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ما
الذي يحدث الآن بعد القرار 1757؟ بقلم
: رامي خوري دايلي
ستار - 2/6/2007 ان القرار 1757 هو السلاح الأخير
في هذه الحرب و هو سلاح فعال
لأنه يتمتع بشرعية دولية
وإقليمية What
happens now after Resolution 1757? By
Rami G. Khouri Daily
Star staff Saturday,
June 02, 2007 UN
Security Council Resolution 1757, passed on Wednesday to
establish a mixed Lebanese-international court to try
suspects in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri and 22 others in February 2005, has sparked intense and
justified debate. This is indeed a historic resolution,
especially coupled with the international investigation
into the murders and other bombings that have plagued The
confusing truth is that the positions of both the
resolution's supporters and opponents are correct to a
large extent: The resolution promises justice and an end
to impunity for the as-yet unidentified killers and
bombers; it infringes on Lebanese sovereignty; it
exacerbates existing domestic political polarization
between the government and the opposition; it targets
Syria and its friends in Lebanon; it ravages the
Lebanese legacy of consensus-based national
policy-making; and, it offers all Lebanese an
opportunity to rally around a new political idea in
order to move their country forward again. As
such the resolution is merely one more facet of the
fundamental ideological war that has defined Resolution
1757, like the handful of other United Nations
resolutions before it on The
use of UN Security Council resolutions to achieve this
aim is legitimate in the eyes of the world, for two
important reasons: A majority of Lebanese clearly wanted
to see an end to Syrian domination of their country in
2005, and the same majority wants to stop the
decades-old cycle of unsolved assassinations and
bombings. The use of UN resolutions brings all these
different issues into one process, which is why the
positions of both supporters and opponents are correct.
The core issue at hand is to bring to justice those who
killed Hariri and the other victims, but the political
contours of that aim are anchored firmly in accusations
that The
vote to establish the court comes at a time when the
regional diplomatic dynamics in the The
continued proliferation of Al-Qaeda-like extremist
groups throughout the region, such as Fatah al-Islam in Resolution
1757 is the latest weapon in this war, and it is potent
because it enjoys international and regional legitimacy,
due to the prevalent Lebanese demand to bring the
killers and bombers to justice. The rigorous
international investigation under way and the judicial
trial to follow will reveal who is guilty or innocent.
In the meantime, we should not confuse the two core
dynamics of this process: the noble pursuit of justice
for Lebanon, and the brutal exercise of antagonistic
state power by the US, Syria, Iran and interested
others, who will either reach a political accommodation
soon, or recklessly fight to the death and leave this
region - starting with Iraq and Lebanon - a devastated
wasteland. Rami
G. Khouri is published twice-weekly by THE DAILY STAR. http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=5&article_id=82690 ----------------- نشرنا
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