As our colleagues Hwaida Saad and Anne Barnard report from Beirut, the deadly bombings at the gate of the Iranian Embassy in the Lebanese capital on Tuesday were immediately interpreted there as a form of retaliation for Iranâs intervention in the civil war in neighboring Syria.
That was abundantly clear in the way the attacks were reported by Al Manar, a satellite news channel operated by Hezbollah, the militant and political organization supported by Iran that represents Lebanonâs Shiite Muslim community. Since Hezbollahâs fighters began crossing the border into Syria, they have helped to tip the balance of power back in favor of President Bashar al-Assadâs forces, and away from the mainly Sunni Muslim insurgents supported by their sectarian allies in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states.
One Manar report â" which included extremely graphic images of those wounded in the attack on the diplomatic compound in south Beirut â" featured a statement from Ali Ammar, who represents Hezbollah in the Lebanese Parliament, bemoaning the fact that, he said, this violence was âsupported by some Arabs.â
Another member of Hezbollahâs political wing, the agriculture minister Hussein Hajj Hassan, also appeared in the Manar report, calling the bombings âan addition to the record of terrorist, criminal acts by these killers.â
More graphic footage of the attackâs victims from Al Manar â" meaning âThe Beaconâ in Arabic â" was also broadcast by Al Alam, the Iranian governmentâs Arabic-language satellite news channel.
Hezbollah, which was nurtured by Iran as a militant force to combat Israel during its occupation of southern Lebanon, has rejected criticism of its intervention in Syria by claiming that the Assad government is an important ally in the âresistanceâ to the Jewish state. In the introduction to the Manar report, a journalist asserted that the bombings at the Iranian compound, in a part of Beirut largely under the control of Hezbollah, âserve the interests of the enemies and Zionists.â
Another report on the attack, from Iranâs English-language satellite news channel Press TV, began with a direct defense of Hezbollahâs military intervention in the Syrian civil war. âHezbollah believes,â a reporter on the scene told Press TV viewers, âand I think thatâs a very acceptable argument, that its acts, and its involvement in Syria, have actually prevented such explosions from increasing ⦠in number.â
It was only Hezbollahâs intervention in Syria, the Press TV reporter suggested, that had prevented Sunni jihadists bent on eliminating members of all other Islamic sects from staging more attacks on the Shiite community in Lebanon.
The Lebanese-Australian journalist Rania Abouzeid, who lives and works in Beirut, described some of the other local television coverage of the attacks in a post for The New Yorkerâs News Desk blog. âApart from vaguely blaming Israel, which is the usual move after an unsolved attack,â she wrote, âsome local TV pundits and politicians have pointed out that the bombings may be an attempt not only to punish Hezbollah for fighting in Syria, but also to try to split it from its base.â She explained:
The idea is that Hezbollahâs supporters will blame the group for the car bombs in their neighborhoods, and put pressure on it to withdraw from the fight across the border.
Thatâs highly unlikely for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that the pain threshold for Hezbollahâs followers is high. The party â" which has formidable military, political and social services branches â" has done much to elevate the status, power and prospects of a once-downtrodden, destitute Shiite community. Hezbollah offers schools, hospitals, employment programs, agricultural initiatives and other assistance to its supporters. After the monthlong war with Israel in 2006, which left the mainly Shiite southern suburbs of Beirut a mountain of rubble and ruins, Hezbollah rebuilt the area. It wasnât unusual at the time to hear mothers who had lost their children in Israeli bombings to stoically and fervently proclaim that they accepted their painful sacrifice, and would pay it again with their remaining children.
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