Bush's Latest Shia Pet: Hezbollah!
"U.S. Called Ready to See Hezbollah in Lebanon Role" By STEVEN R. WEISMAN, NYT
After  years of campaigning against Hezbollah, the radical Shiite Muslim party in  Lebanon, as a terrorist pariah, the Bush administration is grudgingly going  along with efforts by France and the United Nations to steer the party into the  Lebanese political mainstream, administration officials say.
 The administration's shift was described by American, European and United  Nations officials as a reluctant recognition that Hezbollah, besides having a  militia and sponsoring attacks on Israelis, is an enormous political force in  Lebanon that could block Western efforts to get Syria to withdraw its troops.
 On Tuesday, Hezbollah showed its clout by sponsoring one of the biggest  demonstrations of recent Lebanese history, bringing hundreds of thousands of  largely Shiite supporters into central Beirut to support the party's alliance  with Syria and, by extension, the presence in Lebanon of 14,000 Syrian troops.
 Lebanon's political crisis deepened Wednesday when Parliament renominated the  pro-Syrian prime minister nine days after he resigned under pressure from street  demonstrations. If opposition leaders refuse to join his transitional  government, tension over the rules for elections in May and the withdrawal of  Syrian troops from the country will be high.
 The United States and France sponsored a United Nations Security Council  resolution last year calling for Syrian troops to leave Lebanon, and a special  United Nations envoy, Terje Roed Larsen, is to press for the troop withdrawal.  Officially, Mr. Larsen's mission is also to demand the disarmament of Hezbollah,  but as a practical matter that objective has receded, various officials say.
 "The main players are making Hezbollah a lower priority," said a  diplomat who is closely tracking the negotiations. "There is a realization  by France and the United States that if you tackle Hezbollah now, you array the  Shiites against you. With elections coming in Lebanon, you don't want the entire  Shiite community against you."
 The new posture of the administration was described by its officials, who asked  not to be identified because of longstanding American antipathy toward  Hezbollah.
 "Hezbollah has American blood on its hands," an administration  official said, referring to such events as the truck bombing that killed more  than 200 American marines in Beirut in 1983. "They are in the same category  as Al Qaeda. The administration has an absolute aversion to admitting that  Hezbollah has a role to play in Lebanon, but that is the path we're going  down."       
Lebanon has been by no means an autocracy since Syria ended the civil war in 1990, but pushing "Democracy!" in Lebanon will largely benefit Hezbollah, since the traditional Lebanese political system is severely gerrymandered against the Shiites (and in favor of the less anti-Israel groups, such as the Maronite Christians). Hezbollah only has one tenth of the seats in the current Lebanese assembly but they likely have a plurality among voters.
 
 
 
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