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‘Arab Spring’ Leaves a Weakened Hezbollah

If Bashar Assad does not survive in Syria, Hezbollah will be confronted by rising Sunni enemies.

by
Jonathan Spyer

Bio

January 24, 2012 - 12:00 am
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In early January 2011, Hezbollah and its allies took up the reins of government in Lebanon, having ensured the collapse of the coalition led by March 14 leader and then Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri. Hezbollah needed a coalition which would staunchly oppose the Special Tribunal on Lebanon investigating the killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri.

But many at the time discerned a more significant meaning in the rise to government of the March 8 coalition. It looked like the latest stage in the inexorable rise of the Shia Islamist movement, founded by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards in 1982. Hezbollah had survived Israel’s onslaught in 2006 and had gone on to successfully intimidate its internal opponents in the mini-civil war of May 2008.

With a reputed yearly donation of $200 million from Tehran, Hezbollah had built a state within the state. It had developed a matchless military and security capability, independent of the organs of the Lebanese government and in most ways more powerful. By January 2011 Hezbollah looked set to absorb its host.

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Today, however, much of this is open to question. Hezbollah no longer looks so unassailable. The movement has been one of the less remarked upon victims of the Arab upheavals of 2011.

Over the last two decades, Hezbollah defined itself along a number of parallel lines, each of which before 2011 appeared to support the other. The movement was simultaneously a sectarian representative of the Lebanese Shia, a regional ally of Iran and Syria, a defender of the Lebanese against the supposed aggressive intentions of Israel, and a leader of a more generically defined Arab and Muslim “resistance” against Israel and the West.

As a result of the events of 2011, these various lines which seemed mutually supportive have begun to contradict one another. This is diminishing Hezbollah’s position, though it remains physically unassailable for as long as the Assad regime in Syria survives.

When the “Arab Spring” first broke out, Hezbollah was able to happily endorse it. This is because in its first three significant manifestations — in Egypt, Tunisia, and Bahrain — the “Arab Spring” was directed against pro-Western, anti-Iranian regimes. And in Bahrain, a Shia populace was rising up against a pro-Western, Sunni monarch.

The problems began with the outbreak of the revolt against the Assad regime in Syria. Syria is a charter member of the pro-Iranian regional alliance to which Hezbollah also belongs. It is also a vital strategic conduit for the organization, providing a hinterland, a potential safe haven in the event of war with Israel, and a route for the supply of Iranian arms. For all these reasons, Hezbollah is determined that Assad survive. Reliable sources suggest that Hezbollah men have played a certain role in helping the regime in its attempt to suppress the uprising. Specifically, Hezbollah men are thought to be involved in infiltrating opposition groups and providing intelligence.

This investment in the survival of Assad indicates which of the four aspects of Hezbollah’s identity mentioned above are most important to it. The link with the Iran-led alliance and maintaining the ability to wage war against Israel are the cardinal interests. To maintain these, Hezbollah has to a great extent sacrificed its more nebulous self-image as a leader of pan-Islamic “resistance.” Syrian Sunnis leading the uprising against Assad now count Hezbollah among their enemies. The movement’s flag has been burnt at opposition rallies.

So the uprising in Syria has served to remove the veil of “resistance” from the face of Hezbollah. The sectarian visage beneath has been revealed. Hezbollah has been exposed as a sectarian, Iran-aligned Shia force, backing a vicious, non-Sunni dictatorship in its war against its own, largely Sunni people.

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6 Comments, 5 Threads

  1. 1. Random Blowhard

    All I have to say is – HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAA.

    Remember the only thing Allah hates more than unbelievers is heretics. He who lives by the sword will be impaled upon it.

  2. And a flotilla of the multinational “1000 Ship Navy” transits the Straits of Hormuz, unmolested by the Iranians. Iran has its hands full. Putin has his election woes. The Russian “carrier” (if you can call it that) has departed Syria. Turkey is unhappy. Israel is unhappy. The Arab League is unhappy. Iraq has its own problems to worry about.

    Assad must be finding it is very, very lonely at the top of a pariah nation!

    • John Myers

      Lest we forget that China is having internal problems, North Korea may collapse, Hugo Chavez is not well, the Castro brothers are failing and Obama is unlikely to be re-elected. Overall I’m actually pretty optimistic about the prospects for another great century for the United States.

  3. 3. rbj

    Hmm, are we about to see a Sunni-Shia civil war that crosses various national borders?

    And what would that do to the flow of oil from the Middle East?

  4. 4. wodun

    Hate of Jews > the intrafaith struggle of the islamists. Hezbollah will thrive.

  5. 5. sasquatch

    Perhaps what we are seeing is the Islamic version of Northern Europe’s 30 years War.

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