[LCM Articles] Syria: out the door, back through the window
Michel Rbeiz
mrbeiz at gmail.com
Thu Jun 16 11:59:37 EDT 2005
The Independent<http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/story.jsp?story=646518>
Syria: out the door, back through the window
Monday, 13th June 2005, by Robert
Fisk<http://www.selvesandothers.org/view18.html>
*The presence of Damascus's spies has cast a shadow over the first free
elections in Lebanon for 30 years. Robert Fisk reports on the intelligence
war that is threatening a nation's future
*
The Lebanese went to the elections yesterday as if it was a festival, all
music and flags and picnics on the grass opposite the polling booths. The
Christian and the Muslim and the Druze of Lebanon lay down with their
appropriate tigers. The first free elections in 30 years.
The Mediterranean, far down the mountainside, lay pale green in the evening
light. Liberty. The Syrians have gone. But have they? The Mediterranean
looks suddenly darker. The intelligence war that has so often smothered
Beirut is closing in again.
How war closets this country, bastes it in the oven of history, ensures that
the smallest constituency maintains the integrity of the civil war that
ended 15 years ago, a conflict in which the Syrians were deeply involved.
I only have to visit a few friends to hear the worst. The Syrians are back.
An odd colonel or two, a general here and there, from the intelligence
services, of course. True? And, if so, why?
The UN confirmed the withdrawal of all Syrian troops and intelligence
officers scarcely a month ago. Now the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan,
threatens to send his "verification" team back to reconfirm. There are
names: Khalouf, Safeitly, Jabour, Ghazaleh ... Syrian intelligence officers.
Ghazaleh was the former head of Syrian military intelligence in Lebanon.
Or maybe he still is? If the Syrians have returned - out through the door,
back through the window, as the Lebanese say - what might they do with the
sectarian pot that constitutes all of Lebanon's tragedies?
Travel through the mountains of Lebanon yesterday and the Druze-Christian
war comes back like a tempest. In the village of Kfar Matta - of which more
later - the Christians cannot even vote alongside their Druze neighbours,
because they killed too many of them in 1983.
The Druze, who lost 270 in a 1983 massacre - which also killed a friend,
Clark Todd, a Canadian television correspondent - vote enthusiastically in a
school in the centre of their still partly-ruined village. Lebanese soldiers
guard them. The Christians of Kfar Matta, however, have to go elsewhere to
exercise their democratic vote.
But the Syrians, that's the thing. Are they back? Alas, they probably are. A
dark cloud shadows this awesomely beautiful country, just when we all
thought it was safe to go back into the green waters of the sea.
The story so far. Rafik Hariri, the former prime minister of Lebanon, was
murdered in a bombing in Beirut on 14 February, 2005. Opposition politicians
blamed the Syrian regime because - so they said - it believed Hariri was
behind UN Security Council Resolution 1559, supported by the United States
and France, which demanded the withdrawal of the Syrian army and its
intelligence officers from Lebanon.
A million Lebanese rallied to demand the truth about his assassination. A
preliminary UN investigation concluded "the government of Syria bears
primary responsibility for the political tension that preceded the
assassination ..."
But now, according to the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Siyassa, a CIA investigation
into the murder concluded that between six and nine senior Syrian
intelligence officers were involved.
The paper names - as "planners and executors" - of the murder, Colonel
Mohamed Khalouf, former commander of the Syrian intelligence offices at the
Beau Rivage hotel in Beirut, Colonel Jihad Safeitly, head of Syrian
"Political Operations" in Lebanon, and Brigadier General Rustum Ghazaleh,
former head of Syrian military intelligence in Lebanon.
It claims, too, that a secret CIA/FBI investigation was carried out on the
Hariri assassination in Lebanon for four days, starting on 18 February,
which concluded that four senior members of the Lebanese security forces
knew of plans for the murder before it took place and helped monitor
Hariri's movements and select the date of his murder.
One of the paper's sources said a former Lebanese cabinet minister was also
involved. The Lebanese are already trying to guess - accurately - his
identity.
This is, as they say, a very serious matter. Even graver is the information
which Walid Jumblatt, the Druze leader, says he has received of continued
Syrian intelligence operations in Lebanon. He has been told that - back in
Lebanon after their famous "military withdrawal" - are Mohamed Jabour, a
Syrian officer formerly based in the Lebanese town of Sofar, high in the
hills above Beirut, and Jamer Jamer, who was a spook in the west Beirut
Hamra district, and Said Rabah, a Syrian intelligence man from Hamana (in
the valley below Sofar), and that all have returned to Lebanon.
And so has Rustum Ghazaleh, the ex-top intelligence man in the country. All
of the above, Syria officially denies.
Mr Jumblatt still believes that he is on a Syrian "hit list" and the
Americans are banging the same drum almost every day. "Our message to
Syria,'' President George Bush said on Friday " ... is that in order for
Lebanon to be free, Syria needs to not only remove its military, but to
remove intelligence officers as well."
An anonymous US government spokesman - rather too anonymous for such a
comment, perhaps - said the American information came from "a variety of
credible Lebanese sources."
The murder of the Lebanese journalist, Samir Kassir, 11 days ago - a writer
who was deeply critical of the Syrian Baath party, who had received furious
phone calls from Rustum Ghazaleh - was a message to Lebanon: just when you
thought it was safe to speak freely, the murderers are still in business.
And how. After Hariri's murder, one of the top pro-Syrian security
officials, Lebanese General Haj Ali, removed the burnt- out remains of the
Hariri convoy from the scene of the crime.
Other security officials planted false evidence at the scene. Or so said the
first UN investigation team.
Now, it turns out - chillingly for those of us who believed that a clean
security leadership had been installed in Lebanon - that the car in which
Kassir was bombed was also removed from the scene of the crime within hours,
allowing the Lebenese cops to "lose" the detonator of the explosives which
killed him.
This is no small matter. At the scene, I watched Lebanese military forensic
officers take pieces of the bomb from the burnt vehicle after Kassir's
assassination, placing them in containers.
But the police moved the car, and the detonator - which is the all-important
clue to the culprits - disappeared. How very convenient. Detonators have
numbers. These codes can be used to discove the manufacturer and, more
importantly, the country to which it was sold.
No wonder the Mediterranean looks suddenly darker. No detonator. No numbers.
No culprits. There are glitches, of course.
The intelligence teams sniffing around Hariri's murder are said to be 85 per
cent certain of their information about the Syrian intelligence officers but
only 15 per cent about the possible involvement in the bombing of Imad
Mougnieh, a pro-Iranian Lebanese who is widely regarded as the leader of the
hostage-takers who abducted so many Westerners in Lebanon in the 1980s.
He was not, so they claim, in Lebanon before Hariri's killing. Which is
interesting.
Mr Mougnieh is linked to the Hizbollah, who the Americans - and, of course,
the Israelis - want disarmed. If a Hizbollah connection can be foisted on to
Hariri's death, then US demands become ever more powerful.
But Hizbollah had no reason to harm Hariri - whose secret contacts with the
Hizbollah leadership have recently been revealed. Are the Americans now
bringing politics into the police investigation of Hariri's death?
The danger of all this spookery, of course, is that it is being played out
in a fragile, post-war country whose civil war animosities can be reawoken
by a single bomb; hence, presumably the five explosions in Christian areas
of Lebanon that followed Hariri's murder.
Yesterday's third day of elections - which will decide whether the
opposition or the pro-Syrian rump control the next parliament - were, in
principle at least, a spirited affair.
Lebanese Christian politicians allied themselves, for votes only of course,
with their own former civil war opponents.
Thus in the Christian town of Kahale - a Lebanese Forces bastion in the war
- cars were careering through the streets with their occupants waving
Hizbollah flags. In the village of Kfar Matta, stranger things were to be
observed. In 1983, Christian militiamen - including, tragically, Christians
from the same village - embarked on an orgy of killing of their Muslim
neighbours. At least 270 men, women and children were butchered.
They included a young Canadian journalist called Clark Todd who was
reporting the war.
Fifteen years after the end of that war, the villagers voted for tickets
that actually joined former Christian and Druze enemies. It was, some of
them claimed, a first step towards a reconciliation. But not yet.
The Lebanese voting system is often described as proportional
representation. Actually, it's proportional sectarian - because the voting
lists contain candidates selected by their ethnic origins.
And in Kfar Matta, there has been none of the formal "reconciliation" -
musallah in Arabic - that must precede any tribal return to a town or
village in which one side has committed a crime. So the Christians of Kfar
Matta could not vote in their village, from which they have long fled.
Instead, they were given polling stations in the neighbouring village of
Mishrif, next to a cul-de-sac which could not lead to their former homes and
those of their victims but which was a few metres inside the parish of Kfar
Matta - and thus made the polling stations legal.
Rafic Haddad, a young equity analyst who now lives in Paris - far too young
to have been involved in the war - had flown all the way from his home in
France, his £350 air ticket an expensive way of subsidising democracy - to
vote at Mishrif. "One day we'll go back to our town - it will happen, there
will be conciliation," he said. And that, remarkably, is what the Druze in
Kfar Matta told me, too.
Firas Kaddaj wanted this reconciliation. "We have got to have a new Lebanon
now that things have changed," he told me in front of the schoolhouse
polling station which the Christians of his village could not visit.
But this is a sensitive, desperately dangerous place, in which optimism
flowers amid the bougainvillea while threats lay heavy over the landscape.
On Friday night, I drove up for dinner with Walid Jumblatt in his Druze
castle at Mukhtara. There was fine wine and the best salads and the funniest
of conversations. But Mr Jumblatt, my favourite - indeed, the only - true
nihilist in the Arab world - is looking worried. He thinks he is on a hit
list. I fear he is, too. I fear all Lebanon is.
So how to end this report from that soft, gentle, ferocious country of
Lebanon? With these words: watch out!
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/lebanon-articles/attachments/20050616/4389cb98/attachment.htm
More information about the Lebanon-Articles
mailing list