al-Hasani
ELITE MEMBER
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- Feb 1, 2013
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I think Hezbollah and the Shi'a community broadly needs to reconcile itself to a certain reality: the Assad regime will not and cannot survive. And even if it holds out for another decade, it will not have the capability to project influence into Lebanon as it has for the last four decades. The calculus has changed and Iran will not be confronting Israel and the West as it once did either - that route has proved economically unviable.
How that will manifest on the ground is a long story and probably beyond the discussion here.
The Christians are politically very fragmented, confused and split. Some are essentially siding with an alliance of minorities against the Sunnis, while others have historically reconciled themselves with the Sunni Arab depth (such as Samir Geagea, who has a romance with KSA).
But ultimately, they are politically weak and are on the back-foot demographically and are losing a lot of land. So instead of being active deciders in the country, they're increasingly becoming sidekicks siding either with the Sunnis or the Shi'ites, or M14 and M8, and betting on their side winning.
Yes, nothing has changed then from the time I followed Lebanese politics more closely.
Yes, the Christian Arabs are becoming fewer in numbers for each decade, which is IMO a shame, and the significant political influence they once had which often manifested itself in Arab nationalism is becoming more and more irrelevant for each day.
What I would do personally as a Sunni Arab politician/leader in Lebanon would be to play the Lebanese nationalism card coupled with a Arab nationalism that is inclusive for Christian Arabs like we saw in Iraq and saw/see in Syria. That way they would turn sides definitively. I think that it is the fear of being oppressed that makes them play on both horses at once. The uncertainty. If just the economic (which a alliance with the Sunni Arab world would quickly solve) and security situation (the hardest hurdle) improves then the rest will follow automatically IMO.
Lastly the Druze can come under that camp as they apparently consider themselves ancestors of the Arab Christian Lakhmid Kingdom who were originally from Yemen.
At least the powerful princely Arsalan family does that and I have heard that they play the biggest role among the Druze community in Lebanon.