Macron’s ‘risky bet’ in Lebanon
French president lays out his strategy in the former
French protectorate as it struggles to overcome latest social upheaval.
By RYM
MOMTAZ 9/1/20, 7:07 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuel-macrons-risky-bet-in-lebanon-beirut-explosion/
BEIRUT —
Emmanuel Macron says he’s making a “risky bet” by working to avoid a political
collapse in Lebanon, but is limited in what he can achieve.
"It's
the last chance for this system," the French president told POLITICO in an
interview while en route from Paris to Beirut Monday evening.
Macron is
in the Middle Eastern country and former French protectorate for the second
time within a month to try to chart a way forward based on reforms in exchange
for a bailout. The country has been reeling from a long-standing political and
financial crisis, in addition to the resurgence of the coronavirus and the
massive explosion that ripped through Beirut's port in August, killing nearly
200 and prompting the resignation of Hassan Diab as prime minister.
After weeks
of French pressure to nominate a so-called credible figure to the premiership,
political parties agreed to put forward diplomat Mustapha Adib as the new prime
minister on Monday — just hours before Macron’s arrival.
The French
president has emerged as the only global heavyweight to have offered the
country's leaders a potential path to safety, though his critics say he isn't
doing enough.
Lebanon's
ruling class has steamrolled previous attempts by the international community
to push reform in the country. Macron warned the next three months will be
"fundamental" for real change to happen, and if it doesn't, he will
switch tack, taking punitive measures that range from withholding a vital
international financial bailout to imposing sanctions against the ruling class.
But
Macron’s detractors say he is not using the full breadth of France's influence
and power to bring about the change he seeks, given the Lebanese party
currently most opposed to real reforms — Hezbollah — is empowered to do so due
to its umbilical bond with Iran and the formidable financing and arming it provides.
Macron
refuted the critique, arguing: "If we fight force with force, that’s
called escalation," and that only leads to war, which he said is the last
thing Lebanon needs.
"Don't
ask France to come wage war against a Lebanese political force ... It would be
absurd and crazy."
The choice
Macron is faced with in Lebanon is the same one liberal democracies are facing
in dealing with countries such as Russia, China, Turkey and Iran, which don’t
hesitate to use armed force, violate international laws and subvert the global
rules-based system.
"The
difficulty of those who defend a pluralist path is not to fall into the trap of
the escalation of powers; it’s the trap I don’t want to fall into and I won’t
fall into, including in the Eastern Mediterranean," Macron said, referring
to Turkey’s rising tensions with Greece over maritime territory.
Macron
insisted he doesn’t have a record of being soft and isn’t about to back down in
Lebanon either — citing his administration’s decision to launch an airstrike in
Syria in response to the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons against its own
people, and deployment of a ship and two fighter jets to the Mediterranean in
response to Ankara’s moves in disputed waters.
The French
leader said he plans to engage with the new prime minister-designate and all
Lebanese political parties in parliament — including those he doesn’t agree
with. Macron said he wants credible commitments from political party leaders
that they’ll make reforms, including a concrete timetable for implementing
changes and holding a parliamentary election within “six to 12 months.” He also
said he wants to implement a "demanding" follow-up mechanism on these
pledges.
Uneasy
start
Macron’s
return to Lebanon after a first visit following the blast has been met with a
wave of skepticism of what he's been able to achieve, even among those who
hailed him as a potential savior for the country only three weeks ago.
A small
crowd waited for Macron outside the house of legendary Lebanese singer Fayrouz
— whom he visited Monday in his first stop — shouting "Adib won't
do!" and "We want Nawaf Salam!"
Critics are
disgruntled with the choice of the new prime minister-designate, a hitherto
largely unknown figure, who served as chief of staff to Najib Mikati, a former
embattled prime minister, and most recently as ambassador to Germany.
Macron said
the closest alternative, Nawaf Salam — a current judge on the International
Court of Justice who has been the main candidate for prime minister of civil
society and opposition groups that have been protesting since October 2019 —
would not have worked.
Hezbollah
vetoed the choice. On top of that, Salam’s support comes from protest movements
rather than political parties, meaning he wouldn’t have had enough
parliamentary support. He would have needed to be granted exceptional
legislative powers for a transitional period to be able to pass reforms and
hold elections unobstructed — something France couldn’t secure.
"If I
imposed Mr. Nawaf Salam ... we kill his candidacy because we put him in a
system in which the parliament will block everything,” Macron said.
But Macron
also accused the protest movement of not rising to the occasion.
Macron
claimed he’s exerting pressure in Lebanon in a way that hasn’t been done
before.
"A
name works if the street knows how to produce a leader who leads the
revolution, and breaks the system. It didn’t work, at least not today, maybe
tomorrow or after tomorrow it will."
Macron also
rejected accusations that he personally chose Adib and made a deal with Iran.
"I
don’t know him, I didn’t choose him, and it’s not my job to interfere or
approve," he said.
Macron
claimed he’s exerting pressure in Lebanon in a way that hasn’t been done before
by visiting the country in such quick succession; holding frank, long and
repeated conversations with the ruling class; threatening to withhold aid and
impose sanctions, among other things.
Citing
Italian Marxist writer Antonio Gramsci, Macron said: "The new is having a
hard time emerging, and the old is persevering. We have to find a way through,
that’s what I’m trying to do."
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário