A puzzling run for
president in Lebanon
Christian Michel Aoun is alienating his traditional backers and violating
Lebanon's unwritten rules.
By TONY BADRAN
December 6/06
Los Anegles Times:
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-badran6dec06,0,8412.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
IF YOU'RE LUCKY enough not
to be obsessed with Middle East politics, you may be surprised to learn that the
keynote speaker at Hezbollah's massive Beirut demonstration last week was not a
Shiite Muslim but a Maronite Christian. Michel Aoun, the army general who was
driven into exile by Syria in 1990 but has been oddly friendly with Syria and
its local allies since his return to Lebanon last year, addressed an
overwhelmingly Shiite crowd and called for the resignation of Sunni Prime
Minister Fouad Siniora.
Aoun's primary objective is to become president. To achieve this goal, he
concluded a political alliance with Hezbollah in February, hoping to build a
strong enough coalition to win the presidency (a position that by long custom
goes to a Christian leader).
With one year remaining in Syrian-installed President Emile Lahoud's term, time
is running out for Aoun. Even with Hezbollah's support, he lacks the seats to be
elected by parliament. Toppling the current government, however, might be a
first step toward a full shift in the country's internal political balance.
Aoun's personal ambitions are quixotic at best. But his drive to be president
has been a great gift to Hezbollah, allowing the extremist party to disguise its
current attempt at a sectarian coup against one of the Arab world's few
democracies as a broad national movement. Lebanon is made up of large minorities
of Shiites, Sunnis, Druze and Christians of various sects, along with dozens of
smaller groups. To create the illusion of a national consensus, you need useful
idiots from outside your own sect. This is where the general comes in.
Aoun has chosen the Shiite option. His soft policy toward Syria (including
ambiguous statements about an international tribunal to try the assassins of
former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri) is aimed at securing Syrian acceptance of
his presidential bid. Is it likely that the same regime the general fought in a
bloody 1990 war will be interested in making him president of Lebanon? Aoun's
newfound ally, Suleiman Franjieh, a longtime Syrian loyalist and a fellow
Maronite, seems to think so. Franjieh may envision a new alliance among
Maronites, Shiites and the ruling Alawites in Syria.
But Aoun's calculations fail to take in some dangerous regional realities. Syria
is more than pleased to see Aoun attacking the anti-Syrian government. So is
Iran, whose supreme guide, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, recently predicted the defeat
of U.S. and allied interests in Lebanon. Wittingly or not, Aoun is serving these
foreign masters for free.
There's a cardinal rule in Lebanese politics that the president must be
acceptable both to his own community and to the others. Aoun is neither. His
positions have been antithetical to the Maronite patriarchate, the seat of
moderation in the community and a strong opponent of using street rallies to
unseat the government. Aoun's alliance with Hezbollah and Syria's puppets has
infuriated the anti-Syrian Christian community, which aimed much of its anger at
him after the assassination of Maronite Cabinet minister Pierre Gemayel last
month. Now, by agreeing to be the vanguard of a Shiite-led coup attempt against
a Sunni prime minister, he has broken an unwritten rule against getting his
community involved in a Sunni-Shiite conflict, potentially putting the already
polarized Maronite community at risk.
Meanwhile, there is strong opposition to his candidacy from the main Sunni and
Druze leaderships. Their lack of trust in him is exacerbated by his vague
position on the international tribunal in the Hariri assassination —
unquestionably the priority of these leaderships, as well as of France and the
U.S.
It's not even clear that the Shiite parties Amal and Hezbollah would back him
for president. Although they have been happy to use Aoun as a club to beat the
majority coalition, the Shiites have never made any public endorsement of him.
That may be because Aoun has shown the Shiites too that he can't be trusted.
During recent national dialogue sessions among the country's leaders, Aoun's
Free Patriotic Movement reportedly tried to cut a deal that fell short of what
his Hezbollah allies were seeking, embarrassing Hezbollah and prompting it to
scuttle the deal.
In the end, the fact that the various communities are opposed to him will make
Aoun's gambit a long shot. But his tone-deaf presidential bid should be
instructive to anybody who believes that the current street theater in Beirut
reflects the will of the Lebanese majority.
For all the chaos that plagues Lebanon, the country's sectarian balance imposes
a complex and durable structure of protocols, restrictions and unwritten rules
on the various communities. When these boundaries are transgressed, the result
is often conflict. The region has a similar set of unwritten rules, and Aoun's
support for a possible (Syrian- and Iranian-backed) Shiite coup against the
Sunni prime minister has sent the Sunni Arab powerhouses strongly backing
Siniora and warning against Iranian interference.
As such, Aoun is but the latest in a line of challengers of Lebanon's unwritten
codes. He will fail like all the others; the question is how much damage he
causes in the meantime.
**Tony Badran, TONY BADRAN
is a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, focusing on
Syria and Lebanon. His blog can be found at beirut2bayside.blogspot.com.