Hezbollah chief: Saudi Arabia 'declared war' on Lebanon, PM Hariri 'forced to resign & detained'
RT,
10
November, 2017
Hezbollah
leader Hassan Nasrallah says Saudi Arabia has declared war on
Lebanon, adding that the “detention” and “house arrest” of
Lebanese Prime Minister Hariri an “unprecedented Saudi
intervention” in Lebanon’s internal affairs.
The reports of the assassination plot were fabricated by the Saudis, Nasrallah said, while the PM’s resignation speech was also written by them, he claimed in a televised speech.
The
Hezbollah leader also stated that the Lebanese government is still
legitimate and urged all the parties to cooperate with it.Nasrallah
claimed that Hariri was prevented by the Saudis from returning to
Lebanon, while the whole situation around resignation of the PM was
an “unprecedented
Saudi intervention” in
Lebanon’s internal affairs.
“Hariri
is a prisoner in Saudi Arabia, and cannot return to his own country.
Saudi Arabia is seeking to impose its will on the Lebanese
government. It is trying to sow the seeds of discord among various
political factions here and pit them against each other,” the
Hezbollah leader said, as quoted by Press TV.
Meanwhile,
the US State Department has released a statement "cautioning
against any party, within or outside Lebanon, using Lebanon as a
venue for proxy conflicts."
Washington urges all parties "to
respect the integrity and independence of Lebanon’s legitimate
national institutions,"
including the government and the army, Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson stated Friday, adding: "In
this regard, we respect Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Al-Hariri as a
strong partner of the United States."
The
Saudi plot also involved inciting Israel to strike Lebanon, Nasrallah
claimed. However, he believes that a new Israeli war with Lebanon is
unlikely, as the Israelis know how high its cost would be. He also
warned Tel Aviv against trying to exploit the unfolding crisis in
Lebanon for its own ends.The most recent armed conflict between
Israel and Hezbollah erupted in 2006 and effectively resulted in a
stalemate. Both sides, however, claimed victory.
The
alleged Saudi actions against Lebanon were prompted by the kingdom’s
anger at the failure of its politics in the country, as well as in
its neighbor, Syria, Nasrallah stated. Riyadh, in fact, failed
across all arenas in the region and will fail again with its new
endeavor in Lebanon, the Hezbollah leader dded.
The
recent remarks made by the top Saudi officials equate to
a “declaration
of war” against
Lebanon and Hezbollah, Nasrallah said. Earlier this week, the Saudi
minister of state for Gulf affairs, Thamer al-Sabhan, said that the
Lebanese administration would be “dealt
with as a government declaring war on Saudi Arabia,” and
blamed Hariri’s administration for its inaction towards Hezbollah
over the past year. “The
Lebanese must all know these risks and work to fix matters before
they reach the point of no return,” Sabhan
told Al Arabiya.
From Israel's Haaretz
From al-JazeeraFrom Israel's Haaretz
Hezbollah's
Nasrallah: Saudi Arabia Inciting Israel to Strike Lebanon
Hezbollah
leader says Saudi Arabia has declared war on Lebanon and is detaining
PM Hariri, warns Israel against 'any attempt to exploit the
situation'
10
November, 2017
Hezbollah's
leader Hassan Nasrallah said on Friday that Saudi Arabia had declared
war on Lebanon and the Iran-backed group, accusing Riyadh of
detaining Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri and forcing him to
resign.
Nasrallah
said Saudi Arabia's detention of Hariri was an insult to all Lebanese
and he must return to Lebanon.
Nasrallah
also said Riyadh is inciting Israel to strike Lebanon, and his
militant group is watching carefully for any Israeli attempts to use
the crisis to begin hostilities against Lebanon. He said Israel is
cautious, however, and unlikely to make such a move.
In
a televised speech, Nasrallah said "Let us say things as they
are: the man is detained in Saudi Arabia and and forbidden until this
moment from returning to Lebanon." Nasrallah called Hariri's
resignation last Saturday an "unprecedented Saudi intervention"
in Lebanese politics.
"It
is clear that Saudi Arabia and Saudi officials have declared war on
Lebanon and on Hezbollah in Lebanon," he said.
He
said Lebanon's government was still legitimate and had not resigned,
saying Hariri's "forced" resignation is unconstitutional
because it was done "under Ń…uress."
"Saudi
will fail in Lebanon as it has failed on all fronts," Nasrallah
said.
Nasrallah
is calming an apparently jittery population following Saudi Arabia's
escalation against Hezbollah's patron Iran. Hariri's resignation last
week was seen as a move by Riyadh to take its rivalry with Iran to
the tiny Lebanon.
Some
fear the escalation will pave the way for Israel to strike against
Hezbollah, against which Israel has fought a number of wars. He
said Israel should not think "we are troubled. No, absolutely
not."
Nasrallah
said Saudi Arabia was encouraging Israel to attack Lebanon. While an
Israeli attack could not be ruled out entirely, he said, it was
unlikely partly because Israel knew it would pay a very high price.
"I warn them against any miscalculation or any step to exploit
the situation," he said.
"Today
we are more confident and feeling stronger in the face of any
threat," said Nasrallah.
Western
countries have looked on with alarm at the rising regional tension.
U.S.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson warned other countries and groups
against using Lebanon as vehicle for a larger proxy fight in the
Middle East, saying Washington strongly backed Lebanon's independence
and respected Hariri as a strong partner of the United States,
referring to him as prime minister.
"There
is no legitimate place or role in Lebanon for any foreign forces,
militias or armed elements other than the legitimate security forces
of the Lebanese state," Tillerson said in a statement released
by the U.S. State Department.
The
French foreign ministry said it wanted Hariri to be fully able to
play what it called his essential role in Lebanon.
Hariri
has made no public remarks since announcing his resignation in a
speech televised from Saudi Arabia, saying he feared assassination
and accusing Iran and Hezbollah of sowing strife in the Arab world.
Two
top Lebanese government officials, a senior politician close to
Hariri and a fourth source told Reuters on Thursday that the Lebanese
authorities believe Hariri is being held in Saudi Arabia.
Riyadh
has advised Saudi citizens not to travel to Lebanon, or if already
there to leave as soon as possible. Other Gulf states have also
issued travel warnings. Those steps have raised concern that Riyadh
could take measures against the tiny Arab state, which hosts 1.5
million Syrian refugees.
Editorial
comment from Haaretz
The
Sunni kingdom is trying to shift the battlefield from Syria to
Lebanon. This may lead to a chain reaction
The
West's infatuation with the kingdom's natural resources has seemingly
blinded it to its immense regional failures
From
Lebanon’s Daily Star – behind a paywall.
Lebanon stands UNITED
Hezbollah
considers Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Cabinet as still functioning
normally, the party’s Secretary-General Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah said
Friday, adding that he considers the premier’s resignation
unconstitutional.
The
leader of Lebanon's Hezbollah has declared that the country's prime
minister is currently detained in Saudi Arabia and that his "forced"
resignation is unconstitutional because it was done "under
pressure".
Speaking
in Beirut on Friday, Hassan Nasrallah said he was sure that Saad
Hariri was forced to resign as part of what he called Saudi Arabia's
policy of stoking sectarian tensions in Lebanon.
Hariri,
who announced
his resignation last week in
a televised address from Riyadh, has yet to return to Lebanon.
Nasrallah
said Hariri is being prevented by Saudi officials from returning to
Lebanon, which is why "we deem the resignation of Hariri illegal
and invalid".
"All
of a sudden, out of nowhere, Saudi Arabia called the prime minister
on urgent matter without his aide or advisers, and was forced to
tender his resignation, and to read the resignation statement written
by them," Nasrallah said, as he accused Riyadh of "blunt,
unprecedented interference".
"We
declare that the prime minister of Lebanon has not resigned," he
said. "Saad Hariri is our political opponent, but he is
also our prime minister."
Nasrallah
also said "Lebanon had enjoyed unprecedented stability over the
past year", and appealed for unity throughout the country.
He
said US President Donald Trump must have known of the plans to force
Hariri's resignation.
Hariri
is part of a unity government that also includes rival political
factions such as those supported by Hezbollah.
Al
Jazeera's Zeina Khodr, reporting from Beirut, said that there is
widespead belief that Hariri is being held against his will, adding
that even his own party members have called for his return to
Lebanon.
"So
a lot of questions of his whereabouts and the well-being of the prime
minister, and a lot of fear that the situation could explode,"
she said.
"No to proxy conflicts'
In
a statement on Friday issued following Nasrallah's televised address,
Rex Tillerson, US secretary of state, cautioned against
using Lebanon "as a venue for proxy conflicts".
He
urged "all parties both within Lebanon and outside to respect
the integrity and independence of Lebanon's legitimate national
institutions".
"The
United States supports the stability of Lebanon and is opposed to any
actions that could threaten that stability."
Earlier,
Heather Nauert, state department spokesperson, said a US diplomat
met Saad
Hariri in
Riyadh, but refused to comment on where the meeting took place or to
elaborate on Hariri's status.
"[The
talks] were sensitive, private, diplomatic
conversations," Nauert said on Thursday.
"We
have seen him. In terms of the conditions of him being held or the
conversations between Saudi
Arabia and
Prime Minister Hariri, I would have to refer you to the government of
Saudi Arabia and also to Mr Hariri's office."
Lebanese
fear escalation of Iran-Saudi tensions
|
Nauert
said Hariri's resignation was an "internal matter that we
couldn't comment on".
Separately,
Russia's ambassador to Lebanon,
Alexander Zasypkin, threatened on Thursday to refer Hariri's case to
the UN Security Council if the "ambiguity" continues.
"The
issue of Hariri's return to the country concerns the sovereign rights
of Lebanon," Zasypkin said in an interview with Lebanese channel
LBC.
Lebanese
officials have said Hariri is likely to be under either house arrest
or in temporary detention in Riyadh.
His
resignation on November 4 came on the same day that dozens of Saudi
princes, senior ministers, businessmen were arrested in
a purge carried out by a new anti-corruption committee led by Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Also
on Friday, France's foreign ministry said it wanted Hariri to be free
of his movements and fully able to play an essential role in his
country.
"As
the minister said, we wish that Saad al-Hariri has all his freedom of
movement and be fully able to play the essential role that is his in
Lebanon," French deputy foreign ministry spokesman
Alexandre Georgini said, refering to an earlier statement by Foreign
Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian.
Georgini
said France's ambassador to Saudi Arabia had also visited Hariri at
his residence
From Saudi-apologist al-Arabiya
Saudi FM Jubeir: We would like sanctions against Iran for supporting terror
Saudi
Arabia would like to see sanctions on Iran for its support of
terrorism and for violating the ballistic missile resolutions of the
United Nations, foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir has said.
In
an interview to CNBC, Jubeir said that when you combine those three,
fixing the nuclear agreement and holding Iran accountable for its
support of terrorism and for its ballistic missile program, then I
think we have an effective way of dealing with Iran.
Crown
Prince Mohammad bin Salman, with an ambitious program, has started an
“internal operation decisive storm” against corruption and
extremism with an “operation to restore hope” among Saudi young
people who pin high hopes on his as a young king to lead the country.
Mohammad
bin Salman plans to modernise the country amid the young Saudi
generation viewing him as a “reformer and hardliner”. Some Saudi
youngsters, mainly females, even consider him as the J.F. Kennedy of
Arabia for his efforts to diversify the economy and turn Saudi Arabia
into an influential country in the Middle East.
“Analysis”
While
considering the manner in which Saad Hariri had to resign as
Lebanon’s prime minister, it has to be realized that Hezbollah
controls around 25 percent of that country’s territory and that its
militia has grown more powerful than the Lebanese army.
The
level of interference by both Hezbollah and Syria in Lebanese
politics at the behest of the Iranian regime, particularly
Hezbollah’s proven record of assassinating those speaking out
against it or its Syrian and Iranian patrons, must have been a major
cause behind Saad Hariri’s decision to leave the country before
announcing his resignation.
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