Mr.
Saniora, Give peace a Chance
September 2/06
I call cals on Lebanon's Prime
Minister Fuad Saniora, who has a lot of good potential and
intentions, to abandon once and forever the notorious
and historically devastating Arab rhetoric and attitudes. There
is no doubt that productive and credible Lebanese politics
cannot be practiced any
longer with this Arab no-stance mentality and indecisive style,
especially during this crucial period in the governance of
Lebanon. The PM ought to
start putting his tongue and mind together where Lebanon's
interests, safety, peace, future, democracy and prosperity are.
He can no longer waste time,
resources and opportunities in cajoling and appeasing Hezbollah,
Syria and Iran, and go on with futile compromises that keep
Lebanon an easy prey to
terrorism and terrorists.
In his last interview with the Canadian CBC, and again
yesterday in his spontaneous response to Israeli PM Ehud
Olmert's statement calling for establishing
direct contacts between Lebanon and Israel, Mr. Saniora's
position was neither cold nor warm; it was lukewarm, evasive and
elusive.
In regards to Hezbollah's disarmament, addressed in the CBC
interview, Mr. Saniora struggled to convince his audience that
the Lebanese army will confiscate
all the illegal arms it may encounter in areas where it deploys.
Up till now he has declined using the term disarmament and has
never yet said that his government will disarm Hezbollah.
Confiscating arms when only encountered is simply like treating
a malignant cancer with a band aid.
As far as relations and contacts with Israel, Mr. Saniora is
supposed to look around seriously and stop his daydreaming and
wishful thinking approaches. He
needs to desensitize his mentality and conduct from obsolete
residual myths he was conditioned to when he was a Syrian stooge
so he, and his country, can live peacefully with, and accept the
reality of the existing Israeli-Arabic relations and contacts.
All Middle Eastern and Muslim countries, including the so-called
Arab ones, have either exchanged formal diplomatic relations
with Israel after signing mutual peace accords (Jordan, Egypt,
and the Palestinians), or are conducting direct overt contacts
with Israel (Qatar, Bahrain, Tunisia, Morocco, Libya, Sudan and
Iraq), or are engaged with the Hebrew State in indirect covert
relations and contacts (Syria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Yemen, Arab
Emirates)
Meanwhile all these countries, including Lebanon, have already
recognized the right of existence of the Israeli State when all
of them with no exception
agreed to the two UN Resolutions 242 (1967) and 332 (1972) that
called for peace in return for land.
Mr. Saniora, who loves continuously tagging Lebanon as an Arab
state and adores bragging about Arab nationalism should put an
end, once and for all, to
the myth that says "Lebanon will be the last Arab State to sign
a peace deal with Israel". In fact, Lebanon is not the only
so-called Arab State that is holding back from forging direct or
indirect relations with the Jewish State, but the only one in
the whole world.
Mr. Saniora is one among many other dignified Lebanese leaders
and politicians who proudly and openly see Egypt's President,
Hosni Mubarak, Jordan's King Abdullah, and Qatar's ruling Prince
as highly prestigious role models in Arabism and Islamism. What
an irony knowing that these three Arab leaders have
official diplomatic ties and relations with Israel.
We call on Mr. Saniora and on the rest of Lebanon's leadership,
both those in political and religious circles, to begin dealing
without hesitation, shame or
procrastination with the reality as other brotherly and sisterly
neighboring Arab countries have done. Let us bury the term enemy
12 feet under and earn an
everlasting peace in the Middle East.
Background
On Wednesday August 30/06, Lebanon's PM, Fuad Saniora refused
to have any direct contact with Israel in a spontaneous hasty
response to a statement made by Israeli's PM Olmart who called
for the establishment of direct contacts with the Lebanese
Government. Saniora officially stated that Lebanon would be the
last Arab country to ever sign a peace deal with the Jewish
state. "Let it be clear, we are not seeking any agreement until
there is just and comprehensive peace based on the Arab
initiative," Fuad Saniora said. He was referring to a plan that
came out of a 2002 Arab League summit in Beirut. It calls for
Israel to return all territories it conquered in the 1967
Mideast war, the establishment of a Palestinian state with
Jerusalem as its capital and a solution to the Palestinian
refugee problem — all in exchange for peace and full
normalization of Arab relations with Israel. Israel has long
sought a peace deal with Lebanon, but Beirut has hesitated as
long as Israel's conflicts with the Palestinians and Syria
remained unresolved. Saniora said Lebanon wants to go back to
the 1949 armistice agreement that formally ended the
Arab-Israeli war over Israel's creation.
*Elias
Bejjani
Chairman for the Canadian Lebanese Coordinating Council (LCCC)
Human Rights activist, journalist & political commentator.
Spokesman for the Canadian Lebanese Human Rights Federation (CLHRF)
E.Mail
phoenicia@hotmail.com
LCCC Web
Site http://www.10452lccc.com
CLHRF Website http://www.clhrf.com
The lccc is the Federal umbrella for the
following nonprofit municipal, provincial and federal Canadian
registered groups:
Canadian Lebanese Human Rights Federation, (CLHRF),
Canadian Lebanese Free Patriotic Movement (FPM-Canada),
Phoenician Club of Mississauga (PCOM),/Canadian Phoenician
Community Services Club (CPCSC),Canadian Lebanese Christian
Heritage Club (CLCHC),World Lebanese Cultural Union (WLCU)-Canadian
Chapter.