Attempting to follow the same path as the IRA and innumerable Marxist
terrorist organizations (national liberation fronts)...without getting rid
of terrorist leadership, objectives or weapons.

Bruce

 
Hezbollah Seeks Legitimacy
By DONNA ABU-NASR Associated Press Writer
BEIRUT, Lebanon
As its Syrian backers leave Lebanon, Hezbollah is seeking to transform
its image domestically and in the West _ from guerrilla group condemned
as terrorist by the United States to political party respected for
playing a serious, productive role in Lebanese politics.

As part of this attempted makeover, Hezbollah sent a senior
representative to a meeting in Beirut last month with American and
British intellectuals, including former government and intelligence
officials, to talk about the group, which Washington accuses of killing
hundreds of Americans in terror attacks in the 1980s.

"It was an opportunity for us to present our views and break the
stereotypical image that Israel has propagated of the group," said Nawaf
al-Mussawi, Hezbollah politburo member in charge of international
relations, who fielded questions for three hours at the meeting.

Among those who attended were about eight Americans, including Graham
Fuller, former deputy head of the CIA's National Intelligence Council,
and Robert Muller, head of the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation,
as well as about six Europeans, who also included former officials, said
Alastair Crooke, director of the Britain-based Conflicts Forum.

The gathering was "not intended to produce recommendations and
conclusions," said Crooke, whose group organized the meeting. "It was
about listening."

The decision to attend the meeting by Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim group
whose name means Party of God, is part of the strategy to gain
international legitimacy and domestic recognition as a major player in
Lebanon's complex politics after decades during which the faction
focused mostly on fighting Israel.

Jamal Khashoggi, media adviser to Prince Turki, the Saudi ambassador to
London, who was present at the Beirut discussions, said the meeting
offered the chance to "build tiny bridges" with factions the West rarely
talks to, Khashoggi said.

"Nobody knows where it will lead," said Khashoggi.

Whether Hezbollah's attempt is genuine or just political opportunism
remains to be seen. But even President Bush suggested Hezbollah could
change its image when he called on it last month to lay down its arms
and prove it was not a terrorist group.

The U.S. government blames Hezbollah for numerous attacks since the
1980s, including the bombings of a U.S. Marine barracks and U.S. Embassy
in Beirut. The group has also been accused of striking the Israeli
Embassy and a Jewish cultural center in separate bombings in Argentina
in the early 1990s that killed scores. Hezbollah denies the claims.

In public addresses, Hezbollah's belligerent anti-Israel and anti-U.S.
rhetoric has not abated. But away from a domestic audience, the group's
shrewd, savvy leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, has said he is ready to
discuss the current arrangement the party has had for years with the
Lebanese army, a formula that has allowed it to continue bearing arms
under the slogan of protecting Lebanon from Israeli aggression.

"We don't carry arms as a hobby, but we feel responsible toward our
country," Nasrallah said last month.

One solution could be incorporating members of Hezbollah into the army
and deploying them in the south _ which could satisfy the U.N. call for
disarmament while also retaining Hezbollah's firepower.

Even Israel has noted a change in Hezbollah's tactics, with one Israeli
security official saying recently that the militant group is scaling
back its support of attacks against Israelis by radical Palestinian
groups.

The official said the rollback in Hezbollah activity is linked to
Israel's planned withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and part of the West
Bank in the summer. He said the Palestinian factions realize that
resumption of attacks against Israelis could delay or scuttle it.

Some analysts say the group wants to ensure a significant presence in
any new Cabinet formed after Lebanese parliamentary elections expected
before the end of May.

The Feb. 14 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri
triggered international pressure on Syria to withdraw its troops,
stationed in Lebanon for almost three decades. The Lebanese opposition
has accused Damascus and its Lebanese agents of murdering Hariri, who
had turned against Syria's presence in Lebanon.

The Syrian pullout has left Hezbollah with its greatest political
challenge since it was formed as a resistance group with Iranian backing
in 1982.

With Syria gone, Hezbollah will field the only armed group in Lebanon
outside the military, but that power can also play against it.

In Lebanon and the Arab world, Hezbollah has gained hero status for
driving Israel out after an 18-year occupation. But Hezbollah has been
on the State Department's list of terror groups since the list's
inception in 1997.

Washington has been pushing Syria to disarm the group, and a price for a
rapprochement between the two countries _ and indeed for an improvement
of relations between Iran and the United States _ could be the disarming
of Hezbollah. Both Syria and Iran back Hezbollah, with Tehran reportedly
providing the group with an estimated $10 million to $20 million
monthly. The political turmoil that followed Hariri's death _ including
anti-Syrian protests, and the resignation of the government _ has
presented Hezbollah with an opportunity to project itself as a capable
conciliator and an indispensable player.

Last month, security-conscious Nasrallah, who is rarely seen in public,
visited political and religious leaders to try to defuse the tensions
and to reiterate that his group won't be drawn into a civil war.

Al-Mussawi said the meeting with the intellectuals aims at "boosting
Hezbollah's political role."

"It's also an attempt to open a hole in the wall with a people for whom
we harbor no enmity," he added. 
050410 204853





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