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The Bekaa
Beckons
John R.
Thomson
Lebanon’s
beautiful Bekaa
Valley
is a hotbed of evil. The primary connecting link between
Syria and
Lebanon, the ruggedly lush valley is an important center
for much of what troubles and terrifies the world:
drugs, terrorists and, reportedly, weapons of mass
destruction. The narrow 75 mile long corridor has, in
fact, become one of the most dangerous places on earth –
and not just for the chance passersby but also for the
world at large. It is long past time for the Bekaa
Valley
to be returned to its peaceful past.
Granted, both legitimate and contraband caravans
transited the Bekaa as they transported all kinds of
merchandise to and from the great port of
Beirut.
Most of the traffic was benign enough, manufactured
goods heading east from
Beirut’s port and
agricultural products moving west towards Europe. For
20 years, however, a very different kind of traffic has
developed: the Bekaa has become one of the world’s most
important transit, as well as refining points, for opium
and its derivatives.
Earlier, in the 1960s, the place was so beautiful and
close to Beirut that families would drive out for
leisurely picnics in the green valley and surrounding
hills, or visit the stately Roman ruins of Baalbek. No
more. Syrian troops are bivouacked in the valley and
people driving out from Damascus are likely to be
Hezbollah terrorists. Founded and financed by Iran, and
coddled by Syria, Hezbollah is dedicated to the
destruction of Israel. Their fighters linger for
training in the Bekaa, before heading south to the
Israeli border to cause as much mischief as possible.
The Bekaa’s descent into an existence far harsher than
caravans and picnics could be said to have started in
those same, turbulent 60s. Reporting for the Sunday
Times of London during 1967’s Six Day War, I drove
from Beirut through the Bekaa, heading for Syria’s Golan
Heights, soon to fall into Israeli hands. As we paused
in the center of the valley, a roar from behind us
turned out to be a flight of four Lebanese Air Force
Hawker-Hunter jet fighters. Moments later, swooping in
from the southeast came four much faster Israeli Mirage
fighters. As the Lebanese “fighters” flew overhead, the
pilot in the lead aircraft “waggled” his wings in an
internationally recognized peaceful salute and veered
north; the lead Israeli Mirage returned the greeting and
banked eastwards towards Damascus.
Since that moment of bizarre pilot politesse,
things have declined precipitately. As peace unfolded
in 1967 and during the rest of the decade, a flood of
Palestinians surged north from the territory newly
occupied by Israel. Inter-communal hostilities between
Lebanese Christians and Muslims took a massive toll.
Beirut was reduced to rubble. Israel invaded Lebanon
from the south, followed by Syria from the east. In
1982, some 1,000 Palestinian refugees were massacred in
the horrific Sabra and Chatila camps on the city’s
outskirts.
In October 1983, the U.S. Marines’ peacekeeping
encampment near the Beirut airport was truck-bombed
killing 241 troops. When the remaining Marines decamped
having scarcely retaliated, Arabs throughout the region
decided America had no stomach for confronting the
simmering discontent emanating from the tortured
Palestinian-Israeli confrontation. And the discontent
fed as it spread on Arabia’s
frustrated awareness of its own social, cultural and
military foibles.
With Syria effectively in control of Lebanon and already
involved in the drug trade, it was a small step to
utilize the Bekaa
Valley
as a transit base, and another small step to set up
heroin processing facilities. Indeed, units of the
Syrian military have long provided the Bekaa’s dirty
denizens “protection” services … to protect their
monetary interests in the various businesses.
It was equally easy – just another small step -- for
Syria to wink at Iran sending hundreds of Hezbollah
recruits for training in the Bekaa. The two countries
had been on friendly terms ever since the mullahs took
over in Tehran in 1979 – so much so that, in the
mid-80s, thousands of Iranian women, widowed from the
Iraq-Iran war, went to Damascus to seek husbands.
Special hotels were designated for the ladies, who on
arrival would create cash by selling a few Persian
carpets and anything else of value they had been able to
bring, in order to lure their Syrian sweethearts back
home.
There the Bekaa
Valley
sat in corrupted splendor. The formerly relaxed valley
had become a safe haven for the manufacture of illicit
drugs and a training ground for fanatical terrorists.
What could have been a more natural place for Saddam
Hussein, under threat of invasion and destruction, to
warehouse his WMD?
Following the end of major Operation Iraqi Freedom
hostilities, Israeli intelligence began last June to
investigate the possibility, and within weeks became
convinced that substantial quantities of Iraqi WMD had
transited Syria and were now stashed less than 15 miles
from Israeli territory. So convinced were they that
plans were made for offensive strikes aimed at the Bekaa
and at Damascus. And then, silence.
As the Israelis were rattling their sabers, Syrian
President Bashar Al-Assad assured Secretary of State
Colin Powell that his government was at last moving
against terrorist organizations in Damascus, and they
did so, for as long as it took Powell to return to
Washington, DC. Then, in a classic Damascene maneuver,
Syrian officials said there had been some
misunderstanding and rescinded many of the concessions
the American Secretary of State had a few days earlier
announced had been agreed with Al-Assad. It seemed
clear Powell had been hoodwinked into convincing the
Israelis to stand down from their offensive posture.
As if that were not enough, credible reports place
significant quantities of WMD at three clearly
identified locations within Syria, transported by a
company,
Al-Bachaer, owned by the Al-Assad family.
Nevertheless, for
more than nine months, there has been nothing but
silence about this most compelling solution to the
mystery of what became of Saddam’s WMD.
The Bekaa
Valley is a
fetid swamp of subversion and it is time to drain it,
whether or not WMD are found there. As was the case in
Iraq, there
are multiple reasons to relieve Lebanon, the region and
the world of the Bekaa’s multiple dangers.
What a victory it would be, were the heroin
factories and the Hezbollah fighters removed from their
cushy existence, forcefully if necessary.
Moreover, it is time to tell Bashar Al-Assad to come
clean on a host of unsavory subjects, including
·
revealing Iraqi WMD locations in Syria and cooperating
in their disposal;
·
handing
over Iraqi funds held in Damascus banks;
·
capturing ex-officials of Saddam’s regime hiding around
the country;
·
closing
down Syria’s own WMD programs;
·
withdrawing Syrian troops and ending the occupation of
Lebanon.
Just as the mood in the United States has altered
radically since 9/11, so has the Middle East’s image of
America since the end of major hostilities in Iraq.
Once again, there is respect for the United States. Not
affection, but respect. That respect has resulted in
numerous national changes of direction towards more open
societies:
Iraq:
promulgation of an interim constitution as a first step
to open election of representatives and writing of a
permanent constitution;
Libya:
discontinuance of all WMD programs and renunciation of
the presidential aspirations of Colonel Muammar
Qaddafi’s son, Seif, groomed for 12 years to succeed his
father;
Egypt:
declaration by President Hosni Mubarrak that a special
commission will create a democratic succession plan and
simultaneous denial that his son, Gamal, groomed for 10
years to take over, was ever a candidate to succeed the
man who has headed Egypt for 22 years;
Saudi Arabia:
decision to hold the first democratic elections in the
country’s history, to fill half the seats on municipal
councils, as well as increased women’s rights;
Kuwait, Bahrain,
Qatar:
announcement of plans for faster-paced democratization
and more liberal women’s rights.
The recently completed, corrupt elections in
Iran
emphasize the progress in the Arab states. Moreover,
despite its venality at the polls,
Iran seems to be
cooperating, however reluctantly, with the civilized
world regarding their nuclear development programs.
The foregoing represent significant advances in the
Middle East’s glacial political climate. In less than a
year, seven Arab regimes have taken important steps to
loosen their autocratic grips on their populations.
If it can happen in these countries, progress can surely
occur in Lebanon and Syria. For the sake of peace, in
the region and worldwide, it is essential that the Bekaa
Valley
be returned to a non-threatening condition. And for the
sake of its longevity, it is critical that the Syrian
government make serious efforts to cooperate with the
United States
in rounding up the Iraqi exiles, funds and military
munitions the country harbors.
John R. Thomson has
lived and worked in the Middle East for three decades as
businessman, diplomat and journalist. Starting before
1967’s Six Day War, he has reported extensively on the
region’s wars and geopolitics from bases in
Beirut,
Cairo and Riyadh.
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