[QUOTE] Originally posted by Ramo
And clearly, they're attributing that at least in part to the Syrian occupation.
Its hard to tell, as Hezb is unclear in its stand on the occupation, as the articles from the Star show.
I'm not saying that the opposition to Syria if fascist, but that the opposition to an equal Shia vote is fascist. Which doesn't include the entire Maronite community, but some of it. Anyways, to a large extent corporatist policies dominate in Lebanon IIUC.
[/q]
Im not saying that communal voting quotas are right, but I hardly think support for them is necessarily fascist. As for corporatist, im not sure it means what you think it means. Musso saw it as a way of organizing society and the economy - Lebanon is largely free market in economy.
Which says something about Syria's 29 years as an occupier, doesnt it? And its 16 years since the Taif accords, which called for precisely that. Seems theyve put theyre deals with the Maronite and Sunni communities, to keep support for their troops there, ahead of Shiite rights. And yet the Shiites support a pro-Syrian party? Made sense when the Israelis were there and occupying Shiite villages - hasnt made sense for the last 5 years.
.
Amal still exists, don't it?
I really dont know Lebanese voting patterns - does Amal get votes in the Hezb dominated south? IIUC there are Shiites in other parts of Lebanon as well - esp the Bekaa Valley, and parts of Beirut.
By all accounts, most of the anti-Syrian demonstrators are Maronite. Yes, there are Sunnis and Druze, but it's mostly Maronite.[/q]
All the reports ive seen emphasize the mix, and i hear ALOT of quotes from Jumblatt. It wouldnt surprise me that the Maronites are most enthusiastic, though.
And, interestingly enough, Tripoli (a Sunni city) had a pro-Syrian demonstration. Karimi is also a Sunni.
And Karimi is from Tripoli IIUC - thats one data point, not two.
You must forgive me - thats such (IMHO) a typical unrealistic conspiracy theory for the region, that I have a hard time wrapping my head around it as an indicator of general political beliefs. My impression from Iraq is that there are folks who will say the US is the grand conspirator behind everything, yet manage to work with the US anyway.
Lahoud is pretty irrelevent. There's Franjieh (interestingly enough, he supports also Syria as a power-broker in fear of Muslim violence), and that's about it. Wasn't I arguing your point earlier?
I dont know about Lahoud - it seems Hariri broke with Syria over extending his term, and that started the whole chain of events, so I cant see how hes irrelevant.
The same point - IIUC you were arguing that fewer Lebanese than we think are pro-Syrian withdrawl - you were arguing based on polls that many non-Shias are pro-Syrian, yet seemed to assume that all Shias are pro_Syrian. Im simply arguing that views of Syria dont break cleanly on communal lines.
And clearly, they're attributing that at least in part to the Syrian occupation.
Its hard to tell, as Hezb is unclear in its stand on the occupation, as the articles from the Star show.
I'm not saying that the opposition to Syria if fascist, but that the opposition to an equal Shia vote is fascist. Which doesn't include the entire Maronite community, but some of it. Anyways, to a large extent corporatist policies dominate in Lebanon IIUC.
[/q]
Im not saying that communal voting quotas are right, but I hardly think support for them is necessarily fascist. As for corporatist, im not sure it means what you think it means. Musso saw it as a way of organizing society and the economy - Lebanon is largely free market in economy.
It's a question of control in the gov't. As I said, the Shia are shut out despite their plurality. They don't trust the central gov't. The militia remains, and they're backing Syria, because they see them as bargaining chips over the other sectarian factions. There's no timetable for Syrian withdrawal because there's no timetable for Shia political inclusion.
Which says something about Syria's 29 years as an occupier, doesnt it? And its 16 years since the Taif accords, which called for precisely that. Seems theyve put theyre deals with the Maronite and Sunni communities, to keep support for their troops there, ahead of Shiite rights. And yet the Shiites support a pro-Syrian party? Made sense when the Israelis were there and occupying Shiite villages - hasnt made sense for the last 5 years.
.
Amal still exists, don't it?
I really dont know Lebanese voting patterns - does Amal get votes in the Hezb dominated south? IIUC there are Shiites in other parts of Lebanon as well - esp the Bekaa Valley, and parts of Beirut.
By all accounts, most of the anti-Syrian demonstrators are Maronite. Yes, there are Sunnis and Druze, but it's mostly Maronite.[/q]
All the reports ive seen emphasize the mix, and i hear ALOT of quotes from Jumblatt. It wouldnt surprise me that the Maronites are most enthusiastic, though.
And, interestingly enough, Tripoli (a Sunni city) had a pro-Syrian demonstration. Karimi is also a Sunni.
And Karimi is from Tripoli IIUC - thats one data point, not two.
And again, note the Zogby poll: more Sunnis believe that Israel/US had somethign to do with the Hariri assassination than Syria.
You must forgive me - thats such (IMHO) a typical unrealistic conspiracy theory for the region, that I have a hard time wrapping my head around it as an indicator of general political beliefs. My impression from Iraq is that there are folks who will say the US is the grand conspirator behind everything, yet manage to work with the US anyway.
Lahoud is pretty irrelevent. There's Franjieh (interestingly enough, he supports also Syria as a power-broker in fear of Muslim violence), and that's about it. Wasn't I arguing your point earlier?
I dont know about Lahoud - it seems Hariri broke with Syria over extending his term, and that started the whole chain of events, so I cant see how hes irrelevant.
The same point - IIUC you were arguing that fewer Lebanese than we think are pro-Syrian withdrawl - you were arguing based on polls that many non-Shias are pro-Syrian, yet seemed to assume that all Shias are pro_Syrian. Im simply arguing that views of Syria dont break cleanly on communal lines.
Comment