[LCM Articles] Conditions are right for Moussa to get Lebanon's leaders to start leading

Farrah Haidar farrah.haidar at yahoo.com
Tue Jan 30 11:57:53 EST 2007


Conditions are right for Moussa to get Lebanon's leaders to start leading 
 
Editorial
 
Some of the necessary ingredients for a compromise to end the standoff in Beirut are now present, and not a moment too soon. After weeks of stubbornness in both government and opposition circles, both sides seem to be realizing that the current situation demands something more than mindlessly repeating the same maximalist mantras. The trust necessary for a comprehensive deal is not yet in place, but rumblings from some of the key players indicate at least that the antagonists are now speaking the same language.
 
This change affects several internal factors. Regarding the treaty the Cabinet has signed with the United Nations on forming a hybrid international-Lebanese tribunal to handle the Hariri assassination, both judicial officials and the Hizbullah-led opposition have now had time to study the document. The latter has voiced its readiness to back a court, but it wants a few relatively limited amendments regarding jurisdiction. In the matter of institutions like Cabinet and the presidency, both sides now appreciate the fact that Lebanon has entered a de facto transition stage, opening the door for discussion on a broader spectrum of solutions that might include short-term caretaker arrangements on one or more levels. With regard to elections, the opposition seems to have realized that its demand that the next polls be held under a new law cannot be met unless and until the Cabinet is permitted to function. In addition, Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's solid performance before and
 during the Paris III conference has enhanced his influence as a standard-bearer of relative moderation within the ruling March 14 coalition.
 
Some helpful shifts are apparent on the external front as well. The French government has softened its intransigence vis-a-vis revisiting the tribunal, and can presumably be counted on to sway Washington in the same direction. The Russians are already there. Even Damascus, which has not budged from its rejection of that to which Beirut agreed, has refrained from using its ultimate political weapon: Under Article 53, Subsection 5, of the Lebanese Constitution, the president has the authority to dissolve Cabinet by decree. The current occupant of Baabda Palace, Emile Lahoud, has not exercised that power, even though he has opined that Siniora's Cabinet is illegitimate. Since it is virtually inconceivable that Lahoud would resist a command from his Syrian backers, it follows that Damascus has not given up on a compromise.
 
The conditions are right, then, for the emergence of what Arab League chief Amr Moussa has described as a prerequisite for mediation to succeed: the formulation of a Lebanese agenda. Moussa's challenge is to help Lebanon's leaders get the ball rolling in time to keep the anniversary of Hariri's assassination, February 14, from living up to its deadly potential.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/lebanon-articles/attachments/20070130/f1ff68a3/attachment.htm


More information about the Lebanon-Articles mailing list