Saudis increasingly frustrated with Lebanon
Ibrahim al-Hatlani/Al-Monitor/February 29/16
Saudi Arabia is not happy with Lebanon or its failure to control the Islamist militant group Hezbollah, and it’s making its displeasure clear. What’s not known is what it will take to appease Riyadh. The Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Feb. 23 asked its citizens not to travel to Lebanon, for their own safety. It has also asked citizens residing in or visiting Lebanon to leave, unless they absolutely have to stay. This stance pe rsists despite attempts by the Lebanese government and others to convince Riyadh to reconsider its Feb. 19 decision to cancel $4 billion in military aid to Lebanon. Riyadh said it is protesting Lebanese Foreign Minister of Affairs Gebran Bassil’s stance during a Jan. 10 ministerial meeting of the Arab League. Bassil refrained from condemning the recent attack on the Saudi Arabian embassy and its consulate in Iran. Lebanon has a long-standing policy of distancing itself from external conflicts.
Saudi Arabia’s actions come against a Lebanese government that has been politically hijacked by Hezbollah, according to Hezbollah’s opponents in Lebanon and abroad. Also, Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah has been escalating his media attacks on Saudi Arabia.
Adding to the hostility, Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi declared Feb. 16 that Hezbollah members have been directly implicated in supporting Houthis in their war against the Saudi-backed legitimate Yemeni government. On Feb. 24, the military adviser to Saudi Defense Minister Ahmad Assiri said, “We have intelligence information and recordings about the involvement of Hezbollah’s militia in supporting Houthis.” That same day, Saudi media published a video that seems to have been taped between June and July. The Yemeni army said it had found the video in an area where the Houthi militia had been. The video reportedly showed a Lebanese recruiter from Hezbollah talking to Houthi soldiers about carrying out suicide attacks in Saudi Arabia. “Hezbollah is a threat to all Arab states, especially the Gulf,” a source from the Gulf Cooperation Council told Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity. “We have all suffered from Hezbollah’s terrorism and Iran’s use of it,” he continued. “The security services have succeeded in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE [United Arab Emirates] in controlling several security and financial operations of Hezbollah during the past three years, and we are in solidarity with Saudi Arabia.
“There must be a radical change in the balance of power in Lebanon, either through the emergence of a party with equal strength to Hezbollah or through weakening Hezbollah to become equal to other Lebanese parties.”
Hezbollah anticipated the Gulf’s angry measures and sent a security delegation to Cairo. The delegation met with Egyptian officials, reportedly admitted Hezbollah’s role in Yemen and asked Cairo to intercede.But Saudi Arabia is not expected to accept any mediation in this issue, especially from Cairo, which hosted the Houthis in July and permitted them to stage seminars during which they criticized Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi retaliation against Lebanon surprised many observers there and abroad. It is part of a series of security measures that Riyadh has taken against figures or parties operating directly or indirectly in Saudi Arabia in favor of Iran or Hezbollah. These measures include Saudi trials in May that restricted bank accounts, investments and real estate assets of 44 Lebanese people affiliated with Hezbollah in Saudi Arabia. Saudi authorities also pursued several Shiite clerics in the eastern provinces of Qatif and Ihsaa who collect money from their Shiite citizens and send it to their religious authorities in Tehran. Some clerics were arrested on the grounds of money laundering, like Sheikh Khaled Seif, who was tried in October and sentenced to five years in jail.
The kingdom’s ruling parties are convinced Hezbollah is working with Iran to penetrate the Gulf and foil or paralyze Saudi Arabia’s plans to lead the region on both military and security levels. Those plans began when King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud became ruler, and grew as his ambitious son Mohammad Bin Salman launched Operation Decisive Storm in March. The plans continued with the kingdom’s success in forming an Arab alliance to face Houthis in Yemen and were bolstered in December when it formed a 34-country Muslim military alliance to fight terrorism.
Saudi Ambassador to Beirut Awad Assiri launched an open-arms policy in April 2013, but Riyadh has failed to contain Hezbollah behind diplomatic doors. Now it seems Riyadh will not stop at diplomatic and economic displays of anger. It’s not looking for a middle ground with the Lebanese government, which is unable to control Hezbollah locally and abroad.