Fed Up?
Khaled Abu Toameh writes in the Jerusalem Post that Arabs are fed up with Hezbollah. It may well be he's right. There has not been a lot of uproar over Israel attacking Hezbollah. (Except from the ever reliable American left, of course).
With the exception of the Palestinians, the Arab world appears to be united in blaming Iran and Syria for the fighting in Lebanon. Until last week, Arab political analysts and government officials were reluctant to criticize Hizbullah in public. But now that Hizbullah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah and his top aides are in hiding, an anti-Hizbullah coalition is emerging not only in Lebanon, but in several other Arab countries as well.
The Palestinians and Hizbullah feel that their Arab brethren have once again turned their backs on them. On Monday, hundreds of Palestinians who marched in downtown Ramallah in support of Hizbullah chanted: "Hassan Nasrallah is our hero, the rest of the Arab leaders are cowards" and "O beloved Abu Hadi [Nasrallah's nickname], bomb, bomb Tel Aviv." The second battle cry is reminiscent of the famous slogan the Palestinians used during the first Gulf War: "O beloved Saddam, bomb, bomb Tel Aviv."
Hizbullah and their supporters were hoping that the massive Israeli military operation in Lebanon would trigger large-scale protests throughout the Arab world, creating instability and threatening to bring down some of the Arab regimes.
But the response on the Arab street has been so disappointing for Hizbullah that its leaders are now openly talking about an Arab "conspiracy" to liquidate the Shi'ite organization. The few Hizbullah supporters in Ramallah, the Gaza Strip and some Arab capitals have therefore been directing most of their criticism against the Arab presidents and monarchs, accusing them of serving the interests of the US and Israel.
The anti-Hizbullah coalition, which appears to be growing with every Israeli missile that drops on the heads of Hizbullah leaders and headquarters, is spearheaded by Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan. These three countries, together with many Arab commentators and political analysts, are convinced that the leaders of Teheran and Damascus are using Hizbullah to divert attention from Iran's nuclear program and Syria's involvement in the assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri.
The Saudis were the first to openly criticize Hizbullah, paving the way for other Arab countries to follow suit. The message coming out of these countries is that the Arabs and Muslims can't afford to allow an irresponsible and adventurous organization like Hizbullah to drag the region to war. Government spokesmen and officials, as well as prominent Arab editors and commentators, have shown no sympathy for Hizbullah while appearing on pan-Arab TV networks like Al-Jazeera and Abu Dhabi.
The Saudi position, which surprised Hizbullah and its supporters, was outlined by an anonymous official, who said that the people should distinguish between legitimate resistance and dangerous adventurism by some parties without cooperation from their governments and the Arab states.
Frankly, the very public Saudi stance surprised me at the time as I pointed out in an earlier post. And it does appear that there is more negativity about Israel's actions coming from the American left than from the Arab street. Open Arab opposition plus the fact that the G-8 actually came out and condemned Hezbollah (meaning Russia is not covering for him) has to have Hassan Nasrallah thinking about what he did. Hiding like a scared rat, he has to be thinking that maybe, just maybe, this time he screwed up. Big. Maybe having an apocalyptic, aura sensing loony for an ally isn't such a good plan after all.






By Roland Hesz, Tuesday, 18 July , 2006 @ 1:10 am
“And it does appear that there is more negativity about Israel’s actions coming from the American left than from the Arab street.”
Hillary Clinton is leftie, as far as I know
She is giving a supporting speech for Israel, with a bunch of other lefties.
In what sense is that negative comment about Israel?
Or negativity has changed it’s meaning?