Hezbollah's Apocalypse Now

By Amal Saad-Ghorayeb
Sunday, July 23, 2006; Page B04

BEIRUT 
Power failures are creating problems across much of
the city, cellphones are unpredictable, and the
regular bombing makes my neighbors cautious about
going out, leaving most people here alone with the
question that has plagued them for almost two weeks:
What on earth was Hezbollah up to when it abducted two
Israeli soldiers and provoked a punishing response
that is creating orphans and bringing down buildings
all around us?

As a scholar who has devoted much of my career to
following Hezbollah, I have a simple answer. I'm sure
that Hezbollah had envisaged, though perhaps not
expected, a response of this kind. By provoking its
southern neighbor, Hezbollah knew it would present
Israel with a ghastly choice. Hezbollah is a popular
social movement, and it is well aware that it can be
destroyed only if the Israeli army is prepared to
commit mass murder, genocide, ethnic cleansing -- use
whatever unpalatable term you will -- against the
entire Shiite community.

Israel won't win without wiping out a religious group.
However angry the Israelis are, there must be many who
won't be able to stomach that possibility, with its
hideous historic implications. That's what Hezbollah
was counting on 11 days ago when its fighters took
Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser captive near the
Lebanese border.

Without wanting to alarm my neighbors who are
adjusting to the nightly barrage of Israeli missiles,
I cannot help but cast the current conflict in
apocalyptic terms. What began as a surgical military
operation staged by a relatively small organization
has metamorphosed into an existential showdown with
the potential to transform the political landscape of
the Middle East. And it has put Hezbollah in its
favorite spot -- center stage, with the international
community looking on.

I've been reading this script for 11 years now,
interviewing political, media and security officials
from Hezbollah. And they have given me insights into
the party's motives that go well beyond the prisoner
exchange that it publicly claims. True, Hezbollah had
dubbed 2006 "the year of retrieving the prisoners" and
had warned of its intent to kidnap Israelis to secure
the release of three Lebanese held in Israel. But the
seizure of these two soldiers also reflects
Hezbollah's broader goals -- both its domestic
political agenda and its regional, strategic one.

Domestically, Hezbollah has succeeded in integrating
itself into the Lebanese political system, with its
two government ministers and 14 MPs. But the party has
also been keen to convince others of the importance of
its resistance and of its unrivaled efficacy as a
deterrent to the threat posed by Israel.

And Israel's current onslaught has unwittingly
provided Hezbollah with the opportunity to demonstrate
both -- that Israel remains Lebanon's gravest enemy,
and that Hezbollah is the only force capable of
confronting it. The Lebanese government's ineptitude
in handling the crisis, coupled with the army's
sitting-duck status, only underscores that point.

Hezbollah has succeeded in elevating its regional
importance, positioning itself alongside Iran, Syria
and Hamas -- the axis of terrorism in Israel's
lexicon. In this light, Hezbollah's face-off with
Israel is not only a defensive war of survival (in
response to the declared Israeli and U.S. objective of
eliminating the organization), but also an attempt to
shatter the myth of Israeli invincibility (which
explains why Israel also views this conflict in
existential terms).

Most of all, though, Hezbollah hopes to set a new
precedent in the Arab world, as its leader Hasan
Nasrallah revealed in his latest televised speech: He
characterized his movement as a "spearhead of the
[Islamic] umma" and declared the conflict as
"surpassing Lebanon . . . it is the conflict of the
umma," whose success or failure will reverberate in
the entire region. In other words, Hezbollah is to
serve as an inspiration, as an exemplar of bold action
against Israel and, by extension, against Arab regimes
that have allied themselves with the United States and
Israel.

With so much at stake, it is likely that Hezbollah
foresaw Israel's overreaction and laid out contingency
plans. Its daily displays of its long-range missiles
are more than empty exercises in psychological
warfare. Echoing in my mind are the words of a
Hezbollah official. He told me that Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's ongoing anti-Zionism, along with
Iranian supreme religious leader Ali Khamenei's
affirmation that Hezbollah will never disarm, has
given the movement confidence that it can "fight for
months."

Hezbollah is launching missiles deeper into Israeli
territory than it ever has before. It is bringing the
war to Israelis' doorsteps in the hope that they will
pressure their government to call for an unconditional
cease-fire. And it wants to demoralize the Israeli
army, one Hezbollah official told me.

It is hard to gauge public opinion here today. From
the snippets of conversation I pick up, people remain
polarized, as they were before the war: On one end are
those (mainly non-Shiites) who lay the blame for
Israel's destruction of Lebanon squarely on Hezbollah
for having picked the fight; and on the other are
those (overwhelmingly Shiite) who believe, as one man
told me, that "we should fight to the death." But
there are also many in between whose initial anger at
Hezbollah is being replaced by rage at Israel. Those
sentiments remind me of 1982, when Israel's invasion
of Lebanon gave birth to Hezbollah.

Given its current position of strength, Hezbollah is
in no mood to settle for anything less than its
original demand for a prisoner exchange, as Nasrallah
asserted in a recent interview on al-Jazeera. Why
would Hezbollah agree to any of the diplomatic
proposals being floated? The idea of deploying the
Lebanese army to the south to serve as a buffer
between Israel and Hezbollah would be tantamount to
the party's military neutralization. And the notion of
stationing multinational troops there is even more
far-fetched, given that Hezbollah and the Shiite
community would view them as occupiers.

Leaving Israel to significantly weaken Hezbollah's
military infrastructure would have equally perilous
consequences. If there is anything more dangerous than
a strong Hezbollah, it is a weak Hezbollah. One can
only imagine what would happen if the organization
were left bereft of leadership, clinging to its
remaining weapons and operating underground, while the
Shiite community is seething with resentment at
Israel, the United States and the government that it
perceives as its betrayer. As one Hezbollah member
said, "All hell would be let loose."

Which is a reminder that although this past week has
been bad, we haven't seen hell yet.

Amal Saad-Ghorayeb teaches at the Lebanese American
University in Beirut and is the author of "Hizbu'llah:
Politics and Religion" (Pluto Press).




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