March 03,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Independent" -
If you drive from Sunni Muslim Sidon to Shia Muslim
southern Lebanon, you can travel from Saudi Arabia
to Iran in 10 minutes. Sidon – like Lebanon’s other
great Sunni majority city, Tripoli – has always
basked in the favour of the Saudi monarchy.
The south,
with its mass of Hezbollah fighters – armed and paid
for by Tehran, its “martyr” photographs plastered
across the walls of every village – has long been a
lung through which Saudi Arabia’s Iranian enemies
breathe. But now Saudi Arabia, blundering into the
civil war in Yemen and threatening to send its
overpaid but poorly trained soldiers into Syria, has
turned with a vengeance on Lebanon for its
unfaithfulness and lack of gratitude after decades
of Saudi largesse.
After
repeatedly promising to spend £3.2bn on new French
weapons for the well-trained but hopelessly
under-armed Lebanese army, Saudi Arabia has suddenly
declined to fund the project – which was eagerly
supported by the US and, for greedier reasons, by
Paris. Along with other Gulf states, Riyadh has told
its citizens not to visit Lebanon or – if they are
already there – to leave. Saudi Airlines is
supposedly going to halt all flights to Beirut.
Lebanon, according to the Saudis, is a centre of
“terror”.
What
prompted all this spite was a ferocious attack on
the House of Saud by Hezbollah’s chairman, Sayyed
Hassan Nasrallah, whose battalions are fighting and
dying alongside Bashar al-Assad’s soldiers in Syria
and killing the Islamist rebels who share a Sunni
Wahabi faith with the Saudis.
After
pouring billions into Lebanon for decades –
rebuilding the country after successive Israeli
invasions and air raids – the Saudis find that they
cannot prevent the Shia, whose government
representatives include Hezbollah party members,
from expressing their fury at Riyadh, especially
after the Kingdom chopped the head off the popular
and learned
Saudi Shia cleric, Nimr al-Nimr. Why, the Saudis
say, did Lebanon not even join in the chorus of
condemnation against Iran when Saudi diplomats were
assaulted in Tehran?
The Saudis
will probably regret this assault. Pulling Lebanon’s
financial magic carpet away opens the country up to
other “friends”, not least Iran which, according to
the latest Beirut reports, would be happy to fund
the Lebanese army to the tune of £7bn – providing,
of course, the newly purchased weapons come from
Tehran, and not from Paris.
The
Americans and the British, desperate to prop up the
secular Lebanese army with enough weapons to protect
the country from Isis – which briefly took over the
north-eastern Lebanese town of Ersal and still holds
nine Lebanese soldiers captive – are pleading with
the Saudis to keep their original £3.2bn promise.
But this
latest crisis since the last greatest crisis in the
drama of Lebanon – which currently has no president
and no proper functioning parliament and not even a
rubbish collection – is not without its own unique
comedy.
Saudis will
find no problem in abandoning Saudi Airlines’s
lacklustre hospitality en route to Beirut in favour
of the infinitely more luxurious aircraft of
Emirates Airlines. And warnings of “terror” are not
going to stop Saudis desperate for the fleshpots of
the Levant from travelling to Beirut once the
temperatures boil up in the streets of Riyadh and
Jeddah.
The
nightclubs and high-class sex workers of Lebanon
will not fall victim to the aggressive politics of
the Kingdom’s young and newly powerful princes. And
then there is the unfortunate case of “Prince
Captagon”, the
Saudi royal family member still in a Lebanese prison
for allegedly trying to smuggle drugs on to his
private jet at Beirut airport last year.
The moment
he was arrested, the Saudi ambassador to Lebanon
called up the Lebanese foreign minister and
haughtily announced that his immediate release was a
“political” imperative.
The Sunni
Lebanese Future Movement’s leader and former Prime
Minister, Saad Hariri, is a Saudi citizen – as was
his assassinated ex-prime minister father Rafiq –
and is now quite taken aback by the wilful actions
of a nation to which he has always given as much
allegiance as he has to Lebanon. The Future
Movement, it seems, did not try hard enough to
ameliorate Lebanon’s official criticism of Saudi
Arabia in the Arab League and should have prevented
Hezbollah from destabilising Yemen and Bahrain –
even though there is no physical proof that either
Hezbollah or Iran have actually been involved in the
Yemeni war or the Shia revolt against the Bahraini
autarchy, where a Sunni king rules over a Shia
majority.
Needless to
say, the Sunnis of Tripoli are issuing proclamations
of their undying gratitude to the Saudi royal family
for the ceaseless flow of dollars which has
smothered them in years gone by.
Sheikh
Mohammed Yazbek, the head of Hezbollah’s Shariah
Council, insisted that it was the Saudis who should
apologise to Lebanon which “has always been on the
side of the Arab nation”. The country, he said – and
this was a prim way of alluding to the Saudis’
abiding interest in the sleazier side of Lebanon’s
entertainment industry – was “not a farm for the
al-Saud family and others”. But the Hezbollah have
their own sniffy way of reacting to insults.
Former
Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri is taken
aback by the actions of Saudi Arabia (EPA)
“Spontaneous” Shia protest demonstrations were held
in the southern suburbs of Beirut when a local
television station lampooned the unassailable Sayyed
Nasrallah. A cartoon had depicted the Hezbollah
leader proclaiming his total and absolute denial of
all Iranian influence – until a hand marked “Iran”
appeared from the left-hand side of the screen, at
which point the cartoon Nasrallah slobbered all over
it.
The sad
truth is that the Saudis are publicly praised and
secretly reviled across the Muslim Middle East
because they are very rich and most of their fellow
Arabs, comparatively, are very poor. Generous the
Saudis have been – propping up their favourite
political causes, constantly repairing Lebanon,
building hideous new mosques in Bosnia and spending
in the casinos of Europe – but open-minded they are
not.
No wonder
some in Beirut are asking whether, crushed by the
collapse of oil prices, the cost of its Yemeni
adventure and facing a lake of poverty among its own
people, Saudi Arabia isn’t simply running out of
money. In which case, a newly desanctioned Iran
would be happy to take the monarchy’s place as the
financial saviour of Lebanon – as well as play the
new policeman of the Middle East, courtesy of the
US. Strange, isn’t it, that the name “Israel” hasn’t
once popped up in this saga? |