Despite its regional popularity, Hizbullah remains a largely
misunderstood phenomenon in the West where media demonology often
conflates Hizbullah with al-Qaeda and Nasrallah with Usama bin Laden.
Few in Europe or the US have heard Nasrallah's voice. This may largely
be due to the fact that all his speeches are delivered in Arabic. It is
to introduce the Anglophone world to this important voice that Nicholas
Noe has collected Nasrallah's speeches and interviews spanning two
decades in
Voice of Hezbollah: The Statements of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.
With a competent translation by Ellen Khouri, the interviews and
speeches elaborate on key events in Lebanon's recent history.
Nasrallah's pronouncements are invariably thoughtful, nuanced and
carefully worded, eloquence rarely giving way to rhetoric. At times
fiery, they remain grounded in fact, and adversaries often ignore his
promises at their own peril. The book reveals a methodical mind
explicating on historical events and developments with an impressive
attention to detail. The significance of some of the events may have
diminished, however the chronologically ordered interviews offer useful
insights into the strategic shifts in the movement's outlook and the
intellectual evolution of its leader.
Born on 31 August 1960 to
an impoverished fruit vendor in Karantina, East Beirut, Nasrallah was
drawn to religion and intellectual endeavour from an early age. Ninth
in a family of ten children, the young Nasrallah would frequent walk to
the city centre to purchase second-hand books and unlike his peers
would devote all his time to reading. An early influence on Nasrallah's
thinking was the Iranian born Lebanese cleric Imam Musa al-Sadr. In
Lebanon's long history of civil strife, its mostly underprivileged Shia
population has remained largely marginal. The confessional balance of
the political system based on a 1932 census of dubious merit accords
the Shia a subordinate role. It was the
Harkat al-Mahrumin
(Movement of the Disinherited) of Musa al-Sadr that first empowered the
Shia and challenged the entrenched feudal elite lording over it. The
movement also evolved an armed wing,
Afwaj al-Muqawama Al-Lubnaniyya, better known as Amal.
The civil war of 1975 forced the Nasrallah family to relocate to its
ancestral home in Bazouriyeh, South Lebanon, where Nasrallah joined the
nascent Amal movement soon after finishing school in Tyre. At age
fifteen, the precocious youth was appointed head of the movement for
his home town, until then a secular leftist redoubt. Nasrallah founded
a library at the local Islamic Centre where young men and women would
come and receive education, also imbibing the revolutionary teachings
of Musa al-Sadr.
In 1976 Nasrallah headed to Najaf in Iraq to complete his religious
education under Baqr al-Sadr (executed in 1980 by Saddam, he was the
Father-in-law of Iraqi leader Muqtada al-Sadr). On al-Sadr's
instruction Nasrallah was taken under the wings by another one of his
Lebanese disciples, Sheikh Abbas Mussawi with whom Nasrallah would
later found Hizbullah. The man who Nasrallah would recall as a 'friend,
brother, mentor and companion' would assist him through the ascetic
seminary life where the new pupil's hard work would lead him to finish
preliminary instruction in two years, rather than the usual five. It
was in Najaf that Nasrallah was first introduced to the teachings of
Ayatollah Khomeini, who departed from the traditional quietist Shia
theology in his concept of
wilayat al-faqih - the rule of the jurist-theologian - which prescribed the supreme authority of the
faqih over
an Islamic state. To this day Hizbullah remains faithful to this
concept, even though it has since abjured its call for the creation of
an Islamic state as part of its 'Lebanonization' process begun in the
90s.
Nasrallah escaped the Baathist crackdown on Shia
seminaries in '77 and arrived back in Lebanon in '78 to take up his
education at an institution set up by Mussawi in Ba'albek. His return
coincided with the Israeli invasion and two other events of
immeasurable import - the disappearance of Imam Musa al-Sadr, and the
Islamic revolution in Iran - that led him to resume his political
activities. By the late 70s Amal's power, already circumscribed, was on
the wane as a result of political myopia. It was only the mysterious
disappearance of al-Sadr in 1978 (presumably assassinated by Libya's
Gaddafi) that revived its fortunes. By the time Israel invaded Lebanon
in 1982, Nasrallah had become the head of Amal for the Bekaa region and
member of its Central Committee.
It was around the same time that PLO had decamped to South Lebanon
after the events of Black September in 1970. It initially challenged
the entrenched elite - mainly Sunnis and Maronites - leading many
Shia to flock to its ranks. Relations soured over time as the majority
Shia population of south Lebanon was caught between the armed and often
domineering presence of the PLO and the indiscriminate Israeli attacks
from across the border. Amal, which was initially trained by the PLO,
soon allied itself with Syria and intervened to thwart a Palestinian
victory over Maronite militias in 1976. By the time Israel invaded
Lebanon, the local population was so resentful of the PLO presence that
many greeted advancing Israelis tanks with perfumed rice and flowers.
Nabih Berri, the leader of Amal, sought a
modus vivendi
with the Israeli occupiers and joined the collaborationist 'national
salvation' government (It wouldn't be until 1983 that an Israeli
patrol's attack on an
Ashura procession in Nabatiyah would lead Amal to join the resistance).
It was this initial failure of Amal to confront the Israeli occupation
that led a faction led by Nasrallah and Mussawi to split and form the
core of what would later emerge as Hizbullah. In
Pity the Nation,
Robert Fisk's magisterial account of the Lebanon war, the veteran
Middle Easter correspondent describes the first Israeli encounter with
this new force.
Some of the Shia fighters had torn
off pieces of their shirts and wrapped them around their heads as bands
of martyrdom...When they set fire to one Israeli armoured vehicle, the
gunmen were emboldened to advance further. None of us...realised the
critical importance of the events of Khalde that night. The Lebanese
Shia were learning the principles of martyrdom and putting them into
practice...It was the beginning of a legend which also contained a
strong element of the truth. The Shia were now the Lebanese resistance,
nationalist no doubt but also inspired by their religion. The party of
God - in Arabic, the Hezbollah - were on the beaches of Khalde that night.
The improvisations soon gave way to disciplined guerrilla warfare after
Ayatollah Khomeini dispatched a contingent of 1,500 Iranian
Revolutionary Guards in summer 1982 to train volunteers in the Bekaa
Valley. Nasrallah played a key role in recruiting young Shia
volunteers, and by 1985 had assumed leadership of Hizbullah in the
Bekaa valley.
Deadly attacks were launched in the intervening years by a group
calling itself Islamic Jihad allegedly linked to Hizbullah that
targeted the US embassy and marine barracks. The latter there
purportedly to keep peace had soon joined the conflict on side of the
Israeli proxies in Lebanon. French paratroopers suffered a similar
fate, leading to the withdrawal of the Multi-national Force. A
successful strike on the Israeli head quarters in Lebanon that killed
72 Israeli soldiers also precipitated its retreat to the South where it
maintained occupation of a narrow 'security zone'. Continually harried
by Hizbullah, it would eventually end its costly occupation in 2000.
It wasn't until 1985 that Hizbullah emerged as a coherent organization
announcing its formal existence in the form of an Open Letter which
also served as its manifesto. Established with an avowedly pan-Islamic
outlook adhering to Khomeini's W
ilayat al-Faqih
doctrine, the movement has since emphasized its distinctly Lebanese
nationalist credentials with its ambitions limited to the liberation of
occupied Lebanese territory and defence of the realm in the absence of
a strong national army. Leading figures in the movement have hinted
that the Open Letter belonged to a specific period in time and does not
reflect Hizbullah's present political stance.
Nasrallah, who
had since moved to Beirut, first came to prominence when he started
giving speeches and interviews after being appointed to the
consultative council of Hizbullah in 1987. A year later came the first
Israeli assassination attempt. Hizbullah, which, unlike other Lebanese
groups, had avoided confessional/sectarian war to focus solely on
resisting the occupiers, found itself for the first time embroiled in a
turf battle with Amal in Beirut and South Lebanon. These animosities
survived well into the 90s and would only be resolved when Hizbullah
and Amal would join a coalition against the US-backed forces jockeying
for control after the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq
Hariri in 2005.
Although Hizbullah signed on to the Arab League-borkered Taif Accords
that ended the Lebanese Civil War in 1989 they refused to relinquish
arms. The pragmatist Nasrallah and Mussawi's decision to participate in
Lebanese politics also led to a high-level split when Subhi Tufeili the
first Secretary General of Hizbullah chose to part ways rather than
participate in the confessional political system. He was replaced by
Mussawi as Hizbullah's new secretary general. Hizbullah emerged with 12
seats in the 1992 parliamentary elections, a mark of the movements
growing popular base in the Bekaa valley and the South.
Hizbullah continued its low-intensity war where it was careful to
confine its activities to the occupied South. Israel however was less
constrained: Mussawi was assassinated along with his family by an
Israeli gunship in 1992 leading to Nasrallah being elected as the new
Secretary General of Hizbullah. Nasrallah soon moved to modernize the
resistance, ushering in a tactical revolution. Journalist Nicholas
Blanford writes, that underr Nasrallah's leadership, 'the resistance
became more compartmentalized, with units specializing in different
weapons and tactics. Intelligence-gathering measures were improved and
greater autonomy given to field commanders.'
These resulted in a nearly twenty-fold increase in the rate-of- attack
on the Israeli occupation forces by the end of the decade, whereas the
fatality ratio dropped from an average of five-to-one in 1990 to
three-to-two by the end of the decade. Israel responded with several
major attacks, beginning with 'Operation Accountability' in 1993, and
'Operation Grapes of Wrath' in 1996 which culminated in the massacre of
a hundred refugees at a UN compound in Qana by Israeli artillery
(Nasrallah's own 18-year-old son Hadi was killed in 1997 resisting the
Israelis). The operations in 1999 and February 2000 were equally
disastrous for Israel. Meanwhile, its proxies in the SLA continued
their routine torture and harassment in the occupied South.
Hizbullah's biggest success came on May 24, 2000 when Israel's 22 year
occupation of South Lebanon collapsed overnight and soldiers retreated
behind the border. It was the first victory over Israel of any Arab
force, and it was celebrated all over the Middle East. Yet it presented
Hizbullah with an existential dilemma. Pressure was growing on
Hizbullah to disarm as it had achieved its stated goal of liberating
Lebanese occupied territory. In the debate over whether to continue the
armed struggle or to shift focus completely to socio-political issues
Nasrallah opted for the former. However this required a pretext which
was furnished in the form of the Shebaa farms, a narrow strip of the
occupied Golan Heights claimed by Lebanon. With Israel's continued
occupation of the farms, Hizbullah had a rationale for resistance.
The years between Israel's retreat and the commencement of hostilities
in 2006 saw very little combat. Israel continued its violation of
Lebanese airspace with the occasional kidnapping of Lebanese fishers
and farmers while Hizbullah managed to kill 17 more Israeli soldiers.
Under the cover of the stabilizing Syrian presence there since the end
of the Civil War, Hizbullah was able to avoid the messy parochial
politics of Lebanon in favour of continued resistance. However, the
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri in February 2005
came as a major rupture with the past.
The mass protests in the wake of the assassination demanding an end to
the long standing Syrian presence in Lebanon culminated in the 'cedar
revolution' (a phrase coined by a US State Department official). With
US-French backing, the so called March 14 movement, comprising mainly
Sunni and Christian Maronite parties, succeeded in getting Syria to
withdraw from Lebanon. Conscious that the vacuum left by the Syrian
withdrawal may be filled by a US-Isareli hegemony given the pro-US
orientation of the March 14 Alliance newly elected to power, Hizbullah
forged strategic alliances to protect its interests. It buried the
hatchet with Amal to forge an alliance that allowed it to join the
government where it held 5 cabinet seats. Nasrallah has since succeeded
in negotiating another strategic alliance with anti-Syrian Christian
Maronite Free Patriotic Movement of General Michel Aoun.
Contrary to the prevailing media myth, the relationship between
Hizbullah and Syria is mostly strategic, and their interests often
diverge. Hizbullah sided with the Palestinians against the
Syrian-backed Amal during the 'war of the camps'; In the 1988-89
Hizbullah-Amal conflict Syria once against backed its rival. In '87 the
al-Asad regime also had 23 Hizbullah men killed. Hizbullah is also
aware that any peace agreement between Syria and Israel may come at its
expense. The same is also true of US-Iran rapprochement: the Iranian
peace offer to the United States in 2003 included a pledge to withdraw
support for Hizbullah. The last Iranian Revolutioanrly Guard advisers
left Lebanon in 1998. Hizbullah has since emerged as a fully autonomous
movement, thoroughly Lebanese in its outlook. Today it is not so much
its reliance on Iran and Syria that is of higher import, but the
reliance of the two on Hizbullah.
Although Nasrallah had twice negotiated successful prisoner swaps in
'96 and '98 using German intermediaries, in 2004 he scored a major coup
when in return for the bodies of three Israeli soldiers and one
captured officer, Hizbullah succeed in securing the release of 23
Lebanese and 400 Palestinian prisoners. However several Lebanese
prisoners still remained in Israeli custody. In 2006 Nasrallah warned
that unless Israel released these prisoners, he would have no choice
but to capture more Israelis for another exchange. At 9:04 on the
morning of July 12 Hizbullah guerrillas delivered on the promise by
capturing two Israeli soldiers and killing eight more in the ensuing
firefight. A Merkava tank sent in pursuit was also blown up. This
precipitated the heaviest bombing of Lebanon by Israel since its
invasion of 1982.
The war saw Israel wreak mass destruction on the Lebanese civilian
population, even as on the battlefield its performance remained dismal.
Hizbullah withstood the air blitz and with its unrelenting barrage of
rockets drew Israel into committing ground troops. The vaunted IDF with
all its advanced weaponry soon found itself outclassed by Hizbullah's
iron discipline. With little to show for the mounting losses, Israel
was forced to progressively climb down from its earlier maximalist
aims, eventually agreeing to a ceasefire that merely restored the
status quo ante.
Al-Manar continued its broadcasts uninterrupted through the conflict,
and Nasrallah appeared on-air frequently giving reports on the progress
of the war in his characteristic understated, factual manner (one such
appearance ended with Nasrallah dramatically asking viewers to step
outside their homes and look West where they were presented with the
sight of a burning Israeli ship off the Lebanese coastline just
targeted by a Hizbullah missile). During the war more Israelis tuned in
to
al-Manar
than their own national TV. This time it was the Israelis turn to
suffer the indignity of repeated claims of success by their leaders
which would be subsequently discredited by events.
By the time
Israel retreated back to its border it had left a hundred and twenty
soldiers dead, forty of its tanks and armored vehicles destroyed and
one helicopter downed. For Israel it was a humiliating defeat, and an
end of its deterrence capabilities. Hizbullah emerged stronger and more
popular than before. Its immediate and efficient assistance to those
who had lost property during the war further added to its
popularity.Critics who had accused it of precipitating the war -
including the inimitable Robert Fisk - would be proven wrong by
Israel's own official inquiry into the war - the Winograd Committee
report - which confirmed that the war had been planned by Israel more
than a year ahead. As the
Guardian
reported, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's testimony to the
commission 'contradicted the impression at the time that Israel was
provoked into a battle for which it was ill-prepared.'
In a
country caught between its own factional rivalries and the perennial
intervention of foreign powers, principle is often a dispensable
commodity. Yet much of Hizbullah's regional prestige derives from its
ability to take difficult decisions in the face of impossible odds.
Established as a rejection of the kind of realpolitik embraced by Amal,
the existing Shia movement, Hizbullah has not shied away from taking
difficult positions, such as its defence of the Palestinians against
its Syrian backed Shia rival. Through al-Manar, Hizbullah has continued
to present its successful resistance as a model for Palestinians in the
occupied territories, at times actively intervening on their behalf. It
responded to the March 22, 2004 assassination of Sheikh Ahmad Yassin,
the quadriplegic spiritual leader of Hamas with a barrage of more than
60 rockets at six different Israeli military positions in the Shebaa
farms. Similarly in 2006 the timing of its raid was widely seen as
intended to relieve pressure on Gaza under brutal assault at the moment
(in this instance however it had the contrary effect as under the cover
of the Lebanon war, Israel was able to get away with more murder).
In 2007 when the Lebanese military began its assault on the Palestinian
refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared in order to crush a small band of Sunni
militants, Fatah al-Islam, Nasrallah had to tread the fine line yet
again. Most of Lebanon seemed indifferent to the plight of the innocent
Palestinians caught in the crossfire, and even his political ally, the
nationalist general Michel Aoun supported unrestrained action.
Nasrallah's qualified statement of support however declared the
Palestinian refugees a 'red line' as the Lebanese army was a red line.
Neither need be crossed. This drew shrill condemnation from the
US-backed Lebanese opposition who accused him of insufficient
patriotism for not offering unconditional support.
The 2007 US National Intelligence Estimate has put a spanner in the
neoconservative plan for a new war by confirming that Iran has no
nuclear weapons program. However, attempts to curb Iran's mythical
influence have continued apace. Israel's humiliating defeat at the
hands of Hizbullah have led its supporters in the US to back a new
'redirection' plan, as reported by the legendary journalist Seymour
Hersh. This has included arming hard line Sunni militants to confront
Hizbullah (in Iraq US precipitated a civil war by doing the opposite:
arming Shias against the Sunni insurgency) and a wider propaganda
campaign to sow fears of an emerging 'shia crescent'. In Lebanon this
went awry when the militants started showing more interest in fighting
Israel than Hizbullah. The Fatah al-Islam episode further sealed its
fate.
The Sunni Arab leaders of the Egypt and Jordan (and to a lesser degree
Saudi Arabi)have played along. As journalist Patrick Cockburn observes,
they 'were embarrassed by the success of the Shia Hizbollah in the war
in Lebanon
compared to their own supine incompetence.' In the wake of
the 2006 invasion of Lebanon where the Saudi, Jordanian and Egyptian
leadership tacitly sided with Israel, a poll found Nasrallah and
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the two most popular leaders in Egypt. This is all
the more remarkable given the fact that both are Shia, whereas the
leadership of the largely Sunni Egypt has long played on sectarian
differences to deflect its own sordid role in sustaining US-Israeli
hegemony.
Since 2006 Hizbullah has led the opposition in a non-violent protest
against the government demanding fairer representation. Detractors have
tried to portray this as a coup against the government, and Nasrallah's
demand for a one-man-one-vote system as somehow outlandish. A deadlock
has prevented the appointment of a new President, and the political
future remains as yet uncertain. Forces of status quo resent
Hizbullah's assertiveness, but more so its status as a global player
where they on the other hand remain perpetually identified with their
parochial concerns. The government, backed by its supporters in the
West and among the Arab states, has thus far prevented Hizbullah
translating its military victory into political gains. While the people
of the Middle East idolize Hizbullah, for their leaders the movement
presents the threat of a good example. It is not yet confirmed who
assassinated Imad Mughniyeh, but Israel is not alone in wishing to see
Nasrallah and his movement humbled. Should there be a war, it would be
interesting to see how the different forces line up. For now, the only
thing that remains certain is that whatever happens in Lebanon, its
borders are too small to contain the impact.
Muhammad Idrees Ahmad is a member of Spinwatch. His commentaries on arts, politics and culture appear on The Fanonite.