity and peace[edit]
Lebanese dress from the late 19th century.
The remainder of the 19th century saw a relative period
of stability, as Muslim, Druze and Maronite groups focused on economic and
cultural development which saw the founding of the American University of
Beirut and a flowering of literary and political activity associated with the
attempts to liberalize the Ottoman Empire. Late in the century there was a
short Druze uprising over the extremely harsh government and high taxation
rates, but there was far less of the violence that had scalded the area earlier
in the century.
In the approach to World War I, Beirut became a center of
various reforming movements, and would send delegates to the Arab Syrian
conference and Franco-Syrian conference held in Paris. There was a complex
array of solutions, from pan-Arab nationalism, to separatism for Beirut, and
several status quo movements that sought stability and reform within the
context of Ottoman government. The Young Turk revolution brought these
movements to the front, hoping that the reform of Ottoman Empire would lead to
broader reforms. The outbreak of hostilities changed this, as Lebanon was to
feel the weight of the conflict in the Middle East more heavily than most other
areas occupied by the Syrians.
League of Nations Mandate[edit]
Main articles: French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon
and Greater Lebanon
Greater Lebanon (green) in the Mandate of Syria
Following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World
War I, the League of Nations mandated the five provinces that make up
present-day Lebanon to the direct control of France. Initially the division of
the Arabic-speaking areas of the Ottoman Empire were to be divided by the
Sykes-Picot Agreement; however, the final disposition was at the San Remo
conference of 1920, whose determinations on the mandates, their boundaries,
purposes and organization was ratified by the League in 1921 and put into
effect in 1922.
According to the agreements reached at San Remo, France
had its control over what was termed Syria recognised, the French having taken
Damascus in 1920. Like all formerly Ottoman areas, Syria was a Class A Mandate,
deemed to "... have reached a stage of development where their existence
as independent nations can be provisionally recognized subject to the rendering
of administrative advice and assistance by a Mandatory until such time as they
are able to stand alone. The wishes of these communities must be a principal
consideration in the selection of the Mandatory." The entire French
mandate area was termed "Syria" at the time, including the
administrative districts along the Mediterranean coast. Wanting to maximize the
area under its direct control, contain an Arab Syria centered on Damascus, and
insure a defensible border, France moved the Lebanon-Syrian border to the
Anti-Lebanon mountains, east of the Beqaa Valley, territory which had
historically belonged to the province of Damascus for hundreds of years, and
was far more attached to Damascus than Beirut by culture and influence. This
doubled the territory under the control of Beirut, at the expense of what would
become the state of Syria.
As a consequence of this also, the demographics of Lebanon
were profoundly altered, as the added territory contained people who were
predominantly Muslim or Druze: Lebanese Christians, of which the Maronites were
the largest subgrouping, now constituted barely more than 50% of the
population, while Sunni Muslims in Lebanon saw their numbers increase
eightfold, and the Shi'ite Muslims fourfold. The Modern Lebanon's constitution,
drawn up in 1926, specified a balance of power between the various religious
groups, but France designed it to guarantee the political dominance of its
Christian allies. The president was required to be a Christian (in practice, a
Maronite), the prime minister a Sunni Muslim. On the basis of the 1932 census,
parliament seats were divided according to a six-to-five Christian/Muslim ratio.
The constitution gave the president veto power over any legislation approved by
parliament, virtually ensuring that the 6:5 ratio would not be revised in the
event that the population distribution changed. By 1960, Muslims were thought
to constitute a majority of the population, which contributed to Muslim unrest
regarding the political system.
Republic of Lebanon[edit]
Independence and following years[edit]
See also: Lebanese Independence Day
Lebanon gained independence in 1943, while France was
occupied by Germany. General Henri Dentz, the Vichy High Commissioner for Syria
and Lebanon, played a major role in the independence of both nations. The Vichy
authorities in 1941 allowed Germany to move aircraft and supplies through Syria
to Iraq where they were used against British forces. Britain, fearing that Nazi
Germany would gain full control of Lebanon and Syria by pressure on the weak
Vichy government, sent its army into Syria and Lebanon.
After the fighting ended in Lebanon, General Charles de
Gaulle visited the area. Under various political pressures from both inside and
outside Lebanon, de Gaulle decided to recognize the independence of Lebanon. On
November 26, 1941, General Georges Catroux announced that Lebanon would become
independent under the authority of the Free French government. Elections were
held in 1943 and on November 8, 1943 the new Lebanese government unilaterally
abolished the mandate. The French reacted by throwing the new government into
prison. In the face of international pressure, the French released the
government officials on November 22, 1943 and accepted the independence of
Lebanon. The allies kept the region under control until the end of World War
II. The last French troops withdrew in 1946.
Lebanon's history from independence has been marked by
alternating periods of political stability and turmoil interspersed with
prosperity built on Beirut's position as a freely trading regional center for
finance and trade. Beirut became a prime location for institutions of
international commerce and finance, as well as wealthy tourists, and enjoyed a
reputation as the "Paris of the Middle East" until the outbreak of
the Lebanese Civil War.
In the aftermath of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Lebanon
became home to more than 110,000 Palestinian refugees.
Economic prosperity and growing tensions[edit]
In 1958, during the last months of President Camille
Chamoun's term, an insurrection broke out, and 5,000 United States Marines were
briefly dispatched to Beirut on July 15 in response to an appeal by the
government. After the crisis, a new government was formed, led by the popular
former general Fuad Chehab.
During the 1960s, Lebanon enjoyed a period of relative
calm, with Beirut-focused tourism and banking sector-driven prosperity. Lebanon
reached the peak of its economic success in the mid-1960s – the country was
seen as a bastion of economic strength by the oil-rich Persian Gulf Arab
states, whose funds made Lebanon one of the world’s fastest growing economies.
This period of economic stability and prosperity was brought to an abrupt halt
with the collapse of Yousef Beidas' Intra Bank, the country's largest bank and
financial backbone, in 1966.
Additional Palestinian refugees arrived after the 1967
Arab-Israeli War. Following their defeat in the Jordanian civil war, thousands
of Palestinian militiamen regrouped in Lebanon, led by Yasser Arafat's
Palestine Liberation Organization, with the intention of replicating the modus
operandi of attacking Israel from a politically and militarily weak neighbour.
Starting in 1968, Palestinian militants of various affiliations began to use
southern Lebanon as a launching pad for attacks on Israel. Two of these attacks
led to a watershed event in Lebanon's inchoate civil war. In July 1968, a
faction of George Habash's Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)
hijacked an Israeli El Al civilian plane en route to Algiers; in December, two
PFLP gunmen shot at an El Al plane in Athens, resulting in the death of an
Israeli.
As a result, two days later, an Israeli commando flew
into Beirut's international airport and destroyed more than a dozen civilian
airliners belonging to various Arab carriers. Israel defended its actions by
informing the Lebanese government that it was responsible for encouraging the
PFLP. The retaliation, which was intended to encourage a Lebanese government
crackdown on Palestinian militants, instead polarized Lebanese society on the
Palestinian question, deepening the divide between pro- and anti-Palestinian
factions, with the Muslims leading the former grouping and Maronites primarily
constituting the latter. This dispute reflected increasing tensions between
Christian and Muslim communities over the distribution of political power, and
would ultimately foment the outbreak of civil war in 1975.
Hezbollah Troops |
In the interim, while armed Lebanese forces under the
Maronite-controlled government sparred with Palestinian fighters, Egyptian
leader Gamal Abd al-Nasser helped to negotiate the 1969 "Cairo
Agreement" between Arafat and the Lebanese government, which granted the
PLO autonomy over Palestinian refugee camps and access routes to northern
Israel in return for PLO recognition of Lebanese sovereignty. The agreement
incited Maronite frustration over what were perceived as excessive concessions
to the Palestinians, and pro-Maronite paramilitary groups were subsequently
formed to fill the vacuum left by government forces, which were now required to
leave the Palestinians alone. Notably, the Phalange, a Maronite militia, rose
to prominence around this time, led by members of the Gemayel family.[13]
In September 1970 Suleiman Franjieh, who had left the
country briefly for Latakia in the 1950s after being accused of killing
hundreds of people including other Maronites, was elected president by a very
narrow vote in parliament. In November, his personal friend Hafiz al-Asad, who
had received him during his exile, seized power in Syria. Later, in 1976,
Franjieh would invite the Syrians into Lebanon.[14]
For its part, the PLO used its new privileges to
establish an effective "mini-state" in southern Lebanon, and to ramp
up its attacks on settlements in northern Israel. Compounding matters, Lebanon
received an influx of armed Palestinian militants, including Arafat and his
Fatah movement, fleeing the 1970 Jordanian crackdown. The PLO's "vicious
terrorist attacks in Israel"[15] dating from this period were countered by
Israeli bombing raids in southern Lebanon, where "150 or more towns and
villages...have been repeatedly savaged by the Israeli armed forces since
1968," of which the village of Khiyam is probably the best-known
example.[16] Palestinian terror claimed 106 lives in northern Israel from 1967,
according to official IDF statistics, while the Lebanese army had recorded
"1.4 Israeli violations of Lebanese territory per day from
1968–74"[17] Where Lebanon had no conflict with Israel during the period
1949–1968, after 1968 Lebanon's southern border began to experience an
escalating cycle of attack and retaliation, leading to the chaos of the civil
war, foreign invasions and international intervention. The consequences of the
PLO's arrival in Lebanon continue to this day.
The Lebanese Civil War: 1975–1990[edit]
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Main article: Lebanese Civil War
The Lebanese Civil War had its origin in the conflicts
and political compromises of Lebanon's colonial period and was exacerbated by
the nation's changing demographic trends, inter-religious strife, and proximity
to Syria, the Palestine Liberation Organization, and Israel. By 1975, Lebanon
was a religiously and ethnically diverse country with most dominant groups of
Maronite Christians, Orthodox Christians, Sunni Muslims and Shia Muslims; with
significant minorities of Druze, Kurds, Armenians, and Palestinian refugees and
their descendants.
Events and political movements that contributed to
Lebanon's violent implosion include, among others, the departure of European
colonial powers, the emergence of Arab Nationalism, Arab Socialism in the
context of the Cold War, the Arab-Israeli Conflict, Ba'athism, the Iranian
Revolution, Palestinian militants, Black September in Jordan, Islamic
fundamentalism, and the Iran–Iraq War.
In all, it is estimated that more than 100,000 were
killed, and another 100,000 handicapped by injuries, during Lebanon's 16-year
war. Up to one-fifth of the pre-war resident population, or about 900,000
people, were displaced from their homes, of whom perhaps a quarter of a million
emigrated permanently. Thousands of people lost limbs during many stages of
planting of land-mines.
The War can be divided broadly into several periods: The
initial outbreak in the mid-1970s, the Syrian and then Israeli intervention of
the late 1970s, escalation of the PLO-Israeli conflict in the early 1980s, the
1982 Israeli invasion, a brief period of multinational involvement, and finally
resolution which took the form of Syrian occupation.
Constitutionally guaranteed Christian control of the
government had come under increasing fire from Muslims and leftists, leading
them to join forces as the National Movement in 1969, which called for the
taking of a new census and the subsequent drafting of a new governmental structure
that would reflect the census results. Political tension became military
conflict, with full-scale civil war in April 1975. The leadership called for
Syrian intervention in 1976, leading to the presence of Syrian troops in
Lebanon, and an Arab summit in 1976 was called to stop the crisis.
In the south, military exchanges between Israel and the
PLO led Israel to support Saad Haddad's South Lebanon Army (SLA) in an effort
to establish a security belt along Israel's northern border, an effort which intensified
in 1977 with the election of new Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin. Israel
invaded Lebanon in response to Fatah attacks in Israel in March 1978, occupying
most of the area south of the Litani River, and resulting in the evacuation of
at least 100,000 Lebanese,[18] as well as approximately 2,000 deaths.[19]
The UN Security Council passed Resolution 425 calling for
an immediate Israeli withdrawal and creating the UN Interim Force in Lebanon
(UNIFIL), charged with maintaining peace. Israeli forces withdrew later in
1978, leaving an SLA-controlled border strip as a protective buffer against PLO
cross-border attacks.
In addition to the fighting between religious groups,
there was rivalry between Maronite groups. In June 1978 one of Suleiman Franjieh's
sons, Tony, was killed along with his wife and infant daughter in a nighttime
attack on their town, reportedly by Bashir Gemayel, Samir Geagea, and their
Phalangist forces.[20]
Concurrently, tension between Syria and Phalange
increased Israeli support for the Maronite group and led to direct
Israeli-Syrian exchanges in April 1981, leading to American diplomatic
intervention. Philip Habib was dispatched to the region to head off further
escalation, which he successfully did via an agreement concluded in May.
Intra-Palestinian fighting and PLO-Israeli conflict
continued, and July 24, 1981, Habib brokered a cease-fire agreement with the
PLO and Israel: the two sides agreed to cease hostilities in Lebanon proper and
along the Israeli border with Lebanon.
After continued PLO-Israeli exchanges, Israel invaded
Lebanon on June 6 in Operation Peace for Galilee. By June 15, Israeli units
were entrenched outside Beirut and Yassir Arafat attempted through negotiations
to evacuate the PLO. It is estimated[by whom?] that during the entire campaign,
approximately 20,000 were killed on all sides, including many
civilians[citation needed]. A multinational force composed of U.S. Marines and
French and Italian units arrived to ensure the departure of the PLO and protect
civilians. Nearly 15,000 Palestinian militants were evacuated by September 1.
Although Bashir Gemayel did not cooperate with the
Israelis publicly, his long history of tactical collaboration with Israel
counted against him in the eyes of many Lebanese, especially Muslims. Although
the only announced candidate for the presidency of the republic, the National
Assembly elected him by the second narrowest margin in Lebanese history (57
votes out of 92) on August 23, 1982; most Muslim members of the Assembly
boycotted the vote. Nine days before he was due to take office, Gemayel was assassinated
along with twenty-five others in an explosion at the Kataeb party headquarters
in Beirut's Christian neighborhood of Achrafieh on September 14, 1982.
Bachir Gemayel with Philipe Habib
Phalangists entered Palestinian camps on September 16 at
6:00 PM and remained until the morning of September 19, massacring 700–800
Palestinians, according to official Israeli statistics, "none apparently
members of any PLO unit".[21] These are known as the Sabra and Shatila
massacre. It is believed that the Phalangists considered it retaliation for
Gemayel's assassination and for the Damour massacre which PLO fighters had
committed earlier in a Christian town.[22]
Bachir Gemayel was succeeded as president by his older
brother Amine Gemayel, who served from 1982 to 1988. Rather different in
temperament, Amine Gemayel was widely regarded as lacking the charisma and
decisiveness of his brother, and many of the latter's followers were
dissatisfied.
Amine Gemayel focused on securing the withdrawal of
Israeli and Syrian forces. A May 17, 1983, agreement among Lebanon, Israel, and
the United States arranged an Israeli withdrawal conditional on the departure
of Syrian troops. Syria opposed the agreement and declined to discuss the
withdrawal of its troops, effectively stalemating further progress.
In 1983 the IDF withdrew southward and left the Chouf,
and would remain only in the "security zone" until the year 2000.
That led to the Mountain War between the Druze Progressive Socialist Party and
the Maronite Lebanese Forces. The PSP won the decisive battle that occured in
the Chouf and Aley District and inflected heavy losses to the LF. The result
was the expulsion of the Christians from the Southern Mount Lebanon.
Explosion at the Marine barracks seen from afar
Intense attacks against U.S. and Western interests,
including two truck bombings of the US Embassy in 1983 and 1984 and the
landmark attacks on the U.S. Marine and French parachute regiment barracks on
October 23, 1983, led to an American withdrawal, while the virtual collapse of
the Lebanese Army in the 6 February 1984 Intifada in Beirut, led by the PSP and
Amal, the two main allies, was a major blow to the government. On March 5, as a
result of the Intifada and the Mountain War, the Lebanese Government canceled
the May 17 agreement and the Marines departed a few weeks later.
Between 1985 and 1989, heavy fighting took place in the
"War of the Camps". The Shi'a Muslim Amal militia sought to rout the
Palestinians from Lebanese strongholds.
Combat returned to Beirut in 1987, with Palestinians,
leftists, and Druze fighters allied against Amal. After winning the battle, the
PSP controlled West Beirut. The Syrians then entered Beirut. This combat was
fueled by the Syrians in order to take control of Beirut by taking as a pretext
of stopping the fights between the brothers, the PSP and Amal. Violent
confrontation flared up again in Beirut in 1988 between Amal and Hezbollah.
Meanwhile, on the political front, Prime Minister Rashid
Karami, head of a government of national unity set up after the failed peace
efforts of 1984, was assassinated on June 1, 1987. President Gemayel's term of
office expired in September 1988. Before stepping down, he appointed another
Maronite Christian, Lebanese Armed Forces Commanding General Michel Aoun, as
acting Prime Minister, as was his right under the Lebanese constitution of
1943. This action was highly controversial.
Muslim groups rejected the move and pledged support to
Selim al-Hoss, a Sunni who had succeeded Karami. Lebanon was thus divided
between a Christian government in East Beirut and a Muslim government in West
Beirut, with no President.
In February 1989, General Aoun launched the "War of
liberation", a war against the Syrian Armed Forces in Lebanon. His
campaign was partially supported by a few foreign nations but the method and
approach was disputed within the Christian community. This led to the Lebanese
forces to abstain from the Syrian attack against Aoun. In October 1990, the
Syrian air force, backed by the US and pro-Syrian Lebanese groups (including
Hariri, Joumblatt, Berri, Geagea and Lahoud) attacked the Presidential Palace
at B'abda and forced Aoun to take refuge in the French embassy in Beirut and
later go into exile in Paris. October 13, 1990 is regarded as the date the civil
war ended, and Syria is widely recognized as playing a critical role in its
end.[23]
The Taif Agreement of 1989 marked the beginning of the
end of the war, and was ratified on November 4. President Rene Mouawad was
elected the following day, but was assassinated in a car bombing in Beirut on
November 22 as his motorcade returned from Lebanese independence day
ceremonies. He was succeeded by Elias Hrawi, who remained in office until 1998.
Beirut City |
In August 1990, the parliament and the new president
agreed on constitutional amendments embodying some of the political reforms
envisioned at Taif. The National Assembly expanded to 128 seats and was divided
equally between Christians and Muslims. In March 1991, parliament passed an
amnesty law that pardoned most political crimes prior to its enactment,
excepting crimes perpetrated against foreign diplomats or certain crimes
referred by the cabinet to the Higher Judicial Council.
In May 1991, the militias (with the important exception
of Hizballah) were dissolved, and the Lebanese Armed Forces began to slowly
rebuild themselves as Lebanon's only major non-sectarian institution.
Some violence still occurred. In late December 1991 a car
bomb (estimated to carry 100 kg (220 pounds) of TNT) exploded in the Muslim
neighborhood of Basta. At least thirty people were killed, and 120 wounded,
including former Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan, who was riding in a bulletproof
car. It was the deadliest car bombing in Lebanon since June 18, 1985, when an
explosion in the northern Lebanese port of Tripoli killed sixty people and
wounded 110.
The last of the Westerners kidnapped by Hezbollah during
the mid-1980s were released in May 1992.
Occupation: 1992 to February 2005[edit]
Since the end of the war, the Lebanese have conducted
several elections, most of the militias have been weakened or disbanded, and
the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) have extended central government authority over
about two-thirds of the country. Only Hezbollah retained its weapons, and was
supported by the Lebanese parliament in doing so, as they had defended Lebanon
against the Israeli occupation. Syria on the other hand kept its military
presence in most of Lebanon, also holding various government institutions in
the country, strengthening its occupation. The Israeli forces finally withdrew
from south of Lebanon in May 2000, though the Syrian occupation of most Lebanon
still continued.
By early November 1992, a new parliament had been
elected, and Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri had formed a cabinet, retaining for
himself the finance portfolio. The formation of a government headed by a
successful billionaire businessman was widely seen as a sign that Lebanon would
make a priority of rebuilding the country and reviving the economy. Solidere, a
private real estate company set up to rebuild downtown Beirut, was a symbol of
Hariri's strategy to link economic recovery to private sector investment. After
the election of then-commander of the Lebanese Armed Forces Émile Lahoud as
President in 1998 following Hrawi's extended term as President, Salim al-Hoss
again served as Prime Minister. Hariri returned to office as Prime Minister in
November 2000. Although problems with basic infrastructure and government
services persist, and Lebanon is now highly indebted, much of the civil war
damage has been repaired throughout the country, and many foreign investors and
tourists have returned.
Postwar social and political instability, fueled by
economic uncertainty and the collapse of the Lebanese currency, led to the
resignation of Prime Minister Omar Karami, also in May 1992, after less than 2
years in office. He was replaced by former Prime Minister Rachid Solh, who was
widely viewed as a caretaker to oversee Lebanon's first parliamentary elections
in 20 years.
If Lebanon has in part recovered over the past decade
from the catastrophic damage to infrastructure of its long civil war, the
social and political divisions that gave rise to and sustained that conflict
remain largely unresolved. Parliamentary and more recently municipal elections
have been held with fewer irregularities and more popular participation than in
the immediate aftermath of the conflict, and Lebanese civil society generally
enjoys significantly more freedoms than elsewhere in the Arab world. However,
there are continuing sectarian tensions and unease about Syrian and other
external influences.
In the late 1990s, the government took action against
Sunni Muslim extremists in the north who had attacked its soldiers, and it
continues to move against groups such as Asbat al-Ansar, which has been accused
of being partnered with Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network. On January 24,
2002, Elie Hobeika, another former Lebanese Forces figure associated with the
Sabra and Shatilla massacres who later served in three cabinets and the
parliament, was assassinated in a car bombing in Beirut.
During Lebanon's civil war, Syria's troop deployment in
Lebanon was legitimized by the Lebanese Parliament in the Taif Agreement, supported
by the Arab League, and is given a major share of the credit for finally
bringing the civil war to an end in October 1990. In the ensuing fifteen years,
Damascus and Beirut justified Syria's continued military presence in Lebanon by
citing the continued weakness of a Lebanese armed forces faced with both
internal and external security threats, and the agreement with the Lebanese
Government to implement all of the constitutional reforms in the Taif
Agreement. Under Taif, the Hezbollah militia was eventually to be dismantled,
and the LAF allowed to deploy along the border with Israel. Lebanon was called
on to deploy along its southern border by UN Security Council Resolution 1391,
urged to do so by UN Resolution UN Security Council Resolution 1496, and deployment
was demanded by UN Security Council Resolution 1559. The Syrian military and
intelligence presence in Lebanon was criticised by some on Lebanon's right-wing
inside and outside of the country, others believed it helped to prevent renewed
civil war and discourage Israeli aggression, and others believed its presence
and influence was helpful for Lebanese stability and peace but should be scaled
back.[24] Major powers United States and France rejected Syrian reasoning that
they were in Lebanon by the consent of the Lebanese government. They insist
that the latter had been co-opted and that in fact Lebanon's Government was a
Syrian puppet.[25]
Up to 2005, 14-15,000 Syrian troops (down from
35,000)[26] remained in position in many areas of Lebanon, although the Taif
called for an agreement between the Syrian and Lebanese Governments by
September 1992 on their redeployment to Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. Syria's refusal
to exit Lebanon following Israel's 2000 withdrawal from south Lebanon first
raised criticism among the Lebanese Maronite Christians[27] and Druze, who were
later joined by many of Lebanon's Sunni Muslims.[28]) Lebanon's Shiites, on the
other hand, have long supported the Syrian presence, as has the Hezbollah
militia group and political party. The U.S. began applying pressure on Syria to
end its occupation and cease interfering with internal Lebanese matters.[29] In
2004, many believe Syria pressured Lebanese MPs to back a constitutional
amendment to revise term limitations and allow Lebanon's two term pro-Syrian
president Émile Lahoud to run for a third time. France, Germany and the United
Kingdom, along with many Lebanese politicians joined the U.S. in denouncing
alleged Syria's interference.[30] On September 2, 2004, the UN Security Council
adopted UN Security Council Resolution 1559, authored by France and the U.S. in
an uncommon show of cooperation. The resolution called "upon all remaining
foreign forces to withdraw from Lebanon" and "for the disbanding and
disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias".
On May 25, 2000, Israel completed its withdrawal from the
south of Lebanon in accordance with UN Security Council Resolution 425.[31] A
50 square kilometer piece of mountain terrain, commonly referred to as the
Shebaa Farms, remains under the control of Israel. The UN has certified
Israel's pullout,[32] and regards the Shebaa Farms as occupied Syrian
territory, while Lebanon and Syria have stated they regard the area as Lebanese
territory.[33] The January 20, 2005, UN Secretary-General's report on Lebanon
stated: "The continually asserted position of the Government of Lebanon
that the Blue Line is not valid in the Shab'a farms area is not compatible with
Security Council resolutions. The Council has recognized the Blue Line as valid
for purposes of confirming Israel's withdrawal pursuant to resolution 425
(1978). The Government of Lebanon should heed the Council's repeated calls for
the parties to respect the Blue Line in its entirety."[34]
In Resolution 425, the UN had set a goal of assisting the
Lebanese government in a "return of its effective authority in the
area", which would require an official Lebanese army presence there.
Further, UN Security Council Resolution 1559 requires the dismantling of the
Hezbollah militia. Yet, Hezbollah remains deployed along the Blue Line.[35]
Both Hezbollah and Israel have violated the Blue Line more than once, according
to the UN.[36][37] The most common pattern of violence have been border
incursions by the Hezbollah into the Shebaa Farms area, and then Israeli air
strikes into southern Lebanon.[38] The UN Secretary-General has urged "all
governments that have influence on Hezbollah to deter it from any further
actions which could increase the tension in the area".[39] Staffan de
Misura, Personal Representative of the Secretary-General for Southern Lebanon
stated that he was "deeply concerned that air violations by Israel across
the Blue Line during altercations with Hezbollah are continuing to take
place",[40] calling "upon the Israeli authorities to cease such
violations and to fully respect the Blue Line".[41] In 2001 de Misura
similarly expressed his concern to Lebanon's prime minister for allowing
Hezbollah to violate the Blue Line, saying it was a "clear
infringement" of UN Resolution 425, under which the UN certified Israel's
withdrawal from south Lebanon as complete.[42] On January 28, 2005, UN Security
Council Resolution 1583 called upon the Government of Lebanon to fully extend
and exercise its sole and effective authority throughout the south, including
through the deployment of sufficient numbers of Lebanese armed and security
forces, to ensure a calm environment throughout the area, including along the
Blue Line, and to exert control over the use of force on its territory and from
it.[34] On January 23, 2006 The UN Security Council called on the Government of
Lebanon to make more progress in controlling its territory and disbanding
militias, while also calling on Syria to cooperate with those efforts. In a
statement read out by its January President, Augustine Mahiga of Tanzania, the
Council also called on Syria to take measures to stop movements of arms and
personnel into Lebanon.[43]
On September 3, 2004, the National Assembly voted 96–29
to amend the constitution to allow the pro-Syrian president, Émile Lahoud,
three more years in office by extending a statute of limitations to nine years.
Many regarded this as a second time Syria had pressured Lebanon's Parliament to
amend the constitution in a way that favored Lahoud (the first allowing for his
election in 1998 immediately after he had resigned as commander-in-chief of the
LAF.)[44] Three cabinet ministers were absent from the vote and later resigned.
The USA charged that Syria exercised pressure against the National Assembly to
amend the constitution, and many of the Lebanese rejected it, saying that it
was considered as contradictive to the constitution and its principles.[45]
Including these is the Maronite Patriarch Mar Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir – the
most eminent religious figure for Maronites – and the Druze leader Walid
Jumblatt.
To the surprise of many, Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, who
had vehemently opposed this amendment, appeared to have finally accepted it,
and so did most of his party. However, he ended up resigning in protest against
the amendment. He was assassinated soon afterwards (see below), triggering the
Cedar Revolution. This amendment comes in discordance with the UN Security
Council Resolution 1559, which called for a new presidential election in
Lebanon.
On October 1, 2004, one of the main dissenting voices to
Émile Lahoud's term extension, the newly resigned Druze ex-minister Marwan
Hamadeh was the target of a car bomb attack as his vehicle slowed to enter his
Beirut home. Mr. Hamadeh and his bodyguard were wounded and his driver killed
in the attack. Druze leader Walid Jumblatt appealed for calm, but said the car
bomb was a clear message for the opposition.[46] UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan expressed his serious concern over the attack.[47]
On October 7, 2004, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
reported to the Security Council that Syria had failed to withdraw its forces
from Lebanon. Mr. Annan concluded his report saying that "It is time, 14
years after the end of hostilities and four years after the Israeli withdrawal
from Lebanon, for all parties concerned to set aside the remaining vestiges of
the past. The withdrawal of foreign forces and the disbandment and disarmament
of militias would, with finality, end that sad chapter of Lebanese
history.".[48] On October 19, 2004, following the UN Secretary General's
report, the UN Security Council voted unanimously (meaning that it received the
backing of Algeria, the only Arab member of the Security Council) to put out a
statement calling on Syria to pull its troops out of Lebanon, in accordance
with Resolution 1559.[49]
On October 20, 2004, Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri
resigned; the next day former Prime Minister and loyal supporter of Syria Omar
Karami was appointed Prime Minister.[50] On February 14, 2005, former Prime
Minister Hariri was assassinated in a car-bomb attack which killed 21 and
wounded 100. On February 21, 2005, tens of thousand Lebanese protestors held a
rally at the site of the assassination calling for the withdrawal of Syria's
peacekeeping forces and blaming Syria and the pro-Syrian president Lahoud for
the murder.[51]
Hariri's murder triggered increased international
pressure on Syria. In a joint statement U.S. President Bush and French
president Chirac condemned the killing and called for full implementation of
UNSCR 1559. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan announced that he was sending a
team led by Ireland's deputy police commissioner, Peter FitzGerald, to
investigate the assassination.[52] And while Arab League head Amr Moussa
declared that Syrian president Assad promised him a phased withdrawal over a
two-year period, the Syrian Information Minister Mahdi Dakhlallah said Mr
Moussa had misunderstood the Syrian leader. Mr Dakhlallah said that Syria will
merely move its troops to eastern Lebanon. Russia,[53] Germany,[54] and Saudi
Arabia[54] all called for Syrian troops to leave.
Local Lebanese pressure mounted as well. As daily
protests against the Syrian occupation grew to 25,000, a series of dramatic
events occurred. Massive protests such as these had been quite uncommon in the
Arab world, and while in the 90s most anti-Syrian demonstrators were
predominantly Christian, the new demonstrations were Christian and Sunni.[55]
On February 28 the government of pro-Syrian Prime Minister Omar Karami
resigned, calling for a new election to take place. Mr Karami said in his
announcement: "I am keen the government will not be a hurdle in front of
those who want the good for this country." The tens of thousands gathered
at Beirut's Martyrs' Square cheered the announcement, then chanted "Karami
has fallen, your turn will come, Lahoud, and yours, Bashar".[56]
Opposition MPs were also not satisfied with Karami's resignation, and kept
pressing for full Syrian withdrawal. Former minister and MP Marwan Hamadeh, who
survived a similar car bomb attack on October 1, 2004, said "I accuse this
government of incitement, negligence and shortcomings at the least, and of
covering up its planning at the most... if not executing". Two days later
Syrian leader Bashar Assad announced that his troops will leave Lebanon completely
"in the next few months". Responding to the announcement, opposition
leader Walid Jumblatt said that he wanted to hear more specifics from Damascus
about any withdrawal: "It's a nice gesture but 'next few months' is quite
vague – we need a clear-cut timetable".[57]
On March 5 Syrian leader Assad declared in a televised
speech that Syria would withdraw its forces to the Bekaa Valley in eastern
Lebanon, and then to the border between Syria and Lebanon. Assad did not
provide a timetable for a complete withdrawal of Syrian forces from Lebanon –
14,000 soldiers and intelligence agents.[58] Meanwhile, Hezbollah leader
Nasrallah called for a "massive popular gathering" on Tuesday against
UN Resolution 1559 saying "The resistance will not give up its arms ...
because Lebanon needs the resistance to defend it", and added "all
the articles of UN resolution give free services to the Israeli enemy who
should have been made accountable for his crimes and now finds that he is being
rewarded for his crimes and achieves all its demands".[59] In opposition
to Nasrallah's call, Monday, March 7 saw at least 70,000 people – with some
estimates putting the number at twice as high – gathered at central Martyrs'
Square to demand that Syria leave completely.[60]
The following day a pro-Syrian demonstration set a new
record when Hezbollah amassed 400–500 thousand protestors at Riad Solh square
in Beirut, most of them bussed in from the heavily Shi'ite south Lebanon and
eastern Beka'a valley. The show of power demonstrated Hezbollah's influence,
wealth and organization as the sole Lebanese party allowed to hold a militia by
Syria. In his speech Nasrallah blasted UN Security-Council Resolution 1559,
which calls for Hezbollah's militia to be disbanded, as foreign intervention.
Nasrallah also reiterated his earlier calls for the destruction of Israel
saying "To this enemy we say again: There is no place for you here and
there is no life for you among us. Death to Israel!". Though Hezbollah
organized a very successful rally, opposition leaders were quick to point out
that Hezbollah had active support from Lebanon's government and Syria. While
the pro-democracy rallies had to deal with road blocks forcing protestors to
either turn back or march long distances to Martyr's Square, Hezbollah was able
to bus people directly to Riad Solh square. Dory Chamoun, an opposition leader,
pointed out that "the difference is that in our demonstrations, people
arrive voluntarily and on foot, not in buses". Another opposition member
said the pro-Syrian government pressured people to turn out and some reports
said Syria had bused in people from across the border. But on a mountain road
leading to Beirut, only one bus with a Syrian license plate was spotted in a
convoy of pro-Syrian supporters heading to the capital and Hezbollah officials
denied the charges.[61] Opposition MP Akram Chehayeb said "That is where
the difference between us and them lies: They asked these people to come and
they brought them here, whereas the opposition's supporters come here on their
own. Our protests are spontaneous. We have a cause. What is theirs?".[62]
One month after Hariri's murder, an enormous anti-Syrian
rally gathered at Martyr's Square in Beirut. Multiple news agencies estimated
the crowd at between 800,000 and 1 million – a show of force for the Sunni
Muslim, Christian and Druze communities. The rally was double the size of the
mostly Shi'ite pro-Syrian one organized by Hezbollah the previous week.[63]
When Hariri's sister took a pro-Syrian line saying that Lebanon should "stand
by Syria until its land is liberated and it regains its sovereignty on the[64]
occupied Golan Heights" the crowd jeered her.[65] This sentiment was
prevalent among the rally participants who opposed Hezbollah's refusal to
disarm based on the claim that Lebanese and Syrian interests are linked.[66]
Cedar Revolution and 2006 War (2005-present)[edit]
Main article: Cedar Revolution
See also: 2005 Lebanon bombings
Jamil Al Sayyed, a Syrian ally in the Lebanese security
forces, resigned on 25 April, just a day before the final Syrian troops pulled
out of Lebanon.
On 26 April 2005, the last 250 Syrian troops left
Lebanon. During the departure ceremonies, Ali Habib, Syria's chief of staff,
said that Syria's president had decided to recall his troops after the Lebanese
army had been "rebuilt on sound national foundations and became capable of
protecting the state."
UN forces led by Senegalese Mouhamadou Kandji and guided
by Lebanese Imad Anka were sent to Lebanon to verify the military withdrawal
which was mandated by Security Council resolution 1559.
Following the Syrian withdrawal a series of
assassinations of Lebanese politicians and journalists with the anti-Syrian
camp had begun. Many bombings have occurred to date and have triggered
condemnations from the UN Security Council and UN Secretary General.[67]
Eight months after Syria withdrew from Lebanon under
intense domestic and international outrage over the assassination of Lebanese
prime minister Rafiq Hariri the UN investigation has yet to be completed. While
UN investigator Detlev Mehlis has pointed the finger at Syria's intelligence
apparatus in Lebanon he has yet to be allowed full access to Syrian officials
who are suspected by the UN International Independent Investigation Commission
(UNIIIC) as being behind the assassination.[68] In its latest report UNIIIC
said it had "credible information" that Syrian officials had arrested
and threatened close relatives of a witness who recanted testimony he had
previously given the Commission, and that two Syrian suspects it questioned
indicated that all Syrian intelligence documents on Lebanon had been
burned.[69] A campaign of bomb attacks against politicians, journalists and
even civilian neighborhoods associated with the anti-Syrian camp has provoked
much negative attention for Syria in the UN[67] and elsewhere.
On December 15, 2005 the UN Security Council extended the
mandate of the UNIIIC.
On December 30, 2005 Syria's former Vice-President, Abdul
Halim Khaddam, said that "Hariri received many threats" from Syria's
President Bashar Al-Assad.[70] Prior to Syria's withdrawal from Lebanon Mr
Khaddam was in charge of Syria's Lebanon policy and mainly responsible for
Syria's abuse of Lebanon's resources. Many believe that Khaddam seized the
opportunity to clear his history of corruption and blackmail.
Parliament voted for the release of the former Lebanese
Forces warlord Samir Geagea in the first session since election were held in
the spring of 2005. Geagea was the only leader during the civil war to be
charged with crimes related to that conflict. With the return of Michel Aoun,
the climate was right to try to heal wounds to help unite the country after
former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated on 14 February 2005. Geagea
was released on 26 July 2005 and left immediately for an undisclosed European
nation to undergo medical examinations and convalesce.
During the Cedar Revolution Hezbollah organized a series
of pro-Syrian rallies. Hezbollah became a part of the Lebanese government
following the 2005 elections but is at a crossroads regarding UNSCR 1559's call
for its militia to be dismantled. On 21 November 2005, Hezbollah launched an
attack along the entire border with Israel, the heaviest in the five and a half
years since Israel's withdrawal. The barrage was supposed to provide tactical
cover for an attempt by a squad of Hezbollah special forces to abduct Israeli
troops in the Israeli side of the village of Al-Ghajar.[71] The attack failed
when an ambush by the IDF Paratroopers killed 4 Hezbollah members and scattered
the rest.[72] The UN Security Council accused Hezbollah of initiating the
hostilities.[73]
On 27 December 2005, Katyusha rockets fired from
Hezbollah territory smashed into houses in the Israeli village of Kiryat Shmona
wounding three people.[74] UN Secretary General Kofi Annan called on the
Lebanese Government "to extend its control over all its territory, to
exert its monopoly on the use of force, and to put an end to all such
attacks".[75] Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora denounced the attack as
"aimed at destabilizing security and diverting attention from efforts
exerted to solve the internal issues prevailing in the country".[76] On
December 30, 2005 the Lebanese army dismantled two other Katyusha rockets found
in the border town of Naqoura, an action suggesting increased vigilance
following PM Saniora's angry remarks. In a new statement Saniora also rejected
claims by Al-Qaeda that it was responsible for the attack and insisted again
that it was a domestic action challenging his government's authority.[77]
The 2006 Lebanon War was a 34-day military conflict in
Lebanon and northern Israel. The principal parties were Hezbollah paramilitary
forces and the Israeli military. The conflict started on 12 July 2006, and
continued until a United Nations-brokered ceasefire went into effect in the
morning on 14 August 2006, though it formally ended on 8 September 2006 when
Israel lifted its naval blockade of Lebanon, leaving more than 1500 dead
civilians and still the Israeli army couldn't penetrate the Lebanese land
borders and was driven back by Hezbollah suffering heavy casualties and
defeated. (Continoe)
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