April 13, 2021
Gone With The Wind: 75th Anniversary
Iran Haunts the 46th
Anniversary of the Lebanese Civil War
On the forty-sixth anniversary of its
fifteen-year civil war, Beirut again is on the brink of collapse.
by Maya Carlin
The
bloody civil conflict that swept Lebanon on this day in 1975 resulted in more than 150,000 fatalities and 300,000
injuries. Tens of thousands of people currently remain displaced within
Lebanon. Although the regional and international context that contributed to
the civil conflict is different today, Lebanon again is in crisis. The power
vacuum that allowed Hezbollah to seize control in Lebanon is starting to
reappear. As economic devastation, corruption, political turmoil, and civil
unrest continue to keep Beirut on the brink of collapse, the country is at risk
of Tehran’s expanding footprint.
Prior to
the civil war, Lebanon was a functioning multi-sectarian country, with Maronite
Christians and Sunni Muslims making up the majority of the population. The
mid-twentieth century brought regional shifts which altered the fabric of
Beirut. The establishment of Israel, the surge of Pan-Arabism, and the arrival of the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) were crucial factors that helped
catalyze the conflict that would consume Beirut for fifteen years.
The
PLO-supported Lebanese National Movement (LNM) arose during the early years of
the war. This pan-Arabist front was comprised of Sunni Muslims and Arab
nationalists. In opposition, the Phalanges Christian democratic political party
contained the Maronite population. Although tensions between the two groups
escalated in the mid to late twentieth century, two key events directly
triggered the onset of the war. On April 13, 1975, a gunman opened fire on a
church in a Christian suburb in Eastern Lebanon, killing four people. The
Phalangists claimed the perpetrator was an LNM guerilla. Hours later, a
Phalangist gunman ambushed a bus carrying mostly Palestinian passengers,
killing twenty-seven on board.
As
retaliations continued to unfold, PLO guerilla fighters were able to expand
their armed struggle against Israel. The group’s expulsion from the Hashemite
Kingdom in 1970 and arrival in Lebanon gave them a tactical
advantage to attack the Jewish State from the border. Israel
responded to their assaults from the border by invading southern Lebanon twice,
in 1978 and 1982.
The
effort to expel the PLO from Lebanon expanded by 1982 as a Western peacekeeping
coalition dubbed the Multinational Force was created. The task force, comprised
of Italy, the United States, the United Kingdom, and France, became increasingly scrutinized on the ground as a partisan entity. At
this point, the ongoing civil war, Western troop presence, and general turmoil
created opportune conditions that Iran was able to exploit.
Under
the pretense of fighting the “Zionist” and “imperialist” occupation, Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) provided training, funds, and
assistance to Lebanon’s Shiite militias. This awakening of Shiite activism
would pave the path for Tehran to gain its most important asset to date,
Lebanon’s Party of God—Hezbollah.
More
recently, Iran has repositioned itself as the country’s “Islamic Resistance
Force,” pledging to fight against Israeli occupation. In addition to its
military operations, Hezbollah’s grip on Beirut extends to the shadow economy
it controls and the active political and social groups it dominates. In
addition to the network of social services Hezbollah provides, including
schools, health care, and infrastructure, party members have held cabinet seats
since 2005. According to the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies,
Hezbollah seizes between $500 million and $1 billion annually from
Lebanon’s economy.
Hezbollah’s
deep entrenchment in all aspects of society has led Lebanon down a tumultuous
road. Today Beirut faces its worst crisis since its fifteen-year-long civil
war. Economic devastation, political corruption, and large-scale demonstrations
have brought Lebanon to its breaking point.
Iran’s
proxy approach is evident across the Middle East in Yemen, Iraq, and Syria.
Tehran has been waging battles from each front, countering Saudi, American, and
Israeli interests respectively. As its proxy wars continue to escalate across
the region, Iran’s exploitation of Lebanon’s strategic importance will only
increase.
Maya Carlin is an analyst at the Center for Security Policy in Washington
D.C. and a former Anna Sobol Levy Fellow at IDC Herzliya in Israel.
Image: Reuters.
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