Order Code IB89118
CRS Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Lebanon
Updated June 10, 2005
Clyde R. Mark and Alfred B. Prados
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
United States and Lebanon
U.S.-Lebanon Issues
The Syrian Presence
Peace Process
Lebanon-Israel Border Clashes
The Travel Ban
U.S. Interests
U.S. Policy Toward Lebanon
U.S. Assistance for Lebanon
Other Events in U.S.-Lebanon Relations
Role of Congress
Lebanon’s Political Profile
Civil War, 1975-1990
The “Taif” Reforms, 1989
Political Dynamics
Lebanon’s Population
Sectarianism
Post Civil War Elections (1992-2005)
1992
1996
2000
2005
Foreign Presence in Lebanon
Syria
Israel
CHRONOLOGY


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Lebanon
SUMMARY
The United States and Lebanon continue
vaded southern Lebanon in 1982 and occupied
to enjoy good relations. Prominent current
a 10-mile-wide strip along the Israel-Lebanon
issues between the United States and Lebanon
border until May 2000.
include progress toward a Lebanon-Israel
peace treaty, U.S. aid to Lebanon, and Leba-
Lebanon’s government is based in part
non’s capacity to stop Hizballah militia at-
on a 1943 agreement that called for a
tacks on Israel. The United States supports
Maronite Christian President, a Sunni Muslim
Lebanon’s independence and favored the end
Prime Minister, and a Shia Muslim Speaker of
of Israeli and Syrian occupation of parts of
the National Assembly, and stipulated that the
Lebanon. Israel withdrew from southern
National Assembly seats and civil service jobs
Lebanon on May 23, 2000, and Syria com-
be distributed according to a ratio of 6
pleted withdrawing its forces on April 26,
Christians to 5 Muslims. On August 21, 1990,
2005.
the Lebanon National Assembly adopted the
“Taif” reforms (named after the Saudi Arabian
A large Lebanese-American community
city where they were negotiated). The parlia-
follows U.S.-Lebanon relations closely. Presi-
ment was increased to 128 to be divided
dents Eisenhower and Reagan said the United
evenly between Christians and Muslim-Druze,
States had “vital” interests in Lebanon, but
presidential authority was decreased, and the
others might describe U.S. interests in Leba-
Speaker’s and the Prime Minister’s authority
non as less than vital. At the invitation of the
was increased. President Ilyas Hirawi signed
Lebanese government, the United States
the constitutional amendment implementing
intervened in Lebanon to defend Lebanese
the reforms on September 21, 1990.
sovereignty in 1958 and 1982. In a Beirut
terror bombing in October 1983, 241 U.S.
Lebanon held elections for the National
armed forces personnel died. From 1987 until
Assembly in 1992, 1996, and 2000; elections
July 1997, the United States banned travel to
for a new National Assembly are under way
Lebanon because of the threat of kidnaping
in May and June of 2005. The National As-
and dangers from the ongoing civil war.
sembly elected Emile Lahoud President on
October 15, 1998, and extended his term for
Lebanon is rebuilding after the
three years by a constitutional amendment in
1975-1990 civil war. According to estimates,
September 2004. The assassination of former
more than 100,000 people died, another
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, who
200,000 were wounded, 250,000 emigrated to
opposed Lahoud’s extension, sparked a politi-
avoid the fighting, and as many as one-third of
cal crisis, realignments in Lebanon’s domestic
the 3 million population were refugees in the
politics, and withdrawal of Syrian troops from
Lebanon civil war. Syrian armed forces, in-
Lebanon.
vited into Lebanon in 1976 to prevent a Mus-
lim attack on the Christians, continued to
Other CRS reports on Lebanon include
occupy the northern and eastern parts of the
CRS Issue Brief IB92075, Syria: U.S. Rela-
country until April 2005. Israeli forces in-
tions and Bilateral Issues.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
Syria’s Foreign Minister stated that all Syrian forces had withdrawn from Lebanon as
of April 26, 2005. On May 23, the U.N. Secretary General reported that a U.N. team had
found no Syrian military forces, assets, or intelligence apparatus in Lebanese territory, except
for one Syrian battalion deployed near a disputed border village.
On June 5, 2005, Lebanon completed the second round of voting in a four-stage process
to elect members of a new parliament (National Assembly).
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
United States and Lebanon
U.S.-Lebanon Issues
The United States has encouraged the reconciliation and rebuilding of Lebanon since
the 1990 end of the 15-year civil war. There are several other issues between the United
States and Lebanon, in addition to rebuilding.
The Syrian Presence. The United States long has opposed the continuing Syrian
presence in Lebanon. Following the February 14, 2005 assassination of former Prime
Minister Rafiq Hariri, both President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice have repeated the U.S. insistence that Syria withdraw its troops from Lebanon. Under
domestic Lebanese and international pressure, Syria withdrew its forces in March and April
2005 (see “Foreign Presence in Lebanon,” below).
Peace Process. The United States favors a Lebanon-Israel peace treaty. Both
Lebanon and Israel agreed to a peace settlement in May 1983, under the tutelage of U.S.
Secretary of State George Shultz, but Lebanon later abrogated the agreement under Syrian
pressure. Lebanon participated in the Madrid peace conference in October 1991, but it was
widely understood that Lebanon and Israel would not sign a peace agreement unless and until
Syria and Israel had resolved their differences. Israel and Lebanon accept their common
boundary drawn by the French and British in 1922-1923. The primary issue separating Israel
and Lebanon had been the 1982 Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon. Israel withdrew in
May 2000 from all of Lebanon except for a small disputed enclave called the Shib’a Farms,
which some maps place in Lebanon and others place in the Israeli-occupied Syrian Golan
Heights territory. (See CRS Report RL31078, The Shib’a Farms Dispute and its
Implications
.)
Lebanon-Israel Border Clashes. The Lebanon-Israel border has been the scene
of frequent incidents between the Israeli Defense Forces and the Israeli-supported militia, the
South Lebanon Army, on one side and various Lebanese and Palestinian militias on the other
side. In the past, the clashes usually involved Lebanese or Palestinian rockets launched at
Israeli towns, shooting incidents that targeted Israeli military installations or patrols, mines
set along roadsides that were triggered as Israeli vehicles passed, and infiltration attempts.
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The Israelis launched artillery, aerial, or naval bombardments and armored incursions at
suspected guerrilla strongholds. Often, civilians on both sides were the targets of the attacks.
The most recent Israeli-Lebanese exchanges have involved Hizballah rocket attacks on
Israeli posts near Shib’a farms and Israeli air and artillery attacks on Hizballah sites and
Lebanese villages (Hizballah is a predominantly Shia Muslim militia and political party).
The Travel Ban. On July 1, 1985, following the hijacking of TWA flight 847 one
month earlier, President Ronald Reagan issued Executive Determination 85-14 prohibiting
U.S. airlines from flying to Lebanon, prohibiting airlines from ticketing passengers to
Lebanon, and prohibiting Lebanese aircraft from landing in the United States. On January
28, 1987, following the kidnapping of three U.S. citizens and one U.S. resident alien,
Secretary of State George Shultz banned U.S. citizens from traveling to Lebanon. On 25
October 1995, the United States reversed one of the 1985 prohibitions, and allowed U.S.
citizens with waivers to purchase airline tickets to Lebanon. Upon application, the
Department of State could waive the ban and allow U.S. citizens to travel to Lebanon if the
applicants were journalists, Red Cross workers, visiting critically ill family members, or
pursuing U.S. national interests.
On July 30, 1997, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright announced that the travel ban
would not be extended for another six months. U.S. citizens using U.S. passports were free
to travel to Lebanon. On June 19, 1998, President Clinton lifted the airline ticket ban,
allowing persons in the United States to purchase airline tickets to Beirut. The ban on U.S.
airlines flying to Beirut and on Lebanese airlines flying to the United States remains in force.
U.S. Interests
On July 15, 1958, President Eisenhower told Congress that he had deployed U.S. Armed
Forces to assist the Lebanese army in maintaining order in the face of a possible internal
rebellion because Lebanon had “...been deemed vital to United States national interests and
world peace.” (Public Papers of the Presidents, 1958, p. 550-551) On October 24, 1983, the
day after 241 U.S. Armed Forces personnel were killed by a terrorist bombing in Beirut,
President Reagan said “...We have vital interests in Lebanon... .” (Public Papers of the
Presidents, 1983, vol. II, p. 1501) Some would agree with the two Presidents that a friendly
and independent Lebanon is “vital” to U.S. interests. But others might disagree and suggest
that the Eisenhower and Reagan comments reflected the crisis atmospheres in which they
acted and that U.S.-Lebanon ties are more cultural than strategic.
The U.S. interests to which the two Presidents referred do not include conditions often
associated with “vital” interests: the tangible ties of military bases, oil fields, international
waterways, industrial strength, major trading ties, or allied military might. Rather, U.S.
interests in Lebanon stem from the ties of the Lebanese-American community (a majority of
Arab-Americans are of Lebanese origin), Lebanon’s pro- Western (and during the “cold war”
anti-communist) orientation, U.S.-Lebanon cultural ties dating back to the early 19th century,
Lebanon’s requests for U.S. assistance against stronger regional neighbors, Lebanon’s
democratic and Christian experience, and Lebanon’s role as a frequent interlocutor among
the Arab nations.
Maintaining Lebanon’s independence is a primary U.S. interest. The United States has
opposed and continues to oppose foreign occupation of Lebanon, including the Israeli
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occupation of south Lebanon from June 1982 to May 2000, the autonomous actions of the
Palestinian guerrilla movement from the early 1970s through 1982, and the Syrian
occupation from 1975 to 2005. The United States also is concerned that lingering Iranian
influence among anti-Israeli guerrillas and Hizballah, the Lebanese Shia Muslim militia and
political movement, will diminish Lebanon’s independence.
U.S. Policy Toward Lebanon
The United States has enjoyed good diplomatic relations with Lebanon and has
supported Lebanon’s political independence. In July 1958, the United States sent 14,300
U.S. Army and Marine personnel to Lebanon to support the government in resisting a radical
seizure of the country. During the civil war period beginning in 1975, the United States
expressed its concern over the fighting, violence, and destruction of the country, and
provided emergency economic aid for the Lebanese people and military training and
equipment for the Lebanese Armed Forces. The United States supported the various efforts
to arrange cease-fires to end the civil war. U.S. Ambassador Philip Habib’s peace mission
following the 1982 Israeli invasion ended one phase of the fighting and led to the Israeli
withdrawal. As a part of the withdrawal agreement, the United States sent 2,000 Marines to
join the French, Italian, and British contingents in the MultiNational Force (MNF). Secretary
of State George Shultz negotiated a peace agreement between Lebanon and Israel in May
1983, but the agreement was abrogated by Lebanon in March 1984 under Syrian and internal
Lebanese pressure.
In October 1989, the United States supported the Arab League-sponsored Taif meeting
(see The “Taif” Reforms, 1989, below) and supported the governmental reforms, disarming
the militias, and the withdrawal of foreign forces incorporated in the Taif agreement. The
United States encouraged Lebanon’s participation in the 1991 Madrid peace conference and
in the subsequent negotiations (although Lebanon acceded to Syrian pressure and has not
participated in the continuing multilateral and bilateral talks). The United States is a member
of the five nation force monitoring compliance with the April 26, 1996 Israeli-Hizballah
agreement to avoid civilians and limit the Israeli-Hizballah confrontation to military targets.
The agreement was negotiated by the United States.
U.S. Assistance for Lebanon. The Administration requested $32 million in
economic assistance, $700,000 in International Military Education and Training, and $2.3
million in emergency response funds for Lebanon for FY2005. H.R. 4818, the omnibus
appropriations bill, earmarks $35 million for Lebanon, of which $4 million is for educational
institutions. (See Table 2, below.) The Administration has requested $35 million in ESF and
$700,000 in IMET for Lebanon for FY2006.
Other Events in U.S.-Lebanon Relations. On April 18, 1983, a truck bomb
destroyed the U.S. Embassy in west Beirut, killing 63 people, 17 of whom were U.S. citizens,
and wounding another 100 people, 40 of whom were U.S. citizens. On October 23, 1983,
a truck bomb killed 220 U.S. Marine, 18 U.S. Navy, and 3 U.S. Army personnel in a Beirut
airport building used as U.S. MNF headquarters and barracks. On December 12, 1983, a
truck bomb exploded in the U.S. embassy compound in Kuwait, killing 6 people, none of
them U.S. citizens. The incident appeared to be related to the U.S. presence in Lebanon. In
February 1984, the MNF, including the U.S. contingent, left Beirut because it became
obvious that Lebanon’s government was not able to extend its control over Lebanese affairs.
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During the 16-month tour, 265 members of the U.S. MNF contingent were killed. The
United States lost prestige in the Middle East because many Arabs believed the United States
abandoned its commitment to Lebanon by withdrawing the MNF before the Lebanese
government was ready to assert its authority over the country. On September 20, 1984, a
truck bomb killed 20 people, 2 of whom were U.S. military personnel, at the U.S. Embassy
annex in Awkar, north-east of Beirut.
In addition, between 1982 and 1988, 18 U.S. citizens were kidnapped and held hostage,
most of them by pro-Iranian Lebanese. Fifteen of the U.S. hostages escaped or were
released, and 3, Peter Kilburn, William Higgins, and William Buckley, were killed while in
captivity.
Role of Congress
On July 1, 1993, the U.S. Senate passed by voice vote S.Con.Res. 28, which stated that
Syria had violated the Taif Agreements (see below) by not withdrawing from Lebanon in
September 1992, urged an immediate Syrian withdrawal, and called upon the President to
continue withholding aid and support for Syria.
The House of Representatives added an amendment to the State Department
Authorization bill, Section 863 of H.R. 1646, in mid-May 2001, which would have cut
$600,000 in International Military Education and Training (IMET) funds to Lebanon unless
Lebanon deployed its armed forces to the border with Israel. Section 863 also called upon
the President to present a plan to Congress to cut ESF funds if Lebanon did not deploy within
six months.
Section 1224 of P.L. 107-228, the Security Assistance Act of 2002, stated that $10
million of the funds available for FY2003 and subsequent years could not be obligated until
the President certified to Congress that Lebanese Armed Forces had deployed to the
internationally recognized Lebanon-Israel border and that Lebanon was asserting its authority
over the border area. The amendment (popularly called the “Lantos Amendment” after its
initial sponsor) was added to compel Lebanon to exercise control over the border area,
displacing Hizballah forces. Lebanon refused to move to the border until Israel evacuated
the Shib’a Farms disputed area. As of March 2004, Lebanese forces had not moved into the
border area. According to unconfirmed sources, the $10 million was held in an escrow
account pending negotiations among the United States, Israel, Lebanon, and Members of
Congress.
On December 12, 2003, President Bush signed H.R. 1828 (P.L. 108-175), which directs
the President to apply economic and diplomatic sanctions to Syria if Syria does not offer an
immediate commitment to withdraw from Lebanon. H.R. 1828 also calls upon the Lebanese
armed forces to occupy all areas of Lebanon. Lebanon has refused to send its forces along
the southern border with Israel until Israel withdraws from the Shib’a farms area.
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Lebanon’s Political Profile
The “National Covenant,” an unwritten agreement negotiated among Lebanese political
leaders in 1943, provided for the President to be a Maronite Christian, the Prime Minister to
be a Sunni Muslim, and the speaker of the Chamber of Deputies (renamed the National
Assembly in 1979) to be a Shia Muslim. The National Covenant also provided that
parliament seats and civil service jobs be distributed on the basis of 6 Christians to 5
Muslims (including Druze, a separate religious group often associated with Islam). The
President usually selects cabinet ministers to reflect the balance among Lebanon’s religious
communities distributing the portfolios among the Maronites, Greek Orthodox, Greek
Catholics, Armenian Orthodox, Armenian Catholic, Sunni, Shia, and Druze. The
Christian-to-Muslim job ratio and the confessional assignment of government positions was
based on the population as determined in the 1932 census.
According to the 1926 constitution, the people elect the parliament, the parliament
elects a President, and the President selects a Prime Minister and between 18 and 25
members of the cabinet, which then must receive a vote of confidence from the parliament.
The President, serving a six-year, non-renewable term, does not have to win votes of
confidence. The President may propose laws, is responsible for implementing laws, but may
delay implementing laws passed by parliament by demanding additional debate, adjourning
parliament, or calling for new elections.
National Assembly deputies are elected for four-year terms representing electoral
districts. The total number and religious affiliations of deputies from each district are
determined by the population of the district. All voters vote for all candidates regardless of
the voter’s or the candidate’s religion. The National Assembly elected in 1972 was
composed of 53 Christians, 45 Muslim and Druze, and 1 to represent other minorities. The
civil war that began in 1975 delayed the 1976 election until August/September 1992.
Civil War, 1975-1990
A 1975 Christian attack on a Palestinian refugee community triggered the 15-year civil
war. At stake in the civil war was control over the political process and the opportunity to
dictate the permanent form of Lebanon’s government. The Lebanese government requested
Syrian forces in 1976 to protect the rightist/Christian enclave from being overrun by
leftist/Muslim forces. Later, the Arab League approved the Syrian intervention, and armed
forces from several Arab states joined the Syrians in the Arab League’s “Arab Deterrent
Force.” The others withdrew by the late 1980s, and only the Syrian force remains in
Lebanon today. The fighting involved several political party militias, the Lebanese Armed
Forces (the government army), and many of the Palestinian guerrilla groups. Lebanese
militias tied to political parties or to ethnic-religious factions fought among themselves for
dominance over their wing of the political spectrum, and then led their amalgamated force
against the other political forces within Lebanon. For example, the militia of the Maronite
Christian Phalange party dominated by the Jumayyil family, defeated its fellow Maronite and
conservative rival the National Liberal party led by the Shamun family in 1980. The two
armies then joined forces against common foes. Or in another example, the leftist Shia
Muslim Hizballah defeated another leftist Shia Muslim group, the Amal party, in early 1989.
Later, Hizballah and Amal formed a political alliance to run in the 1992 elections.
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From 1975 to 1990, the civil war killed approximately 100,000, wounded 200,000, left
another 100,000 permanently disabled, and forced 250,000 into exile. (There are no accurate
data, no breakdown by year, community, sex, etc., for the casualties.) It is estimated that as
many as one-third of Lebanon’s 3 million people have been war refugees at one time or
another. Damage to Beirut and other cities is estimated in the billions of dollars.
The “Taif” Reforms, 1989
On August 18, 1988, the Lebanese National Assembly did not muster the 51-member
quorum needed to elect a successor to President Amin Jumayyil, whose six-year term expired
on September 23, 1988. With no agreement on a successor a few moments before his term
expired on September 23, 1988, outgoing President Jumayyil appointed Army
Commander-in-Chief General Michel Awn to be the prime minister. Muslims and Druze
refused to serve in the Awn cabinet because Awn was a Christian (a transgression of the
National Covenant, which called for a Sunni Prime Minister) and because the existing
cabinet, under Sunni Muslim Prime Minister Salim al-Huss, had not resigned. Al-Huss
appointed General Sami al-Khatib to be the interim Lebanon Armed Forces (LAF)
Commander-in-Chief. Similarly, on October 18, 1988, the National Assembly failed to elect
a new Speaker, who would preside over the Assembly session that would elect a new
president. Thus, by the end of 1988, Lebanon had no President, two Prime Ministers and two
cabinets, two army Commanders-in-Chief and a divided army, a National Assembly 13 years
overdue for elections, two interim speakers but no permanent speaker of the National
Assembly, and no immediate prospect of reconvening the parliament for an attempt to
resolve the situation. The government was in a stalemate.
In September 1989, after nine months of consultations, an Arab League committee
secured a cease-fire and an agreement for a National Assembly meeting to be held in Taif,
Saudi Arabia, to discuss governmental reforms. On September 30, 1989, 62 members of the
Lebanese parliament met in Taif to begin discussions of government reforms. On October
22, 1989, the Deputies agreed to a reform plan that raised the number of seats in the National
Assembly from 99 up to 108, evenly divided between Christians and Muslim/Druze, left
appointment of the Prime Minister to the parliament, called for disbanding and disarming the
militias, and included a statement that Syria would begin troop withdrawal discussions
within two years. The National Assembly Deputies elected a new Speaker, Husayn
al-Husayni, and President, Rene Muawwad, and approved the reform package on November
5, 1989, at a meeting in al-Qulayat in north Lebanon. On November 20, 1989, President
Muawwad appointed Salim al-Huss to be Prime Minister, and named a 14-member cabinet.
On November 22, 1989, President Muawwad was assassinated by a car bomb as he left
Lebanese Independence Day ceremonies in West Beirut. On November 24, the Deputies met
in Shtawra to elect Ilyas al-Hirawi as the new President. Al-Hirawi named Salim al-Huss to
be the Prime Minister and General Emile Lahud to be Armed Forces Commander-in-Chief.
Awn, besieged at the Presidential palace, refused to recognize the new President.
On August 21, 1990, 48 of 51 National Assembly deputies meeting in Beirut approved
the Taif reforms. President Hirawi signed the constitutional amendment on September 21,
1990, implementing the reforms, but many Christian leaders and General Awn opposed the
reform. On October 13, 1990, Syrian forces drove General Awn out of the Presidential palace
and into the French embassy where he was granted political asylum. Awn’s departure
appeared to end the two-year stalemate, and open the way for the reform government under
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President Hirawi to take full control of the government of Lebanon. Hirawi, whose six-year
term was extended by a constitutional amendment for an additional three years, served until
1998, when he was replaced by the Armed Forces Commander General Emile Lahoud.
Political Dynamics
Lebanon’s Population. The following estimates of Lebanon’s population were
taken from Lebanon’s Political Mosaic, published by the Directorate of Intelligence of the
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, NESA 92-10020, LDA 92-13537, August 1992. There has
been no census in Lebanon since 1932. Not all Lebanese agree with the CIA figures cited,
and some maintain that the Christian communities are understated.
Table 1. Population Estimates, 1991
Number
Percent
Shia Muslim
1,140,000
38%
Sunni Muslim
690,000
23%
Maronite Christian
600,000
20%
Other Christian
360,000
12%
Druze
210,000
7%
Total
3,000,000
100%
Sectarianism. Lebanese groups have developed political parties along religious,
geographical, ethnic, ideological, foreign affiliation, or other lines. In general, Christian
groups are more conservative and better organized. The leading Christian parties (all led by
Maronite Christians) are the Phalange, previously led by the Jumayyil family; the National
Bloc, led by the Iddi family; the National Liberal Party, led by the Shamun family; and the
Maradah, led by the Franjiyah family. Leading Muslim parties are the Shia Muslim Amal,
the Shia Hizballah, the Sunni Independent Nasirite Movement, and the Progressive Socialist
Party (primarily composed of Druze). Another party, the Syrian National Socialist Party
(favors union with Syria), is predominantly Muslim, although it has had some Greek
Orthodox leaders. Political parties form alliances and coalitions, usually temporary and
subject to shifting issues, foreign influence, and personality clashes. Many of the political
parties or other groups have armed militias for protection. In 1975, an incident between
Palestinians and Phalangist Christians triggered a civil war that pitted conservatives against
liberals and Muslims against Christians, and opened Lebanon to foreign intervention.
In recent years, the Lebanese political community also divided between the old guard
elites who practiced politics under the traditional family-led parties, and younger, modern
reformers or dissidents who formed political blocs based more on issues and ideologies. For
example, the Phalange (traditionally conservative Maronite Christian) separated into factions,
one led by George Saadeh and maintaining its allegiance to the Jumayyil family in the
traditional manner; another following a Jumayyil lieutenant, Samir Jaja, who broke away in
a personality and power struggle to form the Lebanese Forces; and a third, the Al-Wad party
of Eli Hubayqah, who broke away from Jaja. (Jaja is in prison for murder and Hubayqah was
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assassinated in January 2002.) Similarly, dissident leaders of Amal, the Shia Muslim party,
broke away to form the more radical Movement of the Deprived, and another radical faction
broke away to form the Islamic Amal group. Hizballah, which started as a branch of an
Iranian religious group, was associated with hostage seizures and terrorism and was involved
in a two-year war with Amal vying for control of Lebanon’s Shia Muslims. Hizballah and
Amal later resolved their differences and formed an alliance for the 1992 elections and
subsequent elections.
Post Civil War Elections (1992-2005)
1992. Beginning in mid-July 1992, several Maronite leaders opined that the elections
tentatively scheduled for September 1992 should be delayed until after Syria agreed to
withdraw troops from Beirut. (The Taif agreement called for Lebanese-Syrian withdrawal
discussions and National Assembly elections two years after the accords were ratified, which
occurred on September 21, 1990.) The Maronites believed that the Syrian military presence
would intimidate voters and would extend the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. Syrian
officials said the elections should go on as scheduled, and that Syria would not withdraw
from Beirut in the near future even if the withdrawal discussions were held. The Maronites
announced an election boycott and called for general strikes on the election days. Many, but
not all, Maronites running for office withdrew their names, and most Maronites stayed away
from the polls.
The Maronite strategy appeared to backfire. The elections went on as scheduled despite
the Maronite boycott, and enough candidates and voters broke ranks with the mainstream
Maronites to elect the necessary number of Christians to the National Assembly. In the end,
more pro-Syrian Deputies were elected than would have been the case if the mainstream
Maronites had remained in the race.
The newly elected National Assembly met as scheduled on October 20, and elected
Amal leader Nabih Birri to be the Speaker of the Parliament. On October 22, 1992,
following consultations with National Assembly members and Speaker Birri, President
Hirawi named Rafiq al-Hariri to be Prime Minister. Hariri named a 30-member cabinet on
October 31, consisting of a mix of new technocrats and old line politicians, and a mix of
Maronites, Greek Catholics, Greek Orthodox, Armenians, Sunni Muslims, Shia Muslims,
and Druze. Prime Minister Hariri said the cabinet’s first task would be restoring the
economy.
1996. The Maronites did participate in the 1996 elections, despite some pro-Syrian and
pro-Muslim manipulating of the voter districts. The National Assembly passed an election
law on July 11, 1996, that named the five provinces as election districts, but subdivided
Mount Lebanon into six sub-districts. Ten Assembly members petitioned the Constitutional
Court claiming the election law violated the constitutional principle of equality among
Lebanese, and the Court upheld their petition. A second law passed on August 13 was
similar to the first, but stipulated that the law would apply only to the 1996 election.
Members failed to acquire the necessary ten signatures on a petition to challenge the new
law, and the elections were held as scheduled with Mount Lebanon as the only subdivided
district. Pro-Syrian forces and the Druze realized the political advantage from the
manipulated voting district because the Druze were assured election in the smaller
sub-districts. Voter turn out was about 44% over the five Sundays on which the election was
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held. As a result of the election, National Assembly Speaker Nabih Birri and Prime Minister
Rafiq Hariri each controlled their own blocs of about 20 seats each. For the most part, the
delegates elected in 1996 were pro-Syrian moderates. Syria did not support extremists from
the left or right. Hizballah won seven seats, a drop from the nine seats it won in 1992.
2000. The 2000 elections were held on August 26 for the 63 seats representing Mount
Lebanon and the north and on September 3 for the 65 seats representing Beirut, the Biqa
(Bekaa) Valley, and the south. Despite their political differences, President Lahud named
former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri to form a new government. Hariri’s 30-man cabinet won
a vote of confidence on October 23, 2000, but frictions between Lahoud and Hariri
continued.
2005. Hariri resigned in October 2004, after disagreeing with a Syrian-backed
constitutional amendment to extend the pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud’s term by an
additional three years, and Hariri subsequently aligned himself with an anti-Syrian opposition
coalition. Hariri’s assassination in a car bombing on February 14, 2005, widely blamed on
Syrian agents, led to widespread protests by an anti-Syrian coalition comprising many
members of the Christian, Druze, and Sunni Muslim and counter-demonstrations by pro-
Syrian groups including Shi’ites who rallied behind the Hizballah and Amal parties. As
Syrian troops departed from Lebanon (see below), President Lahoud appointed an interim
prime minister, Najib Miqati, to oversee parliamentary elections ultimately scheduled to take
place in four rounds of voting during the period May 29 to June 19. The first round, held in
Beirut on May 29, resulted in a strong showing by the anti-Syrian coalition led by the late
Prime Minister Hariri’s son, Saad Hariri, although some Christians broke with the coalition
to support the long exiled General Michel Awn, who had returned to Lebanon in early May.
Although turn-out was relatively light during the first round (28% of eligible voters), all 19
seats went to Saad Hariri’s coalition. During the second round, held in southern Lebanon on
June 5, the Hizballah-Amal list won all 23 seats and voter turn-out was higher (48% of
eligible voters).
Foreign Presence in Lebanon
Syria
Thirty-five thousand Syrian troops entered Lebanon in March 1976, in response to
President Fanjiyah’s appeal to protect the Christians. Between May 1988 and June 2001,
Syrian forces occupied most of west Beirut. (Syrian forces did not venture south of a “red
line” running east and west across Lebanon near Rashayah. South of the line was considered
Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) operating area.) In October 1990, Syrian tanks and infantry
surrounded the Baabda presidential palace in east Beirut where General Awn had been
besieged since September 1989. On October 13, Syrian aircraft bombed and strafed the
palace, causing General Awn to flee to the French embassy where he sought asylum.
In October 1989, as part of the Taif agreements, Syria agreed to begin discussions on
possible Syrian troop withdrawals from Beirut to the Beqaa Valley two years after political
reforms were implemented (President Hirawi signed the reforms in September 1990), and
to withdraw entirely from Lebanon after an Israeli withdrawal. The withdrawal discussions,
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which should have started in September 1992, did not take place, in part because the
Lebanese government said it needed more time to establish its authority over the country.
Syrian officials maintained that they were waiting for the Lebanese government to complete
rebuilding the army and police forces and assume security responsibilities in Lebanon before
beginning the withdrawal discussions. In the meantime, Syria and Lebanon signed a treaty
of brotherhood, cooperation, and coordination in May 1991, which called for creating several
joint committees that will coordinate policies. Some observers speculated that the treaty
would lead to Syrian domination (if not outright annexation) of Lebanon, while others
believed the treaty would enhance Syrian-Lebanese cooperation without affecting Lebanese
independence.
Although Syrian troop strength in Lebanon reportedly declined from 35,000-40,000 to
approximately 14,000 by early 2005, Syria continued to exercise controlling influence over
Lebanon’s domestic politics and regional policies; moreover, its intelligence agents were
active in Lebanon. The Hariri assassination in February 2005 prompted strong domestic and
international pressure on the Syrian regime, particularly from the United States and France,
to withdraw its forces and intelligence apparatus from Lebanon. On April 26, the Syrian
foreign minister informed the U.N. Secretary General and the President of the U.N. Security
Council that Syrian forces had completed their withdrawal from Lebanon. On May 23, the
U.N. Secretary General forwarded a report by a team he had sent to Lebanon to verify Syrian
withdrawal. The team “found no Syrian military forces, assets or intelligence apparatus in
Lebanese territory, with the exception of one Syrian battalion” deployed near the disputed
village of Deir Al-Ashayr on the Lebanese-Syrian border. The team also concluded that “no
Syrian military intelligence personnel remain in Lebanon in known locations or in military
uniform” but added that it was “unable to conclude with certainty that all the intelligence
apparatus has been withdrawn.”
Israel
On March 14, 1978, Israel invaded and occupied Lebanese territory south of the Litani
River, to destroy Palestinian bases that Israel believed were the source of attacks against
Israelis. Israeli forces withdrew on June 13, 1978, after the United Nations Interim Force in
Lebanon (UNIFIL) was placed south of the Litani to serve as a buffer between Israel and the
Palestinians (U.N.S.C. Resolution 425, March 19, 1978). Israeli forces again invaded
Lebanon on June 6, 1982. The IDF overran the UNIFIL positions, occupied southern
Lebanon, defeated Syrian forces in the southern Beqaa, laid siege to Beirut, and killed
approximately 20,000 Lebanese and Palestinians. Israeli forces withdrew in three stages,
completing the primary withdrawal in June 1985. About 1,000 Israeli troops, in cooperation
with the 2,000-3,000 man South Lebanon Army, patrolled the “security zone,” the
10-mile-wide strip along the Lebanon-Israel border that the Israelis held since the 1982
invasion. Israel continued its air and artillery retaliation against Palestinian and Lebanese
armed forces that attack IDF and South Lebanon Army positions.
Between 1978 and 2000, Israel lost 900 soldiers killed in Lebanon and the SLA lost 400
killed; about 2,100 Palestinian and Lebanese guerrillas and 21,000 Lebanese civilians have
died in clashes with the IDF and the SLA. Following an Israeli cabinet vote on March 5,
2000, the IDF began withdrawing in mid-May 2000, intending to leave the SLA in their place
as the IDF moved south. On May 22, the SLA abandoned their positions, compelling the IDF
to pull out of Lebanon during the night of May 23/24. Some 500 Hizballah fighters moved
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in behind the retreating IDF and SLA to take control of the south. Israel gave asylum to about
6,000 SLA members and their families. Hizballah turned over more than 1,500 SLA fighters
to the Lebanese government for trial as traitors.
CHRONOLOGY
06/05/05 — Lebanese completed the second round of voting in a four-stage process to
elect a new National Assembly.
05/23/05 — A U.N. verification team reported its findings that Syrian troops and military
assets had been withdrawn from Lebanese territory.
04/26/05 — Syria’s foreign minister informed the U.N. Secretary General that Syria had
withdrawn its forces from Lebanon.
04/13/05 — Prime Minister Karami resigned because he could not form a coalition
government, and President Lahud named Najib Miqati as interim prime
minister to oversee the May elections.
02/14/05 — Former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri was killed by a car bomb in Beirut.
Prime Minister Karami resigned on February 28 but was named to form a
new government the following week.
10/21/04
Rafiq Hariri resigned and was replaced as Prime Minister by Umar Karami
09/13/04
The U.S. House of Representatives passed H.Con.Res. 363, which condemns
Syria’s continued occupation of Lebanon.
09/03/04
The Lebanese Parliament amended the constitution to allow President Lahud
to serve another three years past his six-year term.
09/02/04 — The United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1559, which
expresses support for Lebanon’s independence and calls for the withdrawal
of Syrian troops from Lebanon.
12/12/03 — The President signed the Syria Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty
Restoration Act, H.R. 1828. The law calls for sanctions against Syria unless
Syria withdraws from Lebanon and calls for Lebanese armed forces to move
to the Israeli border and for Syria and Lebanon to begin peace negotiations
with Israel.
04/15/03 — Prime Minister Hariri resigned, but formed a new government within two
days that had no anti-Syrian members.
03/04/03
Syria completed the withdrawal of 4,000 troops from northern Lebanon.
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04/18/02
Prime Minister Hariri met with President Bush at the White House.
11/08/01 — Lebanon rejected the U.S. request to freeze Hizballah assets following the
November 2 U.S. listing of Hizballah as a terror organization. Many
Lebanese consider Hizballah a resistance movement that freed Lebanon of
the Israeli occupation.
06/14/01
About 6,000 Syrian troops began withdrawing from Beirut.
09/03/00
Lebanon completed two rounds of voting for the 128-seat parliament. Rafiq
Hariri and his 30-man cabinet were sworn in on October 26, 2000.
05/23/00
Israeli forces completed the withdrawal from southern Lebanon, except for
the area around the Shib’a farms. The South Lebanon Army collapsed as the
IDF withdrew. Some 1,500 SLA members were tried by the Lebanese
government for treason, and some 6,000 SLA members and their families
sought asylum in Israel.
03/05/00
The Israeli cabinet voted to withdraw from Lebanon by July 7.
02/09/00
President Clinton said the Israeli attacks against Lebanon were in retaliation
for the Hizballah attacks against Israeli Defense Force personnel.
05/17/99
Following his election as Prime Minister of Israel, Ehud Barak repeated his
campaign pledge that Israeli troops would be out of Lebanon within one year.
11/30/98
Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri resigned. President Lahud named Salim al-Huss
to form a new cabinet on December 2.
10/15/98
The Parliament elected Gen. Emile Lahud to be President, replacing Ilyas
Hirawi. Lahud was granted a constitutional waiver to serve as President
without waiting five years since leaving the army.
07/30/97 — Secretary of State Albright announced that the travel ban on Lebanon,
implemented in 1987, would not be extended.
12/15/96 — Donors attending a Washington conference pledged $1 billion in grants,
loans, and investments to help rebuild Lebanon. The United States announced
that it would increase its aid to Lebanon to $12 million for FY1997.
08/18/96
Lebanon began the five-stage election for the National Assembly.
04/26/96 — Secretary of State Christopher negotiated a cease-fire between Israel and
Hizballah where the two sides agreed not to fire on civilian populations. As
part of the agreement, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, France, and the United States
formed an observer group to report on violations of the agreement.
04/11/96 — Israel launched an air, artillery, and naval barrage at southern Lebanon in
retaliation for Hizballah rocket attacks against northern Israeli cities. Over
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the next 15 days, 20,000 Israelis evacuated northern Israel, and between
400,000 and 500,000 Lebanese fled north to avoid the fighting. More than
150 Lebanese were killed.
10/11/95
Syrian President al-Asad announced that Lebanese President Hirawi’s term
of office would be extended for three years. On October 19, the Lebanese
parliament passed an amendment to the constitution permitting the extension.
President Hirawi was sworn in for an additional three years on November 25.
07/25/93
Israel began a seven-day air, artillery, and naval bombardment of southern
Lebanon in retaliation for the deaths of seven Israeli soldiers. In the
exchange, three Israelis and 130 Lebanese were killed. Israeli Prime Minister
Rabin said the bombardment was intended to drive civilians north to Beirut
where they would force the government to stop Hizballah. As a result of the
Israeli bombardment, about 250,000 Lebanese became refugees.
07/01/93
The U.S. Senate passed S.Con.Res. 28 stating that Syria had violated the Taif
agreement by not withdrawing from Lebanon in September 1992.
12/16/92 — Israel began deporting 415 Palestinian members or suspected members of
Hamas (Islamic Resistance Movement) from the occupied territories into
southern Lebanon. Lebanon refused to allow the deportees to leave the
Israeli security strip and enter Lebanese-controlled territory. The last of the
deportees returned to Israeli prisons on December 15, 1993.
10/20/92
The National Assembly met and elected Nabih Birri as Speaker. On October
22, President Hirawi named Rafiq al-Hariri as Prime Minister, and Hariri
named a 30-man cabinet on October 31.
09/21/92 — Syria and Lebanon did not begin the discussions for Syrian armed forces
withdrawal as called for in the Taif agreement (see August 21, 1990, below).
According to press sources, Lebanon did not request the talks because the
Lebanese government did not believe it was strong enough to assume control
as Syria withdrew from the south, Beirut, and the Biqa Valley.
08/23/92 — Lebanon began three-step elections for parliament. Most Maronites
boycotted the election.
10/30/91
Lebanon participated in the Madrid peace conference (although it was widely
understood that Lebanon and Israel would not sign a peace treaty until after
Syria and Israel resolved their differences).
10/26/90
The Lebanese Forces under Samir Jaja, the Amal militia under Nabih Birri,
and the Druze forces under Walid Jumblatt agreed to withdraw their militias
from Beirut, leaving the Lebanese Armed Forces in control.
10/13/90 — General Awn sought political asylum at the French embassy after Syrian
tanks and planes attacked his refuge at Baabda palace. Awn left for France
one year later.
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08/21/90
— The National Assembly passed amendments to
the
Constitution
implementing the Taif reforms. President Hirawi signed the amendments on
September 21 (the date many cite as beginning the two-year period before the
Lebanon-Syria withdrawal discussions were scheduled to begin).
11/22/89 — President Muawwad was assassinated. On November 24, the National
Assembly Deputies elected Ilyas Hirawi President to replace Muawwad.
11/05/89 — The National Assembly approved the Taif reform package, elected a new
Speaker, and elected Rene Muawwad as President of Lebanon.
10/22/89
Some 60 National Assembly deputies, meeting in Taif, Saudi Arabia, agreed
to government reforms that included increasing the National Assembly from
99 to 108 members evenly divided between Christian and Muslim/Druze,
disarming the militias, and calling for discussions of a Syrian withdrawal
within two years after ratification of the “Taif” agreement. On July 16, 1992,
the National Assembly raised the number of Deputies from 108 to 128 and
reconfirmed the four-year term of office.
09/06/89
U.S. Ambassador John McCarthy closed the U.S. embassy annex in Awkar
following anti-American demonstrations and threats from General Awn.
New U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker reopened the embassy annex on
November 29, 1990.
01/00/89
Fighting resumed between Hizballah and Amal, and between General Awn’s
government forces and several Christian militias. By March, Hizballah
defeated Amal and controlled the left, and Awn’s forces controlled the right.
But Awn was defeated and isolated after he attempted to drive the Syrian
forces out of Lebanon. The Arab League secured a cease-fire in September
1989.
09/23/88
Outgoing President Amin Jumayyil appointed Army Commander-in-Chief
General Michel Awn to be Prime Minister. The National Assembly had failed
to elect Jumayyil’s successor in August. Awn’s appointment meant that
Lebanon had two Prime Ministers, two interim Speakers, two cabinets, a
stalemated parliament, and no President.
06/00/85
Israel completed its withdrawal from Lebanon except for the 10-mile wide
strip along the Lebanon-Israel border.
09/20/84 — A truck bomb killed 20 (two of whom were U.S. citizens) at the U.S.
embassy annex in Awkar.
02/00/84 — The U.S. contingent in the MultiNational Force withdrew from Lebanon.
The French, Italian, and British contingents were out of Lebanon by the end
of March.
10/23/83 — A truck bomb killed 241 U.S. military personnel at the U.S. MNF
headquarters at the Beirut airport.
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04/18/83
A truck bomb destroyed the U.S. embassy in Beirut, killing 63 people (17 of
whom were U.S. citizens) and wounding 100 (40 of whom were U.S.
citizens).
09/18/82 — The press reported that about 1,700 Palestinians had been murdered,
reportedly by Christian militiamen, in the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps
of southern Beirut. Two days later, the Lebanese government requested that
the MNF return to Beirut to stabilize the situation. The first MNF contingent
returned on September 24, 1982. An Israeli commission found Defense
Minister Ariel Sharon responsible for allowing the militiamen into the camp.
09/14/82
A bomb killed President-elect Bashir Jumayyil. The next day, Israeli troops
occupied southern Beirut.
08/00/82
U.S. diplomat Philip Habib negotiated an agreement whereby Israel agreed
to withdraw its troops from Lebanon. The United States, France, Italy, and
Great Britain sent peacekeeping forces to Lebanon to monitor the Palestine
Liberation Organization departure from Beirut.
06/06/82 — Israel invaded Lebanon and occupied southern Lebanon up to the Beirut-
Damascus road.
03/14/78 — Israel invaded southern Lebanon. The United Nations Interim Force in
Lebanon (UNIFIL) established an east-to-west buffer zone across southern
Lebanon to separate Israeli and Lebanese forces. Israel withdrew its troops
on June 13, 1978.
07/00/58
President Eisenhower dispatched 14,300 U.S. Marine and Army personnel to
Lebanon to support the Lebanese government in resisting a radical seizure of
the country. The U.S. forces were withdrawn in October.
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Table 2. U.S. Assistance to Lebanon
(millions of dollars)
Economic Aid
Food Aid
Military Aid
I.M.E.T.
Year
Total
(Grants)
(Grants)
(Loans)
(Grants)
1946 - 1980
332.7
120.2a
86.2b
123.3c
3.0
1981
24.3
4.0
0
20.0
0.3
1982
21.8
9.0
2.2
10.0
0.6
1983
153.9
52.2
0
100.0
1.7
1984
44.0
28.1
0.3
15.0
0.6
1985
21.1
19.9
0.5
0
0.7
1986
17.6
16.0
1.1
0
0.5
1987
23.0
12.8
9.7
0
0.5
1988
12.3
5.1
6.8
0
0.4
1989
15.5
2.8
12.3
0
0.4
1990
19.4
8.3
10.7
0
0.4
1991
19.2
9.3
9.9
0
0
1992
16.4
9.2
7.2
0
0
1993
14.4
10.3
3.5
0
0.6
1994
2.0
1.7
0
0
0.3
1995
16.0
15.6d
0
0
0.4
1996
2.5
2.0
0
0
0.5
1997
12.8
12.3
0
0
0.5
1998
12.6
12.0
0
0
0.6
1999
12.6
12.0
0
0
0.6
2000
15.6
15.0
0
0
0.6
2001
35.4
34.9
0
0
0.5
2002 35.6
35.0
0
0
0.6
2003
35.5
34.8
0
0
.7
2004
37.1
36.4
0
0
.7
2005
38.2
37.5
0
0
.7
Totals
991.5
556.4
150.4
268.3
16.4
I.M.E.T. = International Military Education and Training
Source: U.S. Agency for International Development, U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants
a. Of the $120.2 million total, $19 million was loans.
b. Of the $86.2 million total, $28.5 million was loans.
c. Of the $123.3 million total, $109.5 was loans and $13.8 million was grants.
d. Includes about $6 million from 1994.
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