from the site : NOW
By :  Hanin Ghadar
Feb 23, 2013
 
 
Hezbollah’s deadly connection
 
Recent developments in Syria indicate that Iran has increased its support 
for  the regime of President Bashar al-Assad on more than one level. As Iran 
seems to  have taken over military and logistical decisions, Hezbollah’s 
involvement has  also expanded and intensified. This is very bad news for 
Lebanon, and unless the  Lebanese government and the Shia community take 
drastic 
measures to dissociate  themselves from Hezbollah, Lebanon will not be 
spared from an imminent,  region-wide sectarian war. 
Last month, in a significant prisoner _exchange_ 
(https://now.mmedia.me/lb/en/nowsyrialatestnews/weeping_freed_iranians_appear_in_syria_capital)
  
between the Syrian rebels and the Assad regime, forty  eight Iranians were 
hand-picked by the regime for release by the rebels, and not  a single Syrian. 
This caused a wave of discontent among Assad supporters and  fighters, who felt 
betrayed. Assad no doubt realizes that ill will among his  
already-shrinking popular base will not help his cause. This questionable  
decision 
indicates that Assad had no real say in the matter, and probably  doesn’t on 
other 
issues either. 
Then last week, Iranian official Hojjatoleslam Mehdi Taeb, head of the 
Ammar  Strategic Base and a former Basij commander _said_ 
(http://www.irandailybrief.com/2013/02/15/syria-is-irans-35th-and-a-strategic-province-60000-hezbol
lah-members-took-over-street-war-from-the-syrian-army-of-iran/)  that “
Syria is [Iran’s] 35th [district] and a strategic  province… If the enemy 
attacks us and intends to occupy either Syria or  Khuzestan, the priority is 
that 
we keep Syria.” He also added that Iran  suggested the Syrians establish 
their own Basij. “Syria then [must] set up its  own Basij with an initial 
force of 60,000 Hezbollah forces and they [could]  replace the regular army in 
dealing with the urban warfare." 
If this statement had come out a month ago, no one would have believed 
Taeb.  However, it has become obvious today that Hezbollah is involved in the 
bloodshed  in Syria up to its neck, whether under a “Basij” or in a different 
form. 
This dangerous reality has been acknowledged by Hezbollah officials who 
claim  they are defending Shiite residents of Syria. This reality has put 
Lebanon and  the Lebanese at a new crossroads that can only lead to bad 
scenarios. Hezbollah  in Syria versus Jihadist groups like Jabhat al-Nusra is a 
story 
that will not  have a happy ending. Both are sectarian armed groups that 
will do anything and  kill anyone to protect their presence and the power of 
their founders and  funders. A Sunni-Shiite war is now no longer a scenario. 
It started when  Hezbollah sent its fighter into Syria. 
Hezbollah’s sending militants to Syria to fight against the rebels has a  
number of dangerous implications.  
Hezbollah is not, as it claims to its supporters, a Lebanese party whose  
mission is to protect Lebanese people and territories. It is a militia which  
uses Lebanon as a geographical base from which to launch attacks against 
Iran’s  enemies no matter where or who they are. This means that Hezbollah 
will probably  fight Iran’s war on other fronts as well. If Iran gets attacked 
by Israel or  others, Hezbollah could retaliate. 
Many Lebanese believed that the Party of God would never confront Israel if 
 Iran was attacked because its leaders do not want to lose their arms or  
credibility among their supporters. Iran also prefers this scenario. However, 
 becoming militarily involved in Syria raises this concern again, 
especially that  this involvement will probably expand and increase. 
The involvement so far is probably limited to the Shiite villages along the 
 Lebanese-Syria border, and could have been stretched to Homs in order to 
link  the Syrian coast to Damascus and Lebanon. This means that the Syrian 
regime,  with major Iranian support, could be planning an Alawite/Shiite 
enclave that  will be connected to Lebanon. However, this enclave can only hold 
up if it is  protected militarily for years to come, to avoid possible ethnic 
cleansing.  Hezbollah, in this scenario, could be asked to stay around to 
protect and defend  this area to preserve the linkage to Lebanon, mainly to 
Shiite areas. 
Their involvement in terms of presence and use of arms could develop and 
grow  as the crisis does. The Party of God could find itself managing a war 
against  Sunni Jihadists for a very long time, mainly because these jihadists 
can no  longer see the difference between Assad’s regime and Hezbollah. 
So Hezbollah has decided to be part of an upcoming regional war, and to 
drag  Lebanon into it. The war between Alawite/Shiite fighters and Sunni 
jihadists  will not stay within the parameters of Qusayr along the 
Lebanese-Syrian 
borders.  The spillover of the Syrian crisis to Lebanon will possibly take 
the form of  increased military clashes in more than one area in Lebanon. 
Jihadists from both  groups will not limit their clashes to Syrian territories 
and become friends  back at home. 
The problem is that entire Sunni and Shiite communities in Lebanon will be  
dragged into this war. Al-Nusra and other Jihadists groups in Syria have 
already  defined themselves along sharp sectarian lines. And Hezbollah entered 
the  sectarian game the moment they claimed they are defending the Shia in 
Syria. 
By ‘defending Shiites in Syria’ Hezbollah is exposing the Shiites in 
Lebanon,  as usual, to a very dangerous front. This time the price is going to 
be 
very  high, as no Shiite will ever be trusted, and no Shiite will be 
spared. 
It is convenient to blame Hezbollah for the dark days to come, but if we 
look  inside, it is unsettling to see that the Lebanese government is not 
doing  anything about it. The Shiites are not really doing anything about it 
either.  Some actually believe that Hezbollah needs to protect this bridge in 
Syria to  secure the passage of arms, while others are just afraid to look 
the other way.  They do not want to see the reality, or do anything about it. 
If the Shiites in Lebanon don’t do anything now, in the context of a strong 
 condemnation of Hezbollah’s behavior, they will have only themselves to 
blame  when things get bloody.

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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