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Has
US Hegemon Been Humbled in Lebanon?
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
DIGG THIS
A few days
after the US troops had entered Baghdad and Saddam Hussein's statue
was toppled, Condoleezza Rice (serving then as President George
W Bush's National Security Adviser) told American reporters that
US policy towards Europe should be: "Encourage the Russians,
ignore the Germans and punish the French."
The Bush administration,
celebrating its military victory in Iraq and preparing for more
"regime changes" in Syria and Iran, was basically sending
a "go-fly-a-kite" message to the French and the other
members of "Old Europe" who had opposed the use of military
force to oust the Iraqi Ba'athist regime.
Pentagon officials
explained then that Washington was going to place members of the
"New Europe" like Poland, Estonia and Bulgaria at the
center of the transatlantic alliance. After all, who really needed
those "Cheese-eating surrender monkeys," as one neoconservative
columnist bashed the French who were also denounced as "Euro
appeasers," "Arabists" and "anti-Semites."
For a while
it sounded as if the Vichy regime of World War II were back in power
in France and were being led by French President Jacques Chirac.
For a while, Mr. Chirac competed for the title of the Most Hated
Man in America.
Well, it has
been three years since the anti-French hysteria in Washington which
among other things led lawmakers in Capitol Hill to rename the "French
fries" in the menu of the Congressional cafeteria as "Freedom
fries." But guess who are now emerging as the Good Guys in
the neoconservative narrative? Is it Ahmed Chalabi and the rest
of the Iraqi "freedom fighters"? Guess again. The French?
Those wimpy Froggies? Yup.
"It's
Up to You, President Chirac," screamed the headline of a recent
column in the pro-war editorial page of the Washington Post
which asked – actually pleaded with – the French President to deploy
his country's troops to Lebanon to help clean up the mess made there
by the Israelis and the Americans.
Apparently
the Estonians, the Bulgarians and even the Poles were not ready
to send their troops to Lebanon to disarm the Hezbollah guerillas.
"France has had a very close relationship with Lebanon,"
President Bush explained in a recent press conference. "There's
historical ties with Lebanon. I would hope they would put more troops
in," he said, adding that the French "understand the region
as well as anybody."
These are the
same French who in 2003 warned the Americans not to invade Iraq
since they could end up in the same kind of quagmire that the French
had found themselves in once upon a time in Algeria. In 2003, the
advice of the guys who "understand the region as well as anybody"
was dismissed by the neocons as a reflection of a certain lack of
manhood.
But now everyone
in Washington and Tel Aviv seems to be breathing a sigh of relief
after President Chirac announced that France would commit 2,000
troops to the new international peacekeeping troops in southern
Lebanon.
The decision
breaks a stalemate that has held up the dispatch of soldiers seen
by diplomats as crucial to maintaining the ceasefire between Hezbollah
and Israel. Mr. Chirac's announcement in a nationally televised
address followed days of intense negotiations with the United Nations,
Lebanon and Israel over European concerns that the force would have
no clear mandate and inadequate rights to open fire in defense of
itself or civilians.
"We obtained
the necessary clarifications from the UN on the chain of command,
which needs to be simple, coherent and reactive," he said,
"and the rules of engagement, which must guarantee the freedom
of movement of the force and its ability to operate when confronted
with hostile conditions."
The French,
it should be noted, also helped broker the UN ceasefire after forcing
the United States to accept important changes in the original American
draft resolution.
What is really
interesting in all these latest developments is that even the most
ardent neocons in Washington have not challenged the notion the
US would not be sending its troops to Lebanon.
They justified
that by pointing out that hundreds of US marines were killed during
a bombing in Beirut in 1982. But the French also suffered many casualties
at that time and are still sending their troops to Lebanon. So what
gives? It seems that the Americans are basically conceding that
they "cannot do Lebanon" and are passing the Lebanese
"portfolio" to the French. Perhaps the Bushies are beginning
to feel that the Americans are indeed overstretched in the Middle
East and that the time has come to shift some responsibilities to
other players.
But with responsibility
comes power. With their troops being deployed in Lebanon, the French
are going to be "in charge" in Lebanon, something that
the American and the Israelis will have to accept.
And if this
works, one would not be surprised to see the French and the Italians
(who are also sending troops to Lebanon) and the Germans (who have
good ties with the Syrians AND the Israelis) becoming more active
in the region.
It
seems the American hegemon has been humbled a bit. By the way, "French
fries" are back in the Congressional cafeteria too.
August
30, 2006
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2006 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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