On 8/18/06, Jim Devine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
in fairness, doesn't Hizbullah have petrodollars from Iran to throw
around, whereas Bush simply serves the oil industry and its allies?
(Iran can use its petrocash for political purposes, since its
government isn't a profit-maximizing entity the way corporations are.)

Yes, Tehran, the Kremlin of international Shi'ism, pledged an
"unlimited budget" for Hizballah's reconstruction of Lebanon.  Now,
this will be really unpopular with neoliberal reformists in Iran!

<blockquote>August 16, 2006
The Overview
Hezbollah Leads Work to Rebuild, Gaining Stature
By JOHN KIFNER

BEIRUT, Lebanon, Aug. 15 — As stunned Lebanese returned Tuesday over
broken roads to shattered apartments in the south, it increasingly
seemed that the beneficiary of the destruction was most likely to be
Hezbollah.

A major reason — in addition to its hard-won reputation as the only
Arab force that fought Israel to a standstill — is that it is already
dominating the efforts to rebuild with a torrent of money from
oil-rich Iran.

Nehme Y. Tohme, a member of Parliament from the anti-Syrian reform
bloc and the country's minister for the displaced, said he had been
told by Hezbollah officials that when the shooting stopped, Iran would
provide Hezbollah with an "unlimited budget" for reconstruction.

In his victory speech on Monday night, Hezbollah's leader, Sheik
Hassan Nasrallah, offered money for "decent and suitable furniture"
and a year's rent on a house to any Lebanese who lost his home in the
month-long war.

"Completing the victory," he said, "can come with reconstruction."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

While the Israelis began their withdrawal, hundreds of Hezbollah
members spread over dozens of villages across southern Lebanon began
cleaning, organizing and surveying damage. Men on bulldozers were busy
cutting lanes through giant piles of rubble. Roads blocked with the
remnants of buildings are now, just a day after a cease-fire began,
fully passable.

In Sreifa, a Hezbollah official said the group would offer an initial
$10,000 to residents to help pay for the year of rent, to buy new
furniture and to help feed families.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hezbollah's reputation as an efficient grass-roots social service
network — as opposed to the Lebanese government, regarded by many here
as sleek men in suits doing well — was in evidence everywhere. Young
men with walkie-talkies and clipboards were in the battered Shiite
neighborhoods on the southern edge of Bint Jbail, taking notes on the
extent of the damage.

"Hezbollah's strength," said Amal Saad-Ghorayeb, a professor at the
Lebanese American University here, who has written extensively about
the organization, in large part derives from "the gross vacuum left by
the state."

Hezbollah was not, she said, a state within a state, but rather "a
state within a nonstate, actually."

Sheik Nasrallah said in his speech that "the brothers in the towns and
villages will turn to those whose homes are badly damaged and help
rebuild them.

"Today is the day to keep up our promises," he said. "All our brothers
will be in your service starting tomorrow."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hezbollah men also traveled door to door checking on residents and
asking them what help they needed.

Although Hezbollah is a Shiite organization, Sheik Nasrallah's message
resounded even with a Sunni Muslim, Ghaleb Jazi, 40, who works at the
oil storage plant at Jiyeh, 15 miles south of Beirut. It was bombed by
the Israelis and spewed pollution northward into the Mediterranean.

"The government may do some work on bridges and roads, but when it
comes to rebuilding houses, Hezbollah will have a big role to play,"
he said. "Nasrallah said yesterday he would rebuild, and he will come
through.
"
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Defense Minister Elias Murr said Tuesday that the government would not
seek to disarm Hezbollah.

"The army is not going to the south to strip the Hezbollah of its
weapons and do the work that Israel did not," he said, showing just
how difficult reining in the militia will most likely be in the coming
weeks and months. He added that "the resistance," meaning Hezbollah,
had been cooperating with the government and there was no need to
confront it.

Sheik Nasrallah sounded much like a governor responding to a disaster
when he said, "So far, the initial count available to us on completely
demolished houses exceeds 15,000 residential units.

"We cannot of course wait for the government and its heavy vehicles
and machinery because they could be a while," he said. He also
cautioned, "No one should raise prices due to a surge in demand."

Support for Hezbollah was likely to become stronger, Professor
Saad-Ghorayeb said, because of the weakness of the central government.

"Hezbollah has two pillars of support," she said, "the resistance and
the social services. What this war has illustrated is that it is best
at both.
<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/16/world/middleeast/16hezbollah.html></blockquote>

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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