

July 31, 2006
Conflicts of Interest, Conflicts of Identity:
Arab Reactions to the Israel-Hizbullah
Confrontation
Mark A. Heller
Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies
In
addition to the release of the two soldiers abducted
by Hizbullah, the declared objectives of Israel’s
military campaign in Lebanon include the dismantling
of Hizbullah’s militia and the deployment of the
Lebanese armed forces up to the common border.
Achieving these objectives in the face of Hizbullah
opposition will ultimately require some cooperation,
if not from Shi’ites who provide Hizbullah’s base of
support, then at least from the other main Lebanese
communities: the Sunni Muslims, the Christians and
the Druze. It is not clear whether material support
will be forthcoming – much evidence suggests a
strong reluctance on their part to confront
Hizbullah lest that reignite the Lebanese civil war
– but it is clear that the goals themselves resonate
in the non-Shi’ite sectors of the Lebanese
population. That should not be surprising. Those
sectors formed the bulk of the popular movement
calling for the withdrawal of Syrian forces from
Lebanon – which Hizbullah opposed – and their
representatives have pressed for the disarmament of
Hizbullah and the reassertion of government
authority throughout the country in the “National
Dialogue” carried out since the Syrian withdrawal.
More
surprising are the regional reactions to the
Israel-Hizbullah confrontation. In contrast to its
behavior in every previous clash between Israel and
an Arab adversary, the rest of the Arab world this
time has not lined up unanimously behind the Arab
protagonist. True, the “Arab street” has reacted to
scenes of destruction in Lebanon with demonstrations
of fevered hostility to Israel and, as always,
fevered adoration for anyone who dares defy it, and
Arab governments have had to adjust their
declaratory positions to these emotions. But they
(and parts of the religious establishments) have
also expressed reservations of one sort of another
about Hizbullah and coupled support for its demand
for a ceasefire with support for the disarming of
its militia and the extension of Lebanese government
authority throughout the country – which happen to
be Israel’s stated objectives but which are
vigorously opposed by Hizbullah itself.
All
of this suggests that Israel’s current battle with
Hizbullah is much more than simply another round in
the long Arab-Israeli war. Part of the difference
stems from the challenge that Hizbullah, as a
non-state actor, poses to governments determined to
preserve their monopoly on power and especially on
questions of war and peace. Saudi Arabia,
undoubtedly reflecting the perspective of other
governments, reacted to the July 12 Hizbullah attack
on Israel’s northern border by officially condemning
“rash adventures carried out by elements inside the
state and those behind them without consultation
with the legitimate authority in their state.”
But
that concern is only part of the picture. Another
and perhaps larger part relates to the particular
identity of the non-state actor. Saudi Arabia
reacted far less negatively to an earlier Hamas
attack that was similar to Hizbullah’s (and had
similar consequences), and even if that attack was
not truly a “non-state” operation because Hamas has
controlled (or at least shared control of) the
Palestinian government since early 2006, Saudi
Arabia was also far more indulgent of Hamas attacks
launched from Fatah-ruled Palestinian territories
before 2006. The real difference lies less in the
nature of the action perpetrated than in the
identity of the perpetrator.
Unlike
Hamas, Hizbullah represents a Shi’ite constituency
and has longstanding and intimate ties with Iran.
Indeed, Hizbullah in Lebanon was originally created
as a mirror of Hizbullah in Iran. Its leaders have
personal ties with the Iranian leadership and its
militia has been supplied by Iran and trained and
supported by an Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps
contingent in Lebanon. This link feeds Arab
suspicions of Shi’ite/Iranian power that have been
growing for some time. Last year, Egyptian
President Mubarak charged that Shi’ites in Iraq are
more loyal to Iran than to their own country, and
the year before that, King Abdullah of Jordan
publicly warned against the emergence of a “Shi’ite
crescent” in the Levant. Saudi concerns are
aggravated by the fact the substantial Shi’ite
minority in Saudi Arabia is concentrated almost
entirely in the oil-producing Eastern Province, just
across the Gulf from Iran. Because of the suspicion
that Hizbullah acts as a proxy for Iran -- a
powerful state with undisguised hegemonic ambitions
-- the natural inclination of Arab governments to
side with any Arab protagonist in conflict with
Israel has been tempered by concern that a Hizbullah
success in the current confrontation, however
defined, would encourage further Shi’ite
assertiveness in other countries and promote Iranian
power and influence throughout the region.
Thus,
familiar geopolitical interests supplement the
desire of governments to avoid having their agenda
hijacked by sub-national groups. But these are not
just objective interests defined by geography or the
conventional balance of power. In an important
sense, the perceptions of interests that shape
attitudes toward the Israel-Hizbullah conflict are
filtered through the prism of identity, and
attitudes in the region are divided along
communitarian/sectarian lines in much the same way
as are attitudes within Lebanon itself. Hizbullah
is actively supported only by Shi’ite Iran and by
Syria, a Sunni-majority country but one dominated
for decades by Alawites (long suspected of heresy by
orthodox Sunnis and certified as authentic Muslims
only by Musa as-Sadr, the founder of the Shi’ite
Amal movement in Lebanon).
This
division is consistent with a pattern that has
persisted in the Middle East at least since the
Iranian Revolution of 1979 (and which has played out
in other places as well, such as Pakistan, where
mosque bombings and bloody clashes between Sunnis
and Shi’ites are a frequent occurrence). It was
manifested during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s,
when Syria was the only Arab country to back Iran.
And it has been manifested in attitudes to the civil
war roiling Iraq since the American-led coalition,
in the face of fierce Arab criticism but Iranian
reticence, crushed the mechanism that had enabled a
Sunni minority there to dominate the Shi’ite
majority. This pattern does not preclude short-term
alliances for shifting tactical purposes, but in the
longer term, the domestic Lebanese and regional Arab
alignments surrounding the confrontation between
Israel and Hizbullah may well come to be seen as
another chapter in an unfolding clash of
civilizations within the Muslim world.
___________________________________________________________________
Tel
Aviv Notes
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AVIV UNIVERSITY
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www.tau.ac.il/jcss/
&
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Published
by permission at Israeler.com
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