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JPR 54



Middle East

While the UN fiddles... the Middle East burns

By Donald Macintyre in Kfar Giladi, Eric Silver in Jerusalem, Anne Penketh and Colin Brown

Published: 07 August 2006

Israel suffered its worst casualties in its 26-day war on Hizbollah while United Nations negotiations for a ceasefire intensified.

A direct hit by a Katyusha rocket killed 12 Israeli soldiers in the border kibbutz of Kfar Giladi yesterday while a barrage of rockets aimed at Israel's third city, Haifa, left three civilians dead and 150 wounded.

On the other side of the border, 19 Lebanese civilians were killed by Israel's bombardment of southern Lebanon. The heavy casualties reinforced Israel's insistence that any UN ceasefire resolution must ensure that Hizbollah gunmen cannot return to its northern border. Diplomats hope that foreign ministers will vote in the next day or two on a United Nations resolution, despite Lebanon rejecting the US-French draft because it failed to order an immediate ceasefire and Israeli troops out of southern Lebanon.

But the US and Britain warned that a UN resolution was only a "first step" towards ending the violence, as Israel and Hizbollah militants used the window before a vote to inflict maximum damage.

Israel suffered its worst casualties in its 26-day war on Hizbollah while United Nations negotiations for a ceasefire intensified.

A direct hit by a Katyusha rocket killed 12 Israeli soldiers in the border kibbutz of Kfar Giladi yesterday while a barrage of rockets aimed at Israel's third city, Haifa, left three civilians dead and 150 wounded.

On the other side of the border, 19 Lebanese civilians were killed by Israel's bombardment of southern Lebanon. The heavy casualties reinforced Israel's insistence that any UN ceasefire resolution must ensure that Hizbollah gunmen cannot return to its northern border. Diplomats hope that foreign ministers will vote in the next day or two on a United Nations resolution, despite Lebanon rejecting the US-French draft because it failed to order an immediate ceasefire and Israeli troops out of southern Lebanon.

But the US and Britain warned that a UN resolution was only a "first step" towards ending the violence, as Israel and Hizbollah militants used the window before a vote to inflict maximum damage.

Condoleezza Rice, the US Secretary of State, said: "We're trying to deal with a problem that has been festering and brewing in Lebanon now for years and years and years. And so it's not going to be solved by one resolution in the Security Council. These things take a while to wind down."

The Kfar Giladi attack was the worst in numbers of Israeli victims since the conflict began, and also caused the highest single death toll of Israeli soldiers in the same period. But Haifa was in chaos after Hizbollah launched its worst attack on the city. Last night Israel claimed it had hit the Hizbollah site that had launched the rocket attacks at the city.

The 12 reservists in Kfar Giladi appeared to have been sitting and standing in the shade of a cemetery wall for a briefing when a Katyusha rocket landed right by them, incinerating two cars in the parking lot beside the wall.

As heavy smoke hung in the air from brush fires ignited by other rockets in a withering 15-minute barrage, which landed in the hills above the town of Kiryat Shmona, the charred remains of the vehicles and other debris had been piled high by the wall. Sponge mattresses, possibly from the men's packs, were also piled in the parking lot.

A member of the Kfar Giladi security committee said that, unlike local civilians, the victims had not taken cover in shelters when sirens sounded.

"This shouldn't have happened," he said. "We sounded the alert several minutes before the rocket hit." An officer at the scene said that the explosion had blasted shrapnel 30 metres away. The front of one of the destroyed cars was compressed, suggesting the rocket might have landed directly on it. There was also what looked like a small crater close to the wall.

Intensive diplomatic activity was going on behind the scenes last night, as Tony Blair telephoned President George Bush and the Russian leader, Vladimir Putin. He also sought to contact Jacques Chirac, whose country is expected to lead a multinational force in southern Lebanon that would be part of a longer-term solution described in the draft plan.

"They discussed how they will get the resolution through," said a Downing Street aide. "We can't take anything for granted."

The draft text calls for a "full cessation of hostilities". Whereas Hizbollah is expected to observe an "immediate" ceasefire, Israel is instructed to immediately halt "all offensive military operations". Israel would therefore be allowed to hit back if Hizbollah did not refrain from all attacks. The draft would allow Israeli troops to stay in southern Lebanon until an international force was deployed there.

In Beirut, Hizbollah announced it would agree to the ceasefire only after Israel stopped all attacks and withdrew from Lebanese territory. Nabih Berri, the speaker of the Lebanese parliament, who represents Hizbollah in negotiations, said the draft resolution was unacceptable since it did not deal with Beirut's key demands, including a release of prisoners held by Israel.

Fouad Siniora, Lebanon's Prime Minister, said that his government would demand amendments to the resolution.Israeli officials were reluctant to comment on the provisional text, which was published on Saturday and which security council diplomats continued to discuss yesterday, probably because it meets far more Israeli demands than Lebanese.

The Israelis were less happy, however, with a supervisory role assigned to Unifil, the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, until a more robust international force was in place. Israel has long complained that Unifil has failed to prevent Hizbollah attacks. The draft also provides for an eventual handover of the Shebaa Farms to Lebanon, although UN cartographers confirmed when Israel pulled out of Lebanon in May 2000 that the area had been captured from Syria in the 1967 war. The Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, is reported to be flexible on the territorial dispute, provided Israel's other requirements are met.

Margaret Beckett will fly to the UN to press for "humanitarian corridors " to get food and medical supplies to the shattered communities as a priority immediately after the cessation of violence is agreed on the ground in the Lebanon.

The British efforts to establish humanitarian aid convoys without the fear of being attacked by Israeli jets may deflect some of the criticism against Tony Blair for agreeing to a UN resolution which falls short of an immediate ceasefire.

Day 26

* In the deadliest day of the war for Israel, Hizbollah rockets kill 12 soldiers in the town of Kfar Giladi.

* Further Hizbollah rocket attacks on Haifa kill three civilians and leave 150 people injured. Several are trapped under rubble.

* Israel says troops will remain in Lebanon until a foreign force arrives.

* Israeli army claims it has captured a Hizbollah fighter who took part in the abduction of two Israeli soldiers which triggered the conflict.

* At least 19 Lebanese civilians and a soldier are killed by Israel's bombardment on the south of the country. Israeli air strike hits a truck near a UN convoy, killing two people.

* The conflict has killed more than 800 people, mostly Lebanese civilians.

 

Arab World Finds Icon in Leader of Hezbollah

 

By NEIL MacFARQUHAR

Published: August 7, 2006

DAMASCUS, Syria, Aug. 6 — The success or failure of any cease-fire in Lebanon will largely hinge on the opinion of one figure: Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary general of Hezbollah, who has seen his own aura and that of his party enhanced immeasurably by battling the Israeli Army for nearly four weeks.

 

Copies of the Koran, images of Hezbollah’s leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, and pictures of missile launchers on a desk in a Beirut refugee camp.

With Israeli troops operating in southern Lebanon, Sheik Nasrallah can continue fighting on the grounds that he seeks to expel an occupier, much as he did in the years preceding Israel’s withdrawal in 2000.

Or he can accept a cease-fire — perhaps to try to rearm — and earn the gratitude of Lebanon and much of the world.

Analysts expect some kind of middle outcome, with the large-scale rocket attacks stopping but Hezbollah guerrillas still attacking soldiers so that Israel still feels pain.

In any case, the Arab world has a new icon.

Gone are the empty threats made by President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s official radio station during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war to push the Jews into the sea even as Israel seized Jerusalem, the Golan Heights and the Sinai Peninsula.

Gone is Saddam Hussein’s idle vow to “burn half of Israel,” only to launch limited volleys of sputtering Scuds. Gone too are the unfulfilled promises of Yasir Arafat to lead the Palestinians back into Jerusalem.

Now there is Sheik Nasrallah, a 46-year-old Lebanese militia chieftain hiding in a bunker, combining the scripted logic of a clergyman with the steely resolve of a general to completely rewrite the rules of the Arab-Israeli land feud.

“There is the most powerful man in the Middle East,” sighed the deputy prime minister of an Arab state, watching one of Sheik Nasrallah’s four televised speeches since the war began, during an off-the-record meeting. “He’s the only Arab leader who actually does what he says he’s going to do.”

Days after the current war started, he ended a speech by quietly noting that Hezbollah had just attacked an Israeli warship off Lebanon, a feat considered inconceivable for his group. Those who rushed outside saw a glow visible from the damaged vessel offshore, setting off celebrations around Beirut.

The departure represented by Sheik Nasrallah — his black turban marking him as a sayyid, a cleric who can trace his lineage back to the Prophet Muhammad — has been particularly evident in those speeches. He makes no promises to destroy Israel with its superior military might, but to make it bleed and offer concessions.

“When he says to the people: I am your voice, I am your will, I am your conscience, I am your resistance, he combines both a sense of humility and of being anointed for the task,” said Waddah Sharara, a Lebanese sociology professor and a descendant of Shiite clerics. “He’s like the circus magician who pulls the rabbit out of his hat and always knows exactly who is his audience.”

Some call it his “Disney touch.”

In many ways, this war is the moment that Sheik Nasrallah has been preparing for ever since he was first elected to run Hezbollah at age 32 in 1992, after an Israeli rocket incinerated his predecessor.

In his broadcasts he appears tranquil, assured, sincere and well informed, in command of both the facts and the situation, utterly dedicated to his cause and to his men. He is aloof yet tries to lend his secretive, heavily armed organization an air of transparency by sharing battlefield details.

On Thursday, he offered to stop firing missiles if Israel halted its attacks, saying Hezbollah preferred ground combat. Hezbollah’s position on any cease-fire, echoed by the Lebanese government, is that none is possible as long as Israeli soldiers remain inside the country.

“He has all the power; the government has no cards in its hand,” said Jad al-Akhaoui, the media adviser to a Lebanese cabinet minister. “He keeps saying that he supports the prime minister, but there has been no translation in the field, nothing has stopped. The decision is still Hezbollah’s decision.”

It is not even clear how such decisions are formulated. Even though Hezbollah has two cabinet ministers, proposals are passed through Nabih Berri, the head of the Amal Party and Hezbollah’s onetime rival as the voice of the Shiite Muslim working class.

Lebanese officials said that once Mr. Berri passed on the proposals, nobody was quite sure what happened. Hezbollah officials are either unreachable or mum.

But Sheik Nasrallah is definitely in touch. He gloats over the evident confusion reflected in the Israeli news media about their military offensive. He is known to have read the autobiographies of Israel’s prime ministers. He always calls Israel “the Zionist entity,” maintaining that all Jewish immigrants should return to their countries of origin and that there should be one Palestine with equality for Muslims, Jews and Christians.

In the past, when Israel advanced into Lebanon against Palestinian fighters, the Palestinians would defend fixed positions, then retreat toward Beirut as each line fell.

Analysts say Sheik Nasrallah’s genius was to train hundreds of grass-roots fighters — school teachers and butchers and truck drivers — then to use religion to inspire them to fight until death, with a guaranteed spot in heaven. Skip to next paragraph

Sheik Nasrallah outlined some tactics in Thursday’s speech.

“It is not our policy to hang on to territory; we do not want all our mujahedeen and youths to be killed defending a post, hill or village,” he said, sitting in a studio with the flags of Lebanon and Hezbollah behind him. The idea is to lure elite Israeli soldiers into a trap by having them walk into villages before his guerrillas open fire.

In a world where fathers are known by the name of their eldest son, Sheik Nasrallah is known as Abu Hadi or father of Hadi, after his eldest son, who died in September 1997, age 18, in a firefight with the Israelis. The name instantly reminds everyone of his personal credibility and commitment to the fight.

On that September day, Sheik Nasrallah was scheduled to deliver a speech in Haret Hreik, the unkempt southern Beirut suburb dense with apartment houses that Israel has just turned largely to rubble. But he said nothing of his loss until the crowd started chanting for him to speak about the “martyrs.” He eulogized Hadi as part of a great victory.

In interviews, he said that he would not give his enemies the satisfaction of seeing him weep publicly but that he mourned privately.

He has a daughter and two surviving sons. The eldest, Jawad, around 26, is believed to be fighting in southern Lebanon.

Sheik Nasrallah takes obvious pride in standing up to Israel on the battlefield. All his wartime speeches have been laced with references to restoring lost Arab virility, a big sell in a region long suffering from a sense of impotence. He called the three southern villages where the fiercest clashes erupted “the triangle of heroism, manhood, courage and gallantry.”

He can be by turns avuncular and menacing.

Walid Jumblat, the chieftain of the Druse sect and one of Sheik Nasrallah’s more outspoken critics, said he found the combination unsettling. “Sometimes the eyes of people betray them,” Mr. Jumblat said in an interview in his mountain castle. “When he’s calm, he’s laughing. He’s very nice. But when he’s a little bit squeezed, he looks at you in the eyes fiercely with fiery eyes.”

In the hierarchical rankings of Shiite Muslim clergy, Sheik Nasrallah is a rather ordinary hojatolislam, one step below an ayatollah, and far below being a mujtahid, or “source of emulation” to be followed as a guide.

Yet the Shiite faithful in Lebanon revere him, both as a religious figure and as a leader who gained for them a modicum of respect in the country’s sectarian political system long dominated by Christians and Sunni Muslim barons. Families who evacuated their homes in Beirut’s southern suburbs seemed invariably to leave behind an open Koran with Sheik Nasrallah’s picture propped up nearby, in the hope that the holy verses would protect their homes and their leader.

He is believed to live modestly and rarely socializes outside Hezbollah’s ruling circles. He avoids the telephone for safety reasons, but has met thousands of constituents and dispatches personal messengers to congratulate them for weddings and births.

Aside from Hezbollah’s secretive military operations, the state within a state that he helped build with Iranian and expatriate financing includes hospitals, schools and other social services.

Sheik Nasrallah is a powerful orator with a robust command of classical Arabic, yet he makes himself widely understood by using some Lebanese dialect in every speech. He has coined numerous popular phrases, like calling Israel “more feeble than a spider’s web.”

He comes across as far less dour than most Shiite clerics partly due to his roly-poly figure and slight lisp. But he also — very unusually — cracks jokes.

Prof. Nizar Hamzeh, who teaches international relations at the American University of Kuwait and has written a book on Hezbollah, recalled a Nasrallah speech from last year, given while Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was in the region. A helicopter happened to clatter overhead at some point while he was criticizing United States meddling, and the sheik quipped, “You might be able to catch a glimpse of her now; I hope she sees us as well.” The crowd roared.

He has never pushed hard-line Islamic rules like veils for women in the neighborhoods that Hezbollah controls, which analysts attribute to his exposure to many of Lebanon’s 17 sects.

Born in 1960 in Beirut, Sheik Nasrallah grew up in the Karanteena district of eastern Beirut, a mixed neighborhood of impoverished Christian Armenians, Druse, Palestinians and Shiites.

His father had a small vegetable stand, but the 1975 eruption of the civil war forced the family to flee to their native southern village.

The oldest of nine children and long entranced by the mosque, he decamped for the most famous Shiite hawza, or seminary, in Najaf, Iraq. He fled in 1978 one step ahead of Saddam Hussein’s secret police, returning to Lebanon to join Amal, then a new Shiite militia. He became the Bekaa Valley commander in his early 20’s.

But he considered the Islamic Revolution in Iran led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1979 to be the real model for Shiites to end their traditional second-class status and moved to Hezbollah as it coalesced in the early 1980’s. He studied in a seminary in Qum, Iran, briefly in 1989.

How much a religious figure can appeal to Lebanon’s generally cosmopolitan population has never been clear, and it is particularly murky now that he has provoked a war. Some Lebanese say he has sold his soul to Damascus and Tehran.

“I used to think of Nasrallah as the smartest politician in Lebanon, but this last operation changed my mind,” said Roula Haddad, a 33-year-old administrative secretary, shopping at the upscale ABC mall in the predominantly Christian Ashrafiyeh neighborhood. “It was a huge mistake and he is solely responsible for all the destruction. He proved that he does not care about Lebanese interests; he revealed his true Iranian skin.”

Political analysts said that Lebanon should have seen it coming, but that Sheik Nasrallah proved a rather skillful hypnotist. “Lebanese politics, especially since Nasrallah carved out his role, has become his very own circus,” said Professor Sharara, the Lebanese sociologist. “He built this circus on a foundation of pageantry, lies, fear, crazy hopes and unreal dreams.

“He sold Lebanese on the certainty that he would not abandon them, he would not undertake anything that would cause them harm or destruction, and at the same time he instilled fear, fear of himself,” Professor Sharara said. “He has known this was going to happen for the past 15 years. How can you believe someone who says, ‘Don’t worry, I won’t do anything,’ even while he was building this hellish machine? He knew people would be credulous, would be seduced.”

 54
 Hizbollah rocket kills 12 Israeli soldiers

Beirut, Aug 06: Hizbollah killed 12 Israeli soldiers on Sunday in its deadliest rocket strike yet and Israeli bombs killed 19 Lebanese civilians as Lebanon rejected a draft U.N. resolution to end the 26-day-old war.
A rocket struck a group of Israeli reservists, called up for the Lebanon offensive, in the Israeli village of Kfar Giladi. Medics said dozens were wounded.
Soldiers near the scene held their heads and one wept as a military ambulance pulled away. Helicopters landed nearby to fly the badly wounded to hospitals further from the war front.
Lebanon`s parliament speaker Nabih Berri said his country rejected the US-French draft Security Council resolution because it would let Israeli forces stay on Lebanese soil.
Berri, a Shi`ite politician who has been the main channel between Hizbollah and Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, said the draft ignored the Beirut government`s seven-point plan calling for a ceasefire, the withdrawal of Israeli forces and the return of all displaced civilians among other things.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said that agreeing on a resolution would not end all fighting.
"I would hope that you would see very early on an end to large-scale violence," she said, but did not rule out "skirmishes for some time to come".
US National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley said that once a resolution was adopted, Washington wanted a second one establishing a peacekeeping force in days, not weeks.
Hizbollah, backed by Syria and Iran, has killed 57 Israeli soldiers and 33 civilians in the conflict, sparked when its men seized two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid on July 12.
The Israeli army said on Sunday it had captured one of the Hizbollah fighters who took part in the seizure of the soldiers.

At least 759 people have been killed in Lebanon during the war, including 16 overnight and on Sunday in the bombing of five southern villages.
Beirut was rattled by an air raid in the Shi`ite-dominated southern suburbs, witnesses said. And the Bekaa Valley was hit by several air raids, one near a Lebanese army base.
UN peacekeepers in south Lebanon said a mortar round fired by Hizbollah wounded three Chinese members of the force.
Israel views the UN draft favorably, a senior government official and Israeli media said, noting that it allowed Israel to respond to Hizbollah attacks after a truce and did not order Israel to withdraw its 10,000 soldiers from southern Lebanon.
Israel wants its troops to remain until an international force can take over. Hizbollah says it will keep fighting until Israel stops bombing Lebanon and withdraws all its forces.
The draft was hammered out in negotiations between the United States, Israel`s main ally, and France, touted as leader of the anticipated international force for Lebanon.
Israeli Justice Minister Haim Ramon said Israel would keep attacking Hizbollah targets in Lebanon and its soldiers would stay there until the international force arrived.
Lebanon will seek support for its position from Arab foreign ministers due to meet in Beirut on Monday. Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Mouallem, arriving by land a day early, reiterated that Syria would respond if Israel attacks it.
The war coincides with an Israeli military offensive in the southern Gaza Strip to recover another captured soldier.

Bureau Report
 Hezbollah Batters Haifa With Rockets

By JOSEPH PANOSSIAN, Associated Press Writer
11:32 AM PDT, August 6, 2006

 

BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Hezbollah guerrillas unleashed their deadliest barrage of rockets yet into northern Israel, killing at least 12 people, while Israeli bombardment killed at least 14 people in southern Lebanon as fighting only intensified despite a draft U.N. cease-fire resolution.

A barrage of Hezbollah rockets crashed into Haifa late Sunday, killing at least three people and wounding more than 40, officials said, in the heaviest attack on the port city since fighting with the Lebanese-based militia began nearly four weeks ago.

Emergency services director Eli Bein said three people were killed. Other officials said more than 40 people were wounded, and dozens more suffered shock.

Hezbollah and its allies rejected the draft resolution, saying its terms for a halt in fighting do not address Lebanon's demands -- in a signal that the nearly 4-week-old battle will burn on.

Both sides appeared to be aiming to inflict maximum mutual damage in the few days before the U.S.-French draft resolution is voted on by the U.N. Security Council.

Hezbollah fired a volley of 80 rockets at several other Israeli towns. One of them made a direct hit on a crowd of people at the entrance of the communal farm of Kfar Giladi, killing 11 people, rescue workers said.


It was the highest toll from a rocket attack since the conflict began on July 12. Israel's Channel Two television reported that nine of those killed were reserve soldiers.
A forest burst into flames from the 15-minute barrage and huge plumes of gray smoke rose into the air. Other rockets hit the nearby town of Kiryat Shemona, damaging a synagogue.
When word of the rocket strike reached the Israeli Cabinet during its weekly meeting, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said: "Lucky that we are dealing with Hezbollah today, and not in another two or three years," according to a participant in the meeting.
In southern Lebanon, dozens of Israeli strikes hit communities and roads, with some villages bombed continually for a half-hour, security officials said. Explosions rang across Beirut as warplanes fired more than six missiles into the capital's southern districts.
Ground fighting also raged along a stretch of territory on southern Lebanese border that the Israeli army has invaded.
The U.S.-French resolution for a cease-fire marked a significant advance after weeks of stalled diplomacy aimed at ending the conflict. But getting the two sides -- particularly Hezbollah -- to sign on will likely require a greater push. Israel has said it won't halt its offensive until Hezbollah rockets are silenced.
The plan also envisions a second resolution in a week or two that would authorize an international military force for the Israel-Lebanon frontier and the creation of a large buffer zone in southern Lebanon, monitored by the Lebanese army and international peacekeepers.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stressed the draft resolution was aimed at stopping the large-scale violence to allow a focus on the underlying problems in the conflict.
"It's the first step, not the only step," she said at a news conference in Washington.
Lebanon's parliament speaker, who represents Hezbollah in negotiations, said the plan was unacceptable since it would leave Israeli troops in Lebanon and does not deal with Beirut's key demands -- a release of prisoners held by Israel and moves to resolve a dispute over a piece of border territory.
"If Israel has not won the war but still gets all this, what would have happened had they won?" Nabih Berri said. "Lebanon, all of Lebanon, rejects any talks and any draft resolution" that do not address the Lebanese demands, he said.
Hezbollah's two key allies, Iran and Syria, also rejected the resolution -- suggesting they back a continued fight by the guerrillas.
"The United States, which has been supporting the Zionist regime until today, has no right to enter the crisis as a mediator," Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in a phone conversation with Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Assad said the presence of international forces with extensive power in Lebanon would cause anarchy in the country, according to a report on Ahmadinejad's official Web site.

 

صالح "القلاب"!

طاهر رياض 

        من عادتي أن أنأى بنفسي وقلمي عن التعرض لأولئك الذين "يسوّدون" صحفنا وإعلامنا بمقالاتهم المأجورة (وربما المكتوبة والمرسلة كما نعلم جميعاً من جهات معينة!) والتي تسعى إلى استغفال الناس، وتشويه الحقائق، بغية إرضاء ذوي الأمر والنهي.

        ومن أخلاقي احترام الكلمة ومن يكتبها، واحترام الرأي وتعدد وجهات النظر، فبهذا وحده تتأكد حيوية الفكر، وتتوطد حرية التعبير، المكفولة (كما آمل!) في الدساتير والقوانين كافة!

        وكان يمكن أن نتغاضى وأن نمضي في سكوتنا عن الآراء المريبة والتحليلات المستهجنة، التي "يتقلب" فيها صالح القلاب في عموده اليومي في صحيفة الرأي الأردنية، لولا حساسية الظرف الذي نعيشه هذه الأيام، وإحساسنا بأهمية وخطورة الكلمة المكتوبة وصِلتها بالواقع المجبول بآلام وأحزان وتطلعات الناس.

        وما كنت لأشغل نفسي بالرد على هذا الكاتب الذي نتابع "تقلباته" السياسية والمواقفية والمبدئية، عبر ثلاثين عاماً، لولا أنه، ومرة أخرى في هذه الأيام المفصلية من تاريخنا العربي ووجودنا العربي، يتحدث وكأنه الناطق الرسمي عن الشعب الأردني، الحريص على أمنه وكرامته، المنافح عن مواقفه ...إلخ.

   في مقالاته الأخيرة كرّس القلاب قلمه للدفاع عن الموقف الرسمي الأردني تجاه ما يحدث في لبنان، بكل ما أوتي من فهاهة في التعبير وضحالة في التفكير، محاولاً إظهار هذا الموقف وكأنه أنبل المواقف وأشرفها، معدداً مآثر الحكومة الأردنية غير المسبوقة في نجدة "إخواننا" في لبنان ومساعدتهم وتقديم العون الطبي لهم، بدون أن ينسى "المساعي" الحميدة التي تبذل من أجل ... لا نريد أن نقول من أجل ماذا!..

        ما أثار السيد المتقلب، أقصد القلاب، هو هذا الغضب الشعبي والأردني الذي اتهم ويتهم الحكومة في الأردن بالتخاذل والتهاون وعدم اتخاذ قرار سياسي فعّال يمكن له، حسب ما يرى الشارع العربي الكبير، أن يكون ذا أثر، ولو بسيط، لا في تغيير مجرى الأحداث، بل على الأقل في احترام إن لم نقل احتضان شرف الرأي الذي يتبناه عامة الشعب وخاصتهم ونخبهم الثقافية والفكرية والسياسية.

        أما جام غضبه، أمد الله في عمره ورعاه، فلم يجد غير قناة الجزيرة ليصبه عليها، مشيراً إلى أن الدولة التي تحتضنها تحتضن في الآن ذاته قواعد أمريكية، تنطلق منها الصواريخ لتقتل وتدمر في لبنان. ولا أظنه من الغباء ليجهل أن دولاً أخرى في المنطقة هي بمجملها قواعد راسخة للسياسة الأمريكية، تنطلق منها الأوامر والنواهي ليمتثل لها من يسمّون أنفسهم حكاماً لهذه الدول!

        ثم هو لم يوفر نواباً للشعب في البرلمان من حنقه وعصابيته، فكال لهم الشتائم واتهمهم بخيانة الأمة والدولة، دون أن يخطر له، حفظه الله وأدام عزه، اختبار رأي الشارع الأردني، بفئاته كافة، المتموّر غضباً وحزناً من مواقف حكومته، والممنوع من التعبير أو التظاهر، في بلد يتباهى إعلامه صبح مساء بديمقراطيته وحرياته العامة!

كان أجدر بالسيد القلاب أن ينتقد الإعلام الأردني، بدءاً بالتلفزيون والإذاعة، وليس انتهاء بما يسمح ويمنع كتابته في الصحافة المحلية، وأن ينحاز إلى صوت المغلوبين على أمرهم والمكمومين في هذا البلد الصغير ذي الطموحات الكبيرة.

        كان يجدر به أن يكون صوت الحق والحقيقة، فيعكس، عبر عموده الذي يطل به يومياً على القراء، آمالهم ومخاوفهم، ويحمل همومهم ومواجعهم، ويتبنى تطلعاتهم نحو وطن أكثر حريةً وعدالة..

        على الأقل هذا ما يتوقّع من كاتب حظي بفرصة أن يقرأ يوميّاً من قبل شريحة كبيرة من الناس عبر صحيفة أساسية في الأردن. لكنه, تسلم لي عينه, آثر الوقوف مع حفنة صغيرة من الكتّاب أمثاله في الموقع المجابه لشعبه, الصادم لتطلّعات وطنه, ولكنّه الموقع الذي يهيئ له دخلاً محموداً, ورضاً قد يعيده, أقول قد, إلى موقعه في إحدى الوزارات القادمة!

        أتذكّر هنا حين استلم القلاب وزارة الإعلام في الأردن, وأتذكّر تصريحه بأنّه صوت الحكومة, وشبّه نفسه آنذاك بشاعر القبيلة الذي يعبّر عن آرائها وينافح عنها. وبغضّ النظر عن هذا التشبيه الذي يعيدنا إلى عصور الجاهلية والبداوة, ويدلل على سذاجة ممزوجة بحماقة في التعامل مع العصر وتحدّيات الوطن بل ومع مفهوم الشعر, فقد لعب الرجل دوره بجدارة, فكان لا شاعر القبيلة, بل بوق الحكومة. وكما لا بدّ أنّنا جميعنا ندرك أنّ الشعوب "القبائل" في زمننا هذا ليست هي الحكومات, ولا ينبغي لها, على الأقل في عالمنا العربي المقهورة شعوبه والمنتهكة حرياته!

        في مقالاته التي ذكرت سابقاً واستثارتني لأكتب هذا الكلام, يوضّح القلاب موقفه من الحرب الدائرة رحاها في لبنان, فيدافع عن موقفي مصر والسعودية, ويظهر "عظمة" الموقف الأردني من المأساة اللبنانية, المتمثّلة في إرسال طائرات الإغاثة, ووصول وزير الخارجيّة الأردنية إلى هناك (بعد أسبوعين!) دون أن يقول لنا ماذا فعل بالضبط, مبيّناً, خلاه الله لأمّه, أنّه لولا الجهد الأردني, سياسيّاً وإغاثيّاً, لحلّت كارثة!

  لكن كيف تسنّى للحكومة الأردنية أن تقوم بذلك؟ دعوه يقدّم الجواب بنفسه: "علاقات الأردنّ الدبلوماسيّة بإسرائيل هي التي سمحت بإقامة الجسر الجوّي بين عمّان وبيروت وهو شريان الحياة للشعب اللبناني المنكوب".

        وكأنّ زلزالاً هو ما حلّ بلبنان, أو إعصاراً أو طوفاناً! وكأنّ ما حدث هناك لم يكن بفعل الآلة العسكرية الإسرائيلية ذاتها!

        كأنّ الأطفال والنساء الذين يقتلون هناك, والبيوت والقرى التي تمسح من وجه الأرض, والجرحى بالآلاف والمشرّدين بمئات الألوف, والجسور التي تهدم, ومحطّات الكهرباء والمياه التي تدمّر, والصّراخ والنواح الذي يصمّ الآذان ويفري القلوب, كأنّ كلّ هذا كان بفعل الطبيعة مثلاً أو القضاء والقدر, حتى "تسمح" إسرائيل, عبر علاقاتها الدبلوماسيّة مع الحكومة الأردنية, بمدّ يد العون وتضميد الجراح!...

        أيّ دورٍ "نبيل" إذن تقدّمه الحكومة الأردنيّة لهذا الشعب "المنكوب"!!

        بل أيّ نفاح أحمق عن موقف متخاذل تبنّاه هذا "القلّاب"! وهو إذ يسمّي الحرب الدائرة هناك "بالمؤامرة القذرة", مشيراً بطرف خفي (إذ لا جرأة لديه على تسمية الأشياء بأسمائها!) إلى مسؤوليّة حزب الله عن كلّ ذلك الخراب والدّمار والقتل, فهو لا ينسى أن يسجّل موقفه المتوافق والمتماهي مع موقفي إسرائيل وأمريكا, حيث يقول:"إسرائيل ليس لها مطامع في أراضي لبنان, وليس لديها برنامج ضدّ الدولة اللبنانيّة, ولا تخطّط لجعل لبنان وطناً بديلاً".

أليس هذا ما يردّده صبح مساء بوش وأولمرت؟ أليس هذا ما كذبته الوقائع على الأرض, من خلال قصف القرى والأحياء الأهلة بالمدنيين وتدمير البنية التحتيّة للبنان, كل لبنان, وتشريد ما يزيد على مليون إنسان؟ أليس هذا ما اعترض عليه كلّ المحللين السياسيين وزعامات لبنان النظيفة؟.. وأخيراً أليس هذا عكس ما ذهبت إليه رايس من أنّ هدف هذه الحرب هو إعادة خلق شرق أوسط جديد!

        إذن هو عوضاً عن الدّفاع عن شرف المقاومة, وبدل الوقوف إجلالاً لهؤلاء الذين يدفعون بأرواحهم ليردّوا شيئاً من الصّفعات التي تلقيناها, نحن العرب وما زلنا نتلقّاها, عبر ما يزيد على نصف قرن, من عدو مغتصب دموي حاقد, يتبنى الصالح القلاب "المقولة الإسرائيلية" ويعطيها العذر, ويقدّم لها الغطاء!

        أريد أن أقول نحن هنا في الأردن, شعباً ومثقّفين وقوى وطنية متّحدون في استنكارنا للموقف المائع لحكومتنا تجاه ما يحدث لأهلنا في لبنان وفلسطين, ورفضنا للتبريرات التي يقدّمها الإعلام الرسمي ومن يمثّله من الكتّاب المأجورين أمثال صالح القلاب. وسيظلّ الأردنّ عربياً لا تنقصه النخوة والشهامة, وسنظلّ نناضل ضد من يحاولون تكميم أفواهنا والتحدّث باسمنا وتشويه سمعتنا, ممن ابتلينا بهم وليسوا منّا. وأمّا هؤلاء الحفنة المتحكّمون بنا وبإعلامنا فهم لا يمثلوننا بحال, ولا نفتأ نصيح بهم: وطّيتوا عقالنا!!                    

   

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