Posted on 08/15/2006 6:08:00 PM PDT by neverdem
One evening earlier this summer, Lebanons most popular satire show, Bas Mat Watan, broadcast a sketch showing an interview with Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollahs leader and secretary general. Nasrallah was asked whether his party would surrender its weapons. He answered that it would, but first several conditions had to be met: there was that woman in Australia, whose land was being encroached upon by Jewish neighbors; then there was the baker in the United States, whose bakery the Jews wanted to take over. The joke was obvious: there were an infinite number of reasons why Hezbollah would never agree to lay down its weapons and become one political party among others.
But it was the rapid reaction to the satiric sketch that sent the more disquieting message. That very night, angry supporters of Hezbollah closed the airport road with burning tires a warning that they could block at will the main access point in and out of the country and marched on mainly Sunni, Druse and Christian quarters in Beirut. In a Christian neighborhood, they clashed with the son of a former president and his comrades, and...
--snip--
With hundreds of thousands of his brethren displaced from their homes, with Lebanon already facing an estimated $2.5 billion in direct losses, with Hezbollah having alienated many of its countrymen, even as it has fired off its prize weapons in a war of little benefit, maybe Nasrallah saw something he hadn't earlier: that his party may not always be the only party to hold the weapons. Faced with his intransigence, unable to peacefully settle their differences with Hezbollah, Lebanons other communities will likely rearm. The result may be a return to civil war. And if that happens, nothing will put Lebanon let alone liberal Lebanon back together again.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
I see a Christian Lebanon when WWIII is over, living in peace with its only remaining neighbor, Israel.
Fantastic article. Bump.
More likely they fired off their old katyushas to make room for a more modern inventory.
So now the motivation for the war is clear:
1) Iran takes pressure off of their nuclear program (that you knew),
2) Hezbos attempt to take mantle of "best" Islamic revolutionaries (that you knew too), and
3) Syria attempts to destabalize Lebanon to improve their chances of regaining power there.
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