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06/20/2013

Hariri Takes On Nasrallah

Former Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri accused Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah of endangering Lebanon through the party’s actions over the years, including the sending of fighters to Syria.

In a written address to the Lebanese people, Hariri said some of the following:

“What Lebanon is facing at present approaches the brink of existential danger and threatens Lebanon’s message and the values of cultural and religious diversity. This has made me sound the alarm, to reach the ears of all Lebanese without exception, especially those groups who classify us as adversaries and sometimes charge us with treason or dependence on the outside...

“Our nation, dear Lebanese, is in danger. This is the truth that all religious, sectarian and political groups should contemplate and reflect upon the original sources of this danger.”

Hariri said Hizbullah was once more putting the fate of the nation in danger at “a critical juncture” with policies that jeopardize coexistence, democracy and Islamic unity.

“And when we say the fate of the nation we do not mean one side or sect, but a threat to everyone without exception,” he said. “None of the Lebanese groups, whether Sunni, Shiite, Druze or the Christian sects combined, can be kept away from the [slippery] slope that Hizbullah seeks to drag Lebanon toward.

“Hizbullah has unilaterally decided to breach every tradition, law and rule that govern national life among the Lebanese; it has arrogated to itself, as a party and an armed sectarian group, the rights of states in taking fundamental decisions without any consideration for the sensitivities of the groups it lives among, which constitute at the very least...50 percent of the Lebanese population,” he said, adding that Hizbullah had managed to accomplish such a feat through its “unprecedented intimidation” as a result of its arsenal.

Hariri said Nasrallah had usurped the state and its institutions and allowed Lebanon to become involved in the Syrian conflict. “Nasrallah has [transgressed all norms], deciding to be the head of state, supreme commander of the armed forces, head of the executive branch – allowing the borders to be opened for thousands of fighters to take part in the Syrian war – and the legislative branch for issuing fatwas for defending religious sites and resistance regimes beyond the border,” Hariri said.

Hariri added that for over two decades Hizbullah polarized the Shiite sect, “drowning it in the delusion of power over others in order for it to serve as an armed auxiliary for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard” and spearheaded an Iranian-led policy aimed at a number of countries in the Levant.

“This policy asks Lebanon’s Shiites to be the fuel of an endless, absurd war. It also wants Lebanon to become an arena for defending the regime of Bashar Assad, with front lines that will not be confined to the sects in Lebanon, especially if we spot the strategic dimensions of Iranian policy in the Arab Levant and the signals that are being sent regarding the advanced position of Hizbullah in this policy,” Hariri said.

Arguing that Hizbullah has ruined relations between Sunnis and Shiites and soured Lebanon’s ties with Arab countries, he said there was “nothing more urgent” than to confront Hizbullah’s policies “with all forms of national solidarity.”

He said Hizbullah was trying to convince the Shiite community that its “weapons are for protecting the sect, that Hizbullah has succeeded in establishing the first army of its kind for Shiites in the east” as evidenced by the group’s military activities in Syria and Iran’s support.

“We might not be able to convince the wide audience of our Shiite brothers otherwise, but we cannot accept [Hizbullah’s actions] under any condition...based on our conviction that the party’s claims on this matter...are historic lies,” he said. “We believe there are within the Shiite community voices and wisdom that...can refute this dangerous and insane course that Hizbullah has taken.”

Hariri said he and his allies had attempted to resolve the issue of Hizbullah’s arsenal through agreeing on a national, Lebanese defense strategy but the resistance group had now moved to justifying its weapons through expanding its fight into Syria and the Levant.

Source: Thomas El-Basha / The Daily Star

Hot Spots will return in two weeks.

Brian Trumbore



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06/20/2013

Hariri Takes On Nasrallah

Former Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri accused Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah of endangering Lebanon through the party’s actions over the years, including the sending of fighters to Syria.

In a written address to the Lebanese people, Hariri said some of the following:

“What Lebanon is facing at present approaches the brink of existential danger and threatens Lebanon’s message and the values of cultural and religious diversity. This has made me sound the alarm, to reach the ears of all Lebanese without exception, especially those groups who classify us as adversaries and sometimes charge us with treason or dependence on the outside...

“Our nation, dear Lebanese, is in danger. This is the truth that all religious, sectarian and political groups should contemplate and reflect upon the original sources of this danger.”

Hariri said Hizbullah was once more putting the fate of the nation in danger at “a critical juncture” with policies that jeopardize coexistence, democracy and Islamic unity.

“And when we say the fate of the nation we do not mean one side or sect, but a threat to everyone without exception,” he said. “None of the Lebanese groups, whether Sunni, Shiite, Druze or the Christian sects combined, can be kept away from the [slippery] slope that Hizbullah seeks to drag Lebanon toward.

“Hizbullah has unilaterally decided to breach every tradition, law and rule that govern national life among the Lebanese; it has arrogated to itself, as a party and an armed sectarian group, the rights of states in taking fundamental decisions without any consideration for the sensitivities of the groups it lives among, which constitute at the very least...50 percent of the Lebanese population,” he said, adding that Hizbullah had managed to accomplish such a feat through its “unprecedented intimidation” as a result of its arsenal.

Hariri said Nasrallah had usurped the state and its institutions and allowed Lebanon to become involved in the Syrian conflict. “Nasrallah has [transgressed all norms], deciding to be the head of state, supreme commander of the armed forces, head of the executive branch – allowing the borders to be opened for thousands of fighters to take part in the Syrian war – and the legislative branch for issuing fatwas for defending religious sites and resistance regimes beyond the border,” Hariri said.

Hariri added that for over two decades Hizbullah polarized the Shiite sect, “drowning it in the delusion of power over others in order for it to serve as an armed auxiliary for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard” and spearheaded an Iranian-led policy aimed at a number of countries in the Levant.

“This policy asks Lebanon’s Shiites to be the fuel of an endless, absurd war. It also wants Lebanon to become an arena for defending the regime of Bashar Assad, with front lines that will not be confined to the sects in Lebanon, especially if we spot the strategic dimensions of Iranian policy in the Arab Levant and the signals that are being sent regarding the advanced position of Hizbullah in this policy,” Hariri said.

Arguing that Hizbullah has ruined relations between Sunnis and Shiites and soured Lebanon’s ties with Arab countries, he said there was “nothing more urgent” than to confront Hizbullah’s policies “with all forms of national solidarity.”

He said Hizbullah was trying to convince the Shiite community that its “weapons are for protecting the sect, that Hizbullah has succeeded in establishing the first army of its kind for Shiites in the east” as evidenced by the group’s military activities in Syria and Iran’s support.

“We might not be able to convince the wide audience of our Shiite brothers otherwise, but we cannot accept [Hizbullah’s actions] under any condition...based on our conviction that the party’s claims on this matter...are historic lies,” he said. “We believe there are within the Shiite community voices and wisdom that...can refute this dangerous and insane course that Hizbullah has taken.”

Hariri said he and his allies had attempted to resolve the issue of Hizbullah’s arsenal through agreeing on a national, Lebanese defense strategy but the resistance group had now moved to justifying its weapons through expanding its fight into Syria and the Levant.

Source: Thomas El-Basha / The Daily Star

Hot Spots will return in two weeks.

Brian Trumbore