With Syria imploding, is Hezbollah next?
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| Tel Aviv
Hours after the bombing that killed senior security officials in Damascus on July 18, Hezbollah鈥檚 leader resolutely backed his ally, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. But such support does not help this militant group, which relies so heavily on Syrian assistance.
The occasion for the remarks by Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah 鈥 delivered from the safety of his bunker in Lebanon 鈥 was the anniversary of Hezbollah鈥檚 鈥渄ivine victory鈥 in the July 2006 war against Israel. However, there was nothing victorious about his televised appearance. It merely confirmed Hezbollah as increasingly out of touch with the Arab Spring 鈥 hastening its decline.
After the 2006 war, many Lebanese and many in the greater Middle East perceived Hezbollah as a legitimate and powerful military and political organization. Indeed, it has since gained the majority in Lebanon鈥檚 coalition government.
But Hezbollah鈥檚 unwavering loyalty to the brutal Assad regime places it on the wrong side of history 鈥 costing it support and exacerbating sectarian and political divisions in Lebanon. This is confirmed in my conversations with people in Lebanon and the region, and in the Lebanese and Middle Eastern media.
Polls by the Pew Research Center released this month also show Hezbollah losing its luster. The favorable view of Hezbollah in the past five years dropped by 36 percent in Egypt and 25 percent in Jordan.
In the sectarian tinderbox that is Lebanon, views of Hezbollah are more polarized than ever, with 94 percent of the Sunni community against Hezbollah and 94 percent of Lebanese Shiites approving of them. Support from local 海角大神s is also diminishing, with only about a third of the community openly favoring Hezbollah.
But its crisis goes further. Hezbollah looks out of touch with the discourse of the Arab Spring itself. It called for mourning over the July 18 attack, even while it refused to speak out against the thousands of Syrians killed by the Assad regime.
While the militant group Hamas has invested significant political capital in shifting its rhetoric and alliances to fit the post-Arab Spring period, Hezbollah鈥檚 message and loyalties have not adapted. Its double standard toward freedom-seeking Arab revolutionaries demonstrates that it鈥檚 part of the ancien r茅gime.
Hezbollah鈥檚 stubborn stance presents a strategic and operational challenge as well.聽
Historically, Syria has served as the connecting link between Iran and Lebanon, allowing the flow of weapons and logistical support to Hezbollah. Also, Syria鈥檚 strong presence and influence in Lebanon made sure that Hezbollah鈥檚 weapons and 鈥渞esistance鈥 agenda would not be challenged from within.
As the Syrian regime looks to be imploding and civil war rages, both functions are threatened. What鈥檚 more, a post-Assad Syria will likely reverse the existing partnership with Mr. Nasrallah鈥檚 group. The political opposition in Syria has heavily criticized Hezbollah鈥檚 support for the regime, with protesters burning Hezbollah flags and openly accusing Nasrallah of having blood on his hands.
The May kidnapping of a group of Lebanese Shiites in Syria by an anti-Assad opposition group is a perfect example of this enmity. The kidnappers initially requested Nasrallah鈥檚 apology to them as a condition for releasing the captives.
Regime change in Syria could also give a powerful second wind to the backers of Lebanon鈥檚 2005 鈥淐edar Revolution鈥 who rebelled against Syria鈥檚 military presence and outsized influence in their country. This would undermine Hezbollah鈥檚 political position.聽聽
Hezbollah therefore finds itself in a weaker position 鈥 ideologically, politically, and strategically.
The picture looks more bleak if it is found that Hezbollah, in partnership with Iran, is involved in the July 18 suicide bombing of Israeli tourists on a bus in Bulgaria. Hezbollah denies any role. Still, it鈥檚 plausible they were involved. If that鈥檚 the case, the group鈥檚 decision to project power through attacking soft Israeli targets 鈥 after repeatedly failing to hit 鈥渙fficial鈥 ones like Israeli embassies 鈥 reflects declining strength.
It鈥檚 true that the sophistication and magnitude of Hezbollah鈥檚 military apparatus and its partnership with Iran probably mean the fall of the Assad government would not be enough to bring down the group. Also, within Lebanon, the vast majority of the Lebanese-Shiite community continues to support Hezbollah, partly as a result of the lack of serious political alternatives.
But with the Assad regime entering a stage of even more brutal violence and instability, Nasrallah鈥檚 group faces a particularly complex challenge. Unless it changes course, it will become increasingly marginalized.
[Editor's note: An earlier version referred to the status of Lebanese Shiites kidnapped in Syria. That reference has been removed because their status is not clear.]
Benedetta Berti is a fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies, a lecturer at Tel Aviv University, a member of the Atlantic Council鈥檚 Young Atlanticist working group, and coauthor of the book, 鈥听补苍诲 鈥 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012). Follow her on Twitter at