- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
From David Frum on NRO:
Dennis Ross of the Washington Institute attributes the surge of democratic feeling in Lebanon to a "disappearance of fear." Nice phrase - and one that suggests what Syria's next move is very likely to be: the restoration of that fear.
Restoring fear has been the goal of the insurgents in post-Saddam Iraq: every time they kill, they hope to show Iraqis that it is they and not the new government of Iraq who control life and death. (Today they have served another such notice, by murdering a judge on the tribunal that will judge Saddam.)
So expect more terror in Lebanon - and of course in Israel as well, as Syria's terrorist proxies seek to destabilize the Abbas government in the Palestinian Authority and to warn Israel against lending its support to Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon.
Will terror work? A fierce confrontation is already emerging in Lebanon, powered by these contending facts:
1) Syria cannot afford to set Lebanon free. Lebanon is by far the wealthiest portion of the Assad family domains, thanks in part to the Syrian-approved drug trade. Possession of Lebanon, which Syrian nationalists regard as a natural part of greater Syria, is also essential ideologically. Finally - and maybe most important - a retreat from Lebanon under American pressure would be interpreted in Syria and throughout the region as a confession of weakness: which is fatal to any dictatorship.
2) On the other hand, if Syria does not now withdraw after the joint American-French demand, it will be the United States that will have confessed weakness - repeating past mistakes in the region and inviting further attacks on American interests and American friends, like Rafiq Hariri.
3) The Syrian policy of covert war against the United States has failed. The Syrian-backed insurgency in Iraq did not drive US troops out of the country or defeat George W. Bush. Instead, it has provoked the US into intensifying its pressure on Syria itself.
4) Syria accordingly now faces a choice of options: Find some way to appease the United States short of true withdrawal from Lebanon - or else move from covert war to an all-out anti-American terror campaign.
5) Appeasement is the logical first strategy. Syria is full of terrorist operatives who can be handed over to the US. As well, Syria can in a pinch agree to withdraw its 15,000 troops from Lebanon. A Syrian troop withdrawal would look like a big concession, but would not much alter the power-dynamic in Lebanon, since Syria controls Lebanon through its intelligence agencies and its penetration of the Lebanese government and cabinet. Better still, a troop withdrawal might give France an excuse to end its uncomfortable association with the Bush administration - short of actually changing anything important in Lebanon.
6) The Bush administration is unlikely to be fooled by an appeasement policy. The joint US-French demand for Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon followed the surrender of Saddam's half-brother. And Condoleezza Rice made clear that both the Syrian troops and Syrian intelligence services must go.
But will the Bush administration press the point if the Syrians seem to meet them half-way? That will be a real moment of testing for the Bush policy. Will the Bush administration hold firm? Will it insist on total withdrawal, including the spy services, on the full restoration of Lebanese sovereignty, and on genuinely free elections in May? If so, expect a furious response from Syria, from its ally Iran, and from the terrorist militias they control inside Lebanon. Make no mistake: For the Syrians, Lebanese democracy means war. It's a war the United States can and must win - but only if the US is as tough, as determined, and as clear-eyed as its new Syrian enemy.
A reader from Mansfield Ohio notes that the authors of II Chronicles foretold the predicament 2500 years ago:
16:7 And at that time Hanani the seer came to Asa king of Judah, and said
unto him, Because thou hast relied on the king of Syria, and not relied on
the LORD thy God, therefore is the host of the king of Syria escaped out of
thine hand.
16:8 Were not the Ethiopians and the Lubims a huge host, with very many
chariots and horsemen? yet, because thou didst rely on the LORD, he
delivered them into thine hand.
16:9 For the eyes of the LORD run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to
show himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect toward him.
Herein thou hast done foolishly: therefore from henceforth thou shalt have
wars.
07:49 AM