Lebanon's 'Arab Spring' shakes Iran and the region

Lebanon's 'Arab Spring' shakes Iran and the region
Comment: If the Arab and Iranian regimes hope to survive, they should implement a new social contract enshrining the people's right to hold their leaders accountable, writes Emile Nakhleh.
7 min read
07 Nov, 2019
Demands for justice have targeted all politicians regardless of sect, religion, and social status [AFP]
Lebanon's largely peaceful 'Arab Spring' is a model in civic activism for the greater Middle East.

Prime Minister Saad Hariri's offer to resign in response to the country's popular uprising, which has been devoid of bloodshed and mayhem, is starkly different from the response of regimes to the first Arab spring in 2011.

It's also different from the Iraqi government's bloody response to protests in Baghdad even though following the killing of hundreds of demonstrators, the Iraqi prime minister has also offered to resign.

Yet, the Lebanese uprising, peaceful as it is, poses a serious challenge to the very existence of the Lebanese state. It has also shaken the clerical regime in Iran and is an ominous harbinger for the neighbouring Arab rulers. Lebanon is a precarious state in which trash has been piling up, public services and utilities have been sporadic, and the desire to leave the country has been the overwhelming concern of so many Lebanese.

Attaining a new political order free of sectarianism and corruption in Lebanon is a tall order, rendering the likelihood of success minimal. The Beirut demonstrations are patently indigenous and locally-driven.

The demands for justice and dignity have targeted corruption and all corrupt politicians regardless of their sect, religion, and social status. "All means all," shouted the demonstrators.

Not just the prime minister, but all politicians, including the Hezbollah-supported Maronite president Michel Aoun, all the ministers, and other high-level officials who have benefitted from corruption through partisan patronage positions and other shady deals.

The key demand for a new secular and corruption-free order strikes at the very existence of Lebanon

Eight years ago, the popular revolts were opposed by Arab rulers but supported by the Iranian regime. The ongoing uprisings in Lebanon and Iraq are opposed by Iranian and Arab regimes.

Although the Lebanese popular movement is not religious, its key demand for a new secular and corruption-free order strikes at the very existence of Lebanon, which also makes the current protest movement so unique in the modern annals of the Arab world. The previous Arab Spring aimed at regime change in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, and Libya, but street protests in Lebanon have attacked the religious edifice of Lebanon.

Arab autocratic regimes are worried that the protest virus will inflict their societies and threaten their hold on power. Iran and its proxies in Lebanon and Iraq, including Hezbollah and the Da'wa Party, are concerned because any serious change in the existing power alignments in the two countries will seriously undermine Iran's political influence in both countries.

This fear is what has driven Hezbollah's leader Hassan Nasrallah and Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to denounce the protests as the work of "foreign hands," presumably the United States and Israel.

Qasem Sulaimani, the head of Iran's Quds Force, recently urged Iraqi leaders to respond to street protests as harshly as the Iranian leadership did in suppressing the "Green Revolution" of 2009 in Iran. What he has discovered on his recent visit to Baghdad's Green Zone is that 2019 is vastly different from 2009. Iraqi youth stayed in the streets despite the government's violent response.

Iran's clerical regime and Arab autocrats seem incapable of halting Arab publics' rejection of humiliation, and their persistent demands to root out corruption from their societies and hold their leaders accountable. Instead, Arab and Iranian autocrats and their proxies have been impugning the motives of the demonstrators and belittling the objectives of the new Arab Spring.

Read more: Tuk-tuks of Tahrir: The unlikely symbol of a revolution in Iraq

In Lebanon, Nabih Berri, leader of the other Shia party Amal and speaker of the parliament, much like Hezbollah's leader Nasrallah, has also hued the Iranian line in denouncing the protest movement. He and his ilk are worried that they might lose the sectarian golden goose that has hatched and nurtured corruption in Lebanon in the past half century. A bit of history is illustrative.

A brief history of Lebanon's 'confessionalism'

Lebanon was established as an independent state in 1943 with a 'confessional' or religious system of government in which senior leadership positions were allotted on the basis of religious or sectarian affiliation. The so-called National Charter prescribed, for example, that the President of the Republic will be a Maronite, the Prime Minister a Sunni Muslim, and the Speaker of Parliament a Shia Muslim.

In the early years of independence, the minister of defense was always a Druze, and the Minister of Foreign Affairs was always a Greek Catholic. The Christian community, which according to the 1932 census was a majority, wanted to preserve its status as a privileged majority. Of course, the demographic make-up of the population has dramatically changed since then, with Muslims now accounting for more than 50 percent of all Lebanese.

The days of banking and financial leaders as untouchable gnomes are long gone

Sectarianism and the 1975-1990 civil war have contributed to systemic instability and government paralysis. The confessional basis of the political system was reaffirmed following the civil war with the Taif agreement of 1989, which also extended Lebanese sovereignty to the southern part of the country that was occupied by Israel.

The Israeli occupation that began in 1982 ended in 2000. The Syrian occupation that started in the early years of the civil war ended in 2005.

The Taif accords allowed Syria to extend and deepen its military and security hegemony over Lebanon and indirectly empowered Hezbollah to emerge as the most powerful political party and king maker in Lebanese politics.

Although the Syrians left Lebanon a decade and a half ago, Hezbollah continued to dominate the political landscape. In fact, President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri came to power only with the acquiescence of Hezbollah.

Unlike other militias that were forced to disarm following the Taif accords, Hezbollah has refused to disarm. Hezbollah has maintained that its ability to thwart Israel's military assault in 2006 and to protect the border between Lebanon and Israel justifies its continued build-up of a credible weapons arsenal.

Sadly, Hezbollah, at Iran's behest, decided to participate in the Syrian civil war on insistence in the battle to keep Assad in power. Assad serves Iran's interests in the Levant, and therefore it was logical for Hezbollah, as Iran's regional proxy, to send its fighters to Syria to shore up Assad.

Regime response

Much to the consternation of regional autocrats and corrupt governments, the popular upheaval across the region continued unabated. Although the focus has been on Lebanon and Iraq, massive street protests also have been occurring in Algeria, Sudan, and elsewhere.

The movement is indigenous, and the demands are for a better life, a more hopeful future, good governance, accountable leaders, and an end to humiliation are genuine. They stem not from a foreign instigation but from local conditions. The gap between the small excessively wealthy minority and the ever growing poorer, unemployed, and underemployed majority has increased exponentially.

Social media has played a significant role in mobilising the crowds but not in starting the protest movement. Arab youth are keenly aware through social media of the economic and social conditions in their respective countries. Again, the reach of social media has made their deprivation, by comparison with their counterparts in western societies, more stark, more intolerable, and less unacceptable.

If the Arab and Iranian regimes hope to survive, they should implement a new social contract with their peoples that would enshrine the people's right to hold their economic and political leaders accountable. The days of banking and financial leaders as untouchable gnomes are long gone.

Wealth accumulation should become transparent. The new social contract should delineate new rules for legitimate and illegitimate means of amassing wealth. Street protesters will tell you that there is no way on God's earth that a cabinet member could become so wealthy overnight from his monthly salary.

Acquiring of opulence through shady deals is the handmaiden of corruption, social and economic divisions, injustice, humiliation, and political instability.

This is what has driven thousands of people to the streets. If regimes do not understand this phenomenon and act on it, their security states and services will not be able to save them, and they will be swept away.


Dr Emile Nakhleh was a Senior Intelligence Service officer and Director of the Political Islam Strategic Analysis Programme at the Central Intelligence Agency. 

He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a Research Professor and Director of the Global and National Security Policy Institute at the University of New Mexico, and the author of A Necessary Engagement: Reinventing America’s Relations with the Muslim World and Bahrain: Political Development in a Modernizing State

Follow him on Twitter: @e_nakhleh

This article originally appeared on LobeLog

Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The New Arab, its editorial board or staff.