http://www.timesonl
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,251-2315467.html>
ine.co.uk/article/0,,251-2315467.html

Times Online
August 16, 2006

Analysis: why Hezbollah will not be disarmed 
Nick Blanford, Times Correspondent in Lebanon, explains why Hezbollah will
keep its weapons - but that the Shia group has problems of its own.


"I think you can forget about Hezbollah being disarmed. It is just not going
to happen. Hezbollah doesn't want to be disarmed and there is nobody else
willing to do it. In that simple fact lies the potential for future trouble.
"The UN Security Council resolution 1559 certainly calls for all the
militias operating in Lebanon to be disarmed, but the Lebanese Government
has side-stepped the whole issue since that resolution was passed two years
ago. People here accept that it is a very difficult thing to disarm
Hezbollah against its will.
"Even if the Lebanese Government had been crazy enough to try to force the
army to do it, I think the army would have refused. A lot of its senior
officers are loyal to President Emile Lahoud, the last leading ally of Syria
to remain in office in Lebanon. 
"Many people regard the army as almost a proxy of Hezbollah. The Shia
contingent in the army, which represents about 60 per cent of all soldiers,
would have refused to take on their Shia brothers in Hezbollah.
"If they had accepted the job, they would have been annihilated in a
face-to-face confrontation. Hezbollah has just fought the most powerful army
in the Middle East to a standstill - the Lebanese army is weak, lightly
armed and used to performing more of a policing than a military role.
"The alternative option is to send international troops to disarm Hezbollah,
when the United Nations mission in South Lebanon is given a new mandate and
beefed up with an extra 13,000 peacekeepers.
"But that is not going to happen either. It is clearly understood that the
last thing that foreign countries sending troops to maintain the ceasefire
want to do is to get involved in disarming Hezbollah - or even in preventing
Hezbollah from reaching the border and attacking Israel. There is no way
they want to be caught in the middle, or seen as Israel's extra line of
defence against Hezbollah.
"This is what is behind the delay in agreeing the new UN mission. That is
why the countries willing to offer troops for the new UN mission are still
talking, why the French Foreign Minister is in Beirut today, still asking
searching questions about what the mission's mandate means, what the
situation is on the ground, and who else is going to be there. 
"Countries like France and Australia are willing in principle to commit
soldiers, but they worry that if their forces suddenly find themselves
surrounded by potentially less reliable troops from other countries and
acting as the front line of defence for Israel, then they don't want to be
involved. 
"They want a level of political understanding to be in place at the start,
that Hezbollah won't attack Israel and that when they arrive in south
Lebanon they will not find Hezbollah guerillas still deployed in their
bunkers along the border. 
"In effect, they want the UN force to be mainly a PR stunt to reassure the
international community that the situation in Lebanon is under control.
"Naturally they are not going to get explicit reassurances sent direct to
their foreign ministries, but I think the countries contributing troops can
safely assume that Hezbollah is not interested in exacerbating the situation
on the ground just now. It has its own internal worries.
"I think Hezbollah realises that they made a big mistake by kidnapping those
Israeli soldiers on July 12. They have already admitted that they thought it
would cause nothing more than a mini flare up, they didn't expect the
powerful military reaction they got from the Israelis.
"To the rest of the world, at the moment Hezbollah is basking in success.
The perception among Muslims throughout the world is that they won the war,
and can rest on their laurels. 
"But Hezbollah has hard political work to do at home in reassuring and
maintaining their support among the Shia community, whose homes and
livelihoods have been utterly destroyed by Israeli bombs. 
"The Shia ideology is long-suffering, and you won't often find a Shia ready
to admit that Hezbollah fouled up. They are very stoical. Yesterday I was
talking to an old guy in a southern village where 80 per cent of the
buildings were lying in rubble, and he shrugged philosophically and said
that the Israelis bombed his house in 1996 and 1999 and now again in 2006,
so he would just build it again.
"But I think it is clear that the reason why Hezbollah is now promising to
pay a year's rent for homeless Shia families and compensate them for damaged
property is because they have a lot of work to do to bring their supporters
back on board.
"What is more, I think the recriminations are about to start in earnest from
the other sectarian communities in Lebanon, who stayed quiet during the war
out of loyalty to the country. Shias only represent 35 per cent of Lebanon -
the rest is divided between Sunnis, Christians and Druze. Overall, the
conflict has made an already polarised society even more polarised. 
"The long term danger is that if Hezbollah does not disarm, then the other
communities may decide that if they cannot beat them they may as well join
them, and will start rearming in their turn. And that could be the start of
the slippery slope back towards civil war."






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