Hariri's Exit Sparks Fears of Fresh Violence

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Saad Hariri's resignation from Lebanon's premiership has raised fears that regional tensions were about to escalate and that the small country would once again pay a heavy price.

Analysts said the Saudi-backed Sunni politician's move to step down from the helm less than a year after forming a government was more than just the latest hiccup in Lebanon's notoriously dysfunctional politics.

"It's a dangerous decision whose consequences will be heavier than what Lebanon can bear," Hilal Khashan, a professor of political science at the American University of Beirut, said.

Hariri announced his resignation in a broadcast from Saudi Arabia on Saturday, accusing Iran and its Lebanese ally Hizbullah of taking over Lebanon and destabilizing the entire region.

Hizbullah is part of the government, but the clout of a group whose military arsenal outstrips that of Lebanon's own armed forces is far greater than its share of cabinet posts.

For years now, Lebanon has been deeply divided between a camp dominated by the Shiite Tehran-backed Hizbullah and a Saudi-supported movement led by Hariri.

"Hariri has started a cold war that could escalate into a civil war, bearing in mind that Hizbullah is unmatched in Lebanon on the military level," Khashan said.

The rift in Lebanon's political class led to the assassination in 2005 of Hariri's father Rafik, an immensely influential tycoon who made his fortune in Saudi Arabia.

- Iran-Saudi flare-up -

Investigations pointed to the responsibility of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime and its Lebanese ally Hizbullah.

Other political assassinations in the anti-Hizbullah camp ensued, then a month-long war between Hizbullah and Israel, as well as violent internal clashes that harked back to the dark days of the 1975-1990 civil war.

Twelve years on, Lebanese politics remain just as toxically sectarian and the threat of another flare-up very real. Hariri even said on Saturday he feared going the way of his father.

His resignation came in a context of high tension between Saudi Arabia, once the region's powerhouse, and Iran, which has played an increasingly predominant political and military role in the region recently.

On Friday, Hariri met Iran's most seasoned diplomat, Ali Akbar Velayati, before flying to Saudi Arabia and resigning from there via a Saudi-funded television network.

"The timing and venue of the resignation are surprising... but not the resignation itself," said Fadia Kiwane, political science professor at Beirut's Saint Joseph University.

"The situation is developing rapidly and we're at a turning point... there could be a deadly clash between Saudi Arabia and Iran," she said.

"In that event, the two main camps in Lebanon will clash too."

Over the past few weeks, a Saudi minister, Thamer al-Sabhan, has unleashed virulent attacks against Hizbullah on social media.

- New war with Israel? -

"The terrorist party should be punished... and confronted by force," he wrote last month.

Other than just an internal conflict, analysts also do not rule out an external attack on Hizbullah, be it by Saudi Arabia directly or by the group's arch-foe Israel.

"Hariri is saying 'there is no government any more, Hizbullah is not part of it'... and he is thus legitimizing any military strike against Hizbullah in Lebanon," Khashan said.

Israel and Hizbullah fought a devastating war in 2006, and Israeli politicians have ramped up the rhetoric lately, warning that its military was prepared for war with Lebanon.

Any new war damaging key infrastructure would have a disastrous impact on a country already weakened by ballooning debt, corruption and the demographic pressure from a massive influx of Syrian refugees.

As soon as the news of Hariri's resignation broke, many Lebanese took to social media to voice their fears of a return to violence.

"After Hariri's resignation, a war will be launched against Lebanon," wrote one of them, Ali Hammoud, on Twitter.

On the streets of Beirut, even those who had little sympathy for Hariri expressed concern.

"We're headed for the worst," said one shop owner.

Comments 6
Thumb lubnani.masi7i 05 November 2017, 10:44

His actions and complete surrender to Iran and Hezbollah led us to where we are today. IMO he is as much to blame for Lebanon's demise as much as Hezbollah and Iran are.

Please, Go away and forever this time.

Thumb Mystic 05 November 2017, 12:24

Saudi Arabia does not seem to care alot about the sunni of Lebanon with this move.
Now there is nobody in the government that represents the sunni population.
This has nothing to do with fresh violence, they lost in Syria and anything in Lebanon would be suicide for them, unless Israel ofcourse came in to attack and they joined Israel, but that would be treason and suicide for them too.

If you don't want to be part of the Lebanese system, then go to your noble beloved British crowned King Salman, and ask him to give you, your daily salaries.

Thumb Mystic 05 November 2017, 12:24

Still waiting for that.

Thumb Mystic 05 November 2017, 12:31

Yes we all know that this is a joint Israeli-Saudi scheme, disrupt the Stability in Lebanon from within.

It doesn't really matter in the end, we will just wait until there is someone else to take Hariris spot, and there will be.

Thumb Mystic 05 November 2017, 12:49

If Israel wants to start bombing Lebanon, they can do so with or without a Prime Minister in Lebanon.

Israel does not care about that, they just want to make sure they can win in a next war.
But they still believe it is going to be like 2006, which is another false predictment.

Thumb gigahabib 05 November 2017, 17:35

The Saudis are going crazy, the purge within their own ranks prove this. We will probably soon see internal conflict in Saudi Arabia.

Hariri is just one of their dominoes.