Geography:
Area: 10,400 sq. km. (4,015 sq. km.) about 0.7
times the size of Connecticut.
Cities: Capital--Beirut
(pop. 1.5 million). Other
cities--Tripoli/Trablus (210,000),
Zahle (60,000),
Sidon/Sayda (50,000),
Tyre/Sur (20,000),
Byblos/Jbail (10,000).
Terrain: Narrow coastal plain; El Beqaa (Bekaa
Valley) separates Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon
Mountains.
Climate: Mediterranean; mild to cool, wet
winters with hot, dry summers; Lebanon mountains
experience heavy winter snows.
People:
Nationality: noun
and adjective--Lebanese (singular and
plural).
Population (2006 est.): 3,874,050.
Growth rate (2006 est.): 1.23%.
Major ethnic groups: Arab 95%, Armenian 4%,
other 1% (note: many
Christian Lebanese do not identify themselves as
Arab but rather as descendents of the ancient
Canaanites and prefer to be called Phoenicians).
Religions: Muslim 60% (Shi'a, Sunni, Druze,
Isma'ili, Alawite or Nusayri), Christian 39% (Maronite
Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Melkite Catholic,
Armenian Orthodox, Syrian Catholic, Armenian
Catholic, Syrian Orthodox, Roman Catholic,
Chaldean, Assyrian, Copt, Protestant), other 1%.
Languages: Arabic (official), English, French,
Armenian.
Education: Years
compulsory--8. Attendance--99%. Literacy (2005
est.)--87.4%; 93.1% male, 82.2% female.
Health (2006 est.): Infant
mortality rate--23.7/1,000. Life
expectancy--70.41 male, 75.48 female.
Work force (2001 est.): 2.6 million.
Government:
Type: Republic.
Independence: November 22, 1943.
Constitution: May 23, 1926.
Branches: Executive--president
(chief of state), prime minister (head of
government), deputy prime minister, cabinet. Legislative--unicameral
national assembly. Judicial--four
Courts of Cassation, Constitutional Council,
Supreme Council.
Administrative subdivisions: 8 governorates.
Political parties: Amal Movement, Ba'ath Party,
Democratic Left, Democratic Renewal Movement,
Free Patriotic Movement, Future Movement,
Hizballah, Kataeb Party, Kataeb Reform Movement,
Lebanese Forces, National Bloc, Marada Movement,
Nasserite Popular Movement, National Liberal
Party, Popular Bloc, Progressive Socialist
Party, Qornet Shehwan Gathering, Syrian Social
National Party, Tachnaq Party.
A principal divide in current Lebanese politics
is between pro-and anti-Syrian forces, often
referred to, respectively, as March 8 and March
14, after major demonstrations they organized in
2005. "March 8" consists principally of the
Shi'ite Amal and Hizballah, now allied with the
Free Patriotic Movement (Christian), while March
14 includes the Future Movement (Sunni),
Progressive Socialist Party (Druze), and
Lebanese Forces and Qornet Shehwan Gathering
(both Christian).
Suffrage: 21; compulsory for all males;
authorized for women at 21 with elementary
education.
Economy:
GDP (2006 est.): $21.5 billion.
GDP growth rate (2006 est.): (-5%).
Per capita GDP (2006 est.): $5,500.
Natural resources: limestone, iron ore, salt.
Agriculture: Products--citrus,
grapes, tomatoes, apples, vegetables, potatoes,
olives, tobacco; sheep, goats. Arable
land--18%.
Industry: Types--banking,
tourism, food processing, jewelry, cement,
textiles, mineral and chemical products, wood
and furniture products, oil refining, metal
fabricating.
Trade: Exports--$1.88
billion (2005 est., f.o.b.): authentic jewelry,
inorganic chemicals, miscellaneous consumer
goods, fruit, tobacco, construction minerals,
electric power machinery and switchgear, textile
fibers, paper. Major
markets--Syria, U.A.E., Switzerland, Turkey,
Saudi Arabia. Imports--$9.34
billion (2005 est., f.o.b.): petroleum products,
cars, medicinal products, clothing, meat and
live animals, consumer goods, paper, textile
fabrics, tobacco. Major
suppliers--Italy, Syria, France, Germany,
China, U.S., U.K., Saudi Arabia.
PEOPLE
The population of Lebanon comprises various
Christian and Muslim sects as well as Druze. No
official census has been taken since 1932,
reflecting the political sensitivity in Lebanon
over confessional (religious) balance. While
there is no consensus over the confessional
breakdown of the population for this reason, it
is safe to say that the Muslim sects as a whole
make up a majority, and that Shi'ites, Sunnis,
and Maronites are the three largest groups.
About 400,000 Palestinian refugees, some in
Lebanon since 1948, are registered with the
United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).
They are not accorded the legal rights enjoyed
by the rest of the population.
With no official figures available, it is
estimated that 600,000-900,000 persons fled the
country during the initial years of civil war
(1975-76). Although some returned, continuing
conflict through 1990 as well as after the 2006
war sparked further waves of emigration, casting
even more doubt on population figures. As much
as 7% of the population was killed during the
civil war between 1975 and 1990. Approximately
17,000-20,000 people are still "missing" or
unaccounted for from the civil war period.
Many Lebanese still derive their living from
agriculture. The urban population, concentrated
mainly in Beirut and Mount Lebanon, is noted for
its commercial enterprise. A century and a half
of migration and return have produced Lebanese
commercial networks around the globe--from North
and South America to Europe, the Gulf, and
Africa. Lebanon has a high proportion of skilled
labor compared with many other Arab countries.
HISTORY
Lebanon is the historic home of the Phoenicians,
Semitic traders whose maritime culture
flourished there for more than 2,000 years
(c.2700-450 B.C.). In later centuries, Lebanon's
mountains were a refuge for Christians, and
Crusaders established several strongholds there.
Following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire
after World War I, the League of Nations
mandated the five provinces that comprise
present-day Lebanon to France. Modern Lebanon's
constitution, drawn up in 1926, specified a
balance of political power among the various
religious groups. The country gained
independence in 1943, and French troops withdrew
in 1946. Lebanon participated in the 1948
Arab-Israeli War and signed an armistice with
Israel on March 23, 1949.
Lebanon's history since independence has been
marked by periods of political turmoil
interspersed with prosperity built on Beirut's
position as a regional center for finance and
trade. In 1958, during the last months of
President Camille Chamoun's term, an
insurrection broke out, and U.S. forces were
briefly dispatched to Lebanon in response to an
appeal by the government. During the 1960s,
Lebanon enjoyed a period of relative calm and
Beirut-focused tourism and banking sector-driven
prosperity. Other areas of the country, however,
notably the South, North, and Bekaa Valley,
remained poor in comparison.
In the early 1970's, difficulties arose over the
presence of Palestinian refugees, many of whom
arrived after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, the
secret 1969 Cairo Agreement permitting the
establishment of Palestinian camps in Lebanon,
and 1970 "Black September" hostilities in
Jordan. Among the 1970 arrivals were Yasser
Arafat and the Palestinian Liberation
Organization (PLO). Coupled with the Palestinian
problem, Muslim and Christian differences grew
more intense.
Beginning of the Civil War--1975-81
Full-scale civil war broke out in April 1975.
After shots were fired at a church, gunmen in
Christian East Beirut ambushed a busload of
Palestinians. Palestinian forces joined
predominantly leftist-Muslim factions as the
fighting persisted, eventually spreading to most
parts of the country and precipitating the
Lebanese President's call for support from
Syrian troops in June 1976. In fall of 1976,
Arab summits in Riyadh and Cairo set out a plan
to end the war. The resulting Arab Deterrent
Force, which included Syrian troops already
present, moved in to help separate the
combatants. As an uneasy quiet settled over
Beirut, security conditions in the south began
to deteriorate.
After a PLO attack on a bus in northern Israel
and Israeli retaliation that caused heavy
casualties, Israel invaded Lebanon in March
1978, occupying most of the area south of the
Litani River. In response, the UN Security
Council passed Resolution 425 calling for the
immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces and
creating the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL),
charged with maintaining peace. Israeli forces
withdrew later in 1978, turning over positions
inside Lebanon along the border to their
Lebanese ally, the South Lebanon Army (SLA)
under the leadership of Maj. Sa'ad Haddad, thus
informally setting up a 12-mile wide "security
zone" to protect Israeli territory from cross
border attack.
U.S. Intervention--1982-84
An interim cease-fire brokered by the U.S. in
1981 among Syria, the PLO, and Israel was
respected for almost a year. Several incidents,
including PLO rocket attacks on northern Israel,
as well as an assassination attempt on the
Israeli Ambassador to the United Kingdom, led to
the June 6, 1982 Israeli ground attack into
Lebanon to remove PLO forces. Operation "Peace
for Galilee" aimed at establishing a deeper
security zone and pushing Syrian troops out of
Lebanon, with a view toward paving the way for
an Israeli-Lebanese peace agreement. With these
aims in mind, Israeli forces drove 25 miles into
Lebanon, moving into East Beirut with the
support of Maronite Christian leaders and
militia.
In August 1982, U.S. mediation resulted in the
evacuation of Syrian troops and PLO fighters
from Beirut. The agreement also provided for the
deployment of a multinational force composed of
U.S. Marines along with French and Italian
units. A new President, Bashir Gemayel, was
elected with acknowledged Israeli backing. On
September 14, however, he was assassinated. The
next day, Israeli troops crossed into West
Beirut to secure Muslim militia strongholds and
stood aside as Lebanese Christian militias
massacred almost 800 Palestinian civilians in
the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. Israel's
then-Minister of Defense Ariel Sharon was held
indirectly responsible for the massacre by the
Kahane Commission and later resigned. With U.S.
backing, Amin Gemayel, chosen by the Lebanese
parliament to succeed his brother as President,
focused anew on securing the withdrawal of
Israeli and Syrian forces. The multinational
force returned.
On May 17, 1983, Lebanon, Israel, and the United
States signed an agreement on Israeli withdrawal
that was conditioned on the departure of Syrian
troops. Syria opposed the agreement and declined
to discuss the withdrawal of its troops,
effectively stalemating further progress. In
August 1983, Israel withdrew from the Shuf
(southeast of Beirut), thus removing the buffer
between the Druze and the Christian militias and
triggering another round of brutal fighting. By
September, the Druze had gained control over
most of the Shuf, and Israeli forces had pulled
out from all but the southern security zone,
where they remained until May 2000. The virtual
collapse of the Lebanese Army in February 1984,
following the defection of many Muslim and Druze
units to militias, was a major blow to the
government. With the U.S. Marines looking ready
to withdraw, Syria and Muslim groups stepped up
pressure on Gemayal. On March 5, 1984 the
Lebanese Government canceled the May 17
agreement; the Marines departed a few weeks
later.
This period of chaos witnessed the beginning of
terrorist attacks launched against U.S. and
Western interests. These included the April 18,
1983 suicide attack at the U.S. Embassy in West
Beirut (63 dead), the bombing of the
headquarters of U.S. and French forces on
October 23, 1983 (298 dead), the assassination
of American University of Beirut President
Malcolm Kerr on January 18, 1984, and the
bombing of the U.S. Embassy annex in East Beirut
on September 20, 1984 (9 dead).
It also saw the rise of radicalism among a small
number of Lebanese Muslim factions who believed
that the successive Israeli and U.S.
interventions in Lebanon were serving primarily
Christian interests. It was from these factions
that Hizballah emerged from a loose coalition of
Shi'a groups. Hizballah employed terrorist
tactics and was supported by Syria and Iran.
Worsening Conflict and Political
Crisis--1985-89
Between 1985 and 1989, factional conflict
worsened as various efforts at national
reconciliation failed. Heavy fighting took place
in the "War of the Camps" in 1985 and 1986 as
the Shi'a Muslim Amal militia sought to rout the
Palestinians from Lebanese strongholds. The Amal
movement had been organized in mid-1975, at the
beginning of the civil war, to confront what
were seen as Israeli plans to displace the
Lebanese population with Palestinians. (Its
charismatic founder Imam Musa Sadr disappeared
in Libya three years later. Its current leader,
Nabih Berri, is the Speaker of the National
Assembly.) The combat returned to Beirut in
1987, with Palestinians, leftists, and Druze
fighters allied against Amal, eventually drawing
further Syrian intervention. Violent
confrontation flared up again in Beirut in 1988
between Amal and Hizballah.
Meanwhile, on the political front, Prime
Minister Rashid Karami, head of a government of
national unity set up after the failed peace
efforts of 1984, was assassinated on June 1,
1987. President Gemayel's term of office expired
in September 1988. Before stepping down, he
appointed another Maronite Christian, Lebanese
Armed Forces Commanding General Michel Aoun, as
acting Prime Minister, contravening Lebanon's
unwritten "National Pact," which required the
prime minister to be Sunni Muslim. Muslim groups
rejected the move and pledged support to Salim
al-Hoss, a Sunni who had succeeded Karami.
Lebanon was thus divided between a Christian
government in East Beirut and a Muslim
government in West Beirut, with no president.
In February 1989 Aoun attacked the rival
Lebanese Forces militia. By March he turned his
attention to other militias, launching what he
termed a "War of Liberation" against the Syrians
and their Lebanese militia allies. In the months
that followed, Aoun rejected both the agreement
that ultimately ended the civil war and the
election of another Christian leader as
president. A Lebanese-Syrian military operation
in October 1990 forced him to take refuge in the
French Embassy in Beirut and later to go into a
15-year exile in Paris. After Syrian troop
withdrawal, Aoun returned to Lebanon on May 7,
2005 and won a seat in the 2005 parliamentary
elections. His Free Patriotic Movement became a
principal element of the pro-Syrian opposition
bloc.
End of the Civil War--1989-91
The Ta'if Agreement of 1989 marked the beginning
of the end of the war. In January of that year,
a committee appointed by the Arab League,
chaired by Kuwait and including Saudi Arabia,
Algeria, and Morocco, had begun to formulate
solutions to the conflict, leading to a meeting
of Lebanese parliamentarians in Ta'if, Saudi
Arabia, where they agreed to the national
reconciliation accord in October. Returning to
Lebanon, they ratified the agreement on November
4 and elected Rene Moawad as President the
following day. Moawad was assassinated in a car
bombing in Beirut on November 22 as his
motorcade returned from Lebanese Independence
Day ceremonies. Elias Hrawi, who remained in
office until 1998, succeeded him.
In August 1990, parliament and the new President
agreed on constitutional amendments embodying
some of the political reforms envisioned at
Ta'if. The National Assembly expanded to 128
seats and was divided equally between Christians
and Muslims (with Druze counted as Muslims). In
March 1991, parliament passed an amnesty law
that pardoned all political crimes prior to its
enactment. The amnesty was not extended to
crimes perpetrated against foreign diplomats or
certain crimes referred by the cabinet to the
Higher Judicial Council. In May 1991, the
militias (with the important exception of
Hizballah and Palestinian militias) were
dissolved, and the Lebanese Armed Forces began
to slowly rebuild itself as Lebanon's only major
nonsectarian institution.
In all, it is estimated that more than 100,000
were killed, and another 100,000 left
handicapped, during Lebanon's 16-year civil war.
Up to one-fifth of the pre-war resident
population, or about 900,000 people, were
displaced from their homes, of which perhaps a
quarter of a million emigrated permanently. The
last of the Western hostages taken during the
mid-1980s were released in May 1992.
Postwar Reconstruction--1992 to 2005
Postwar social and political instability, fueled
by economic uncertainty and the collapse of the
Lebanese currency, led to the resignation of
Prime Minister Omar Karami in May 1992, after
less than 2 years in office. Former Prime
Minister Rashid al Sulh, who was widely viewed
as a caretaker to oversee Lebanon's first
parliamentary elections in 20 years, replaced
him.
By early November 1992, a new parliament had
been elected, and Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri
had formed a cabinet, retaining for himself the
finance portfolio. The formation of a government
headed by a successful billionaire businessman
was widely seen as a sign that Lebanon would
make a priority of rebuilding the country and
reviving the economy. Solidere, a private real
estate company set up to rebuild downtown
Beirut, was a symbol of Hariri's strategy to
link economic recovery to private sector
investment. After the election of then-commander
of the Lebanese Armed Forces Emile Lahoud in
1998, following Hrawi's extended term as
President, Salim al-Hoss again served as Prime
Minister. Hariri returned to office as Prime
Minister in November 2000. Although problems
with basic infrastructure and government
services persist, and Lebanon is now highly
indebted, much of the civil war damage was
repaired throughout the country, and many
foreign investors and tourists returned.
In early April 1996, Israel conducted a military
operation dubbed "Grapes of Wrath" in response
to Hizballah's continued launching of rockets at
villages in northern Israel. The 16-day
operation caused hundreds of thousands of
civilians in south Lebanon to flee their homes.
On April 18, Hizballah fired mortars at an
Israeli military unit from a position near the
UN compound at Qana, and the Israeli Army
responded with artillery fire. Several Israeli
shells struck the compound, killing 102
civilians sheltered there. In the "April
Understanding" concluded on April 26, Israel and
Hizballah committed themselves to avoid
targeting civilians and using populated areas to
launch attacks. The Israel-Lebanon Monitoring
Group (ILMG), co-chaired by France and the
United States, with Syria, Lebanon, and Israel
all represented, was set up to implement the
Understanding and assess reports of violations.
ILMG ceased operations following the May 2000
Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon.
On May 23, 2000, the Israeli military carried
out a total withdrawal of Israeli troops from
the south and the Bekaa Valley, effectively
ending 22 years of occupation. The SLA collapsed
and about 6,000 SLA members and their families
fled the country, although more than 3,000 had
returned by November 2003. The military court
tried all of the SLA operatives who remained in
the country and the average sentence handed down
was 1-year imprisonment.
On June 16, 2000, the UN Security Council
adopted the report of the Secretary General
verifying Israeli compliance with UN Security
Council Resolution 425 (1978) and the withdrawal
of Israeli troops to their side of the
demarcated Lebanese-Israeli line of separation
(the "Blue Line") mapped out by UN
cartographers. (The international border between
Lebanon and Israel is still to be determined in
the framework of a peace agreement.) In August
2000, the Government of Lebanon deployed over
1,000 police and soldiers to the former security
zone, but Hizballah also maintained observation
posts and conducted patrols along the Blue Line.
While Lebanon and Syria initially agreed to
respect the Blue Line, both since have
registered objections and continue to argue that
Israel has not fully withdrawn from Lebanese
soil. As regional tension escalated with the
Palestinian intifada in
September 2000, Hizballah cited Blue Line
discrepancies when it reengaged Israel on
October 7, taking three Israeli soldiers captive
in an area known as Sheba'a Farms. (In 2001, the
Israeli Government declared the three soldiers
were believed to be dead.) Sheba'a Farms, a
largely unpopulated area just south of the Blue
Line opposite the Lebanese town of Sheba'a, was
captured by Israel when it occupied Syria's
Golan Heights in 1967. The Lebanese Government
has repeatedly laid claim to the area since
shortly before Israel's general withdrawal.
Meanwhile, the Syrian Government has verbally
stated that the Sheba'a Farms tract is Lebanese,
but, as with the rest of the Lebanon-Syria
border, has been unwilling to commit to a formal
border demarcation in the area. As a result of
secret mediation by the German Government,
Israel released a number of Lebanese prisoners
held by Israel in early 2004 in exchange for
Elhanan Tannenbaum, an Israeli reservist
abducted by Hizballah in late 2000.
In January 2000 the government took action
against Sunni Muslim extremists in the north who
had attacked its soldiers, and it continues to
act against groups such as Asbat al-Ansar, which
has been linked to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida
network, and other extremists. On January 24,
2002, Elie Hobeika, a former Lebanese Forces
figure associated with the Sabra and Shatila
massacres and who later served in three cabinets
and the parliament, was assassinated in a car
bombing in Beirut.
A September 2004 vote by the Chamber of Deputies
to amend the constitution to extend President
Lahoud's term in office by 3 years amplified the
question of Lebanese sovereignty and the
continuing Syrian presence. The vote was clearly
taken under Syrian pressure, exercised in part
through Syria's military intelligence service,
whose chief in Lebanon had acted as a virtual
proconsul for many years. Syria, which views
Lebanon as part of its own territory, has not
signed a boundary agreement with Lebanon and
does not have normal diplomatic relations with
Lebanon. The UN Security Council expressed its
concern over the situation by passing Resolution
1559, also in September 2004, which called for
withdrawal of all remaining foreign forces from
Lebanon, disbanding and disarmament of all
Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias, the
deployment of the Lebanese Armed Forces
throughout the country, and a free and fair
electoral process in the presidential election.
Syrian Withdrawal--2005
Former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, who had
resisted Syria's effort to secure Lahoud's
extension, and 19 others were assassinated in
Beirut by a car bomb on February 14, 2005. The
assassination spurred massive protests in Beirut
and international pressure that led to the
withdrawal of the remaining Syrian military
troops from Lebanon on April 26. In the months
that followed Hariri's assassination, journalist
Samir Qassir, Lebanese politician George Hawi,
and journalist Gebran Tueni were murdered by car
bombs, and Defense Minister Elias Murr and
journalist May Chidiac narrowly avoided a
similar fate when they were targeted with car
bombs. The UN International Independent
Investigative Commission (UNIIIC) headed by
Detlev Mehlis began an investigation of Hariri's
assassination and related crimes, beginning with
the October 2004 attempt to assassinate
Communications Minister Marwan Hamadeh. Serge
Brammertz took over the investigation at the
beginning of 2006. In December 2006, the
Lebanese cabinet approved an agreement with the
UN Security Council to create a special tribunal
of international character which would be
responsible for trying those who might be
indicted as a result of the investigation.
President Lahoud, Parliament Speaker Berri, and
the Shia ministers who resigned from Lebanon's
cabinet in November 2006 did not recognize the
cabinet's decision on this matter, however.
Parliamentary elections were held May 29-June
19, 2005 and the anti-Syrian opposition led by
Sa'ad Hariri, Rafiq Hariri's son, won a majority
of 72 seats (out of 128). Hariri ally and former
Finance Minister Fouad Siniora was named Prime
Minister and Nabih Berri was reelected as
Speaker of Parliament. Parliament approved the
first "made-in-Lebanon" cabinet in almost 30
years on July 30. The ministerial statement of
the new cabinet (which included two Hizballah
ministers), a summary of the new government's
agenda and priorities, focused on political and
economic reform, but also endorsed Hizballah's
right to possess military weapons to carry out a
"national resistance" against the perceived
Israeli occupation of Lebanese territory.
Hizballah forces continued to launch sporadic
military strikes on Israeli forces, drawing
responses that produced casualties on both sides
and, on two occasions in 2001, Israeli air
strikes on Syrian radar sites in Lebanon. Israel
continues to violate Lebanese sovereignty by
conducting overflights of Lebanese territory
north of the Blue Line. UNIFIL has recorded
numerous violations of the Blue Line by both
sides since the Israeli withdrawal. In general,
however, the level of violence along the
Israeli-Lebanon front decreased dramatically
from May 2000 until mid-2006.
War with Israel--2006
On July 12, 2006, Hizballah guerillas crossed
into Israel, killed three Israeli soldiers, and
kidnapped two others, precipitating a war with
Israel. Israeli air strikes hit Hizballah
positions in the south and strategic targets
throughout Lebanon, and Israeli ground forces
ground forces moved against Hizballah in
southern Lebanon. Hizballah resisted the ground
attack and fired thousands of rockets at
civilian targets in Israel. By the time the war
ended, on Aug. 14, an estimated 1200 Lebanese
civilians and hundreds of Hizballah fighters had
died, along with 119 Israeli military and 43
Israeli civilians. UN Security Council
Resolution 1701, which ended the war, provided
for a ceasefire, Israeli withdrawal and lifting
of blockades, disarming of Hizballah and other
militias, and a ban on unauthorized weapons
transfers into Lebanon. UNSCR 1701 also
significantly strengthened UNIFIL's mandate and
authorized its enlargement from about 2,000
initially up to a maximum of 15,000. Bolstered
by UNIFIL, which by the beginning of 2007 had
more than 11,000 personnel, the Lebanese Armed
Forces deployed to southern Lebanon and the
border with Israel for the first time in almost
four decades.
The war temporarily or permanently displaced
roughly one-fourth of Lebanon's population, and
caused enormous damage to homes, businesses, and
infrastructure. The country, which was already
seriously indebted, suffered roughly $5 billion
in damages and financial losses. The
international community provided massive
humanitarian relief, plus substantial aid for
economic reconstruction and reform, with $940
million in aid pledged at an August 31, 2006
donors conference in Stockholm and $7.6 billion
in pledges announced at a Paris conference
January 25, 2007. Aid pledged in Paris was to be
coordinated with the Lebanese Government's
program for fiscal and economic reform.
Although Syria withdrew its military forces from
Lebanon, intelligence assets remained, and Syria
continues to have a strong influence in Lebanese
politics. In November 2006, as Siniora's cabinet
neared approval of the Hariri tribunal,
pro-Syrian ministers, including all the Shi'ite
ministers, withdrew from the cabinet. Led by
Hizballah, pro-Syrian forces began months of
massive demonstrations, sit-ins, and occasional
violence with the aim of either paralyzing or
bringing down the cabinet. Minister of Industry
Pierre Gemayel, son of ex-president Amin
Gemayel, was assassinated November 21.
GOVERNMENT
Lebanon is a parliamentary democracy in which
the people constitutionally have the right to
change their government. However, from the
mid-1970s until the parliamentary elections in
1992, civil war precluded the effective exercise
of political rights. According to the
constitution, direct elections must be held for
the parliament every 4 years. Parliament, in
turn, is tasked to elect a new president every 6
years. A presidential election scheduled for the
autumn of 2004 was pre-empted by a parliamentary
vote to extend the sitting president's term in
office by 3 years. An election for a new
president was held in May 2008. The president,
in consultation with the parliament, chooses the
prime minister. Political parties may be formed.
However, the political parties that do exist are
weak and mostly based on sectarian interests.
Since the emergence of the post-1943 state,
national policy has been determined largely by a
relatively restricted group of traditional
regional and sectarian leaders. The 1943
national pact, an unwritten agreement that
established the political foundations of modern
Lebanon, allocated political power on an
essentially confessional system based on the
1932 census. Until 1990, seats in parliament
were divided on a 6-to-5 ratio of Christians to
Muslims (with Druze counted as Muslims). With
the Ta'if Agreement, the ratio changed to half
and half. Positions in the government
bureaucracy are allocated on a similar basis.
Indeed, gaining political office is virtually
impossible without the firm backing of a
particular religious or confessional group. The
pact also allocated public offices along
religious lines, with the top three positions in
the ruling "troika" distributed as follows:
- The presidency is reserved for a
Maronite Christian;
- The prime minister, a Sunni Muslim, and
- The speaker of parliament, a Shi'a
Muslim.
Efforts to alter or abolish the confessional
system of allocating power have been at the
center of Lebanese politics for decades. Those
religious groups most favored by the 1943
formula sought to preserve it, while those who
saw themselves at a disadvantage sought either
to revise it after updating key demographic data
or to abolish it entirely. Nonetheless, many of
the provisions of the national pact were
codified in the 1989 Ta'if Agreement,
perpetuating sectarianism as a key element of
Lebanese political life.
Although moderated somewhat under Ta'if,
constitutionally, the president has a strong and
influential position. The president has the
authority to promulgate laws passed by the
Chamber of Deputies, to issue supplementary
regulations to ensure the execution of laws, and
to negotiate and ratify treaties.
The Chamber of Deputies is elected by adult
suffrage (majority age is 21) based on a system
of proportional representation for the various
confessional groups. Political blocs are usually
based on confessional and local interests or on
personal/family allegiance rather than on
left/right policy orientations.
The parliament traditionally has played a
significant role in financial affairs, since it
has the responsibility for levying taxes and
passing the budget. It also exercises political
control over the cabinet through formal
questioning of ministers on policy issues and by
requesting a confidence debate.
Lebanon's judicial system is based on the
Napoleonic Code. Juries are not used in trials.
The Lebanese court system has three
levels--courts of first instance, courts of
appeal, and the court of cassation. There also
is a system of religious courts having
jurisdiction over personal status matters within
particular religious communities, e.g., rules on
such matters as marriage, divorce, and
inheritance.
Principal Government Officials
President--Michel Sleiman
Prime Minister--Fouad Siniora
Speaker of Parliament--Nabih Berri
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Fawzi Salloukh
Finance Minister--Mohammad Chatah
Deputy Prime Minister--Issam Abou Jamra
Defense Minister--Elias Murr
Interior Minister--Ziyad Baroud
Ambassador to the U.S.--Antoine Chedid
Ambassador to the UN--Nawaf Salam
Lebanon maintains an embassy in
the United States at 2560 28th Street, NW,
Washington, D.C. 20008, tel. (202) 939-6300.
There also are three consulates general in the
United States: 1959 East Jefferson, Suite 4A,
Detroit, MI 48207, tel. (313) 567-0233/0234;
7060 Hollywood Blvd., Suite 510, Los Angeles, CA
90028, tel. (213) 467-1253/1254; and 9 East 76th
Street, New York, N.Y. 10021, tel. (212)
744-7905/7906 and 744-7985.
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Lebanese political institutions often play a
secondary role to highly confessionalized
personality-based politics. Powerful families
also still play an independent role in
mobilizing votes for both local and
parliamentary elections. Nonetheless, a lively
panoply of domestic political parties, some even
predating independence, still exists. The
largest are all confessional based. The Kataeb
(Phalange), National Bloc, National Liberal
Party, Lebanese Forces and Free Patriotic
Movement (FPM) are overwhelmingly Christian
parties. Amal and Hizballah are the main rivals
for the organized Shi'a vote, and the PSP
(Progressive Socialist Party) is the leading
Druze party. In the 2005 parliamentary
elections, an anti-Syrian opposition coalition
("March 14") emerged, led by Sa'ad Hariri's
predominantly Sunni Future Movement and allied
with Druze leader Jumblatt, the Qornet Shehwan
coalition of center-right Christian politicians,
Samir Geagea's mostly Maronite Lebanese Forces,
and Elias Attallah's Democratic Left secular
movement. In addition to domestic parties, there
are branches of pan-Arab secular parties
(Ba'ath, socialist and communist parties) that
were active in the 1960s and throughout the
period of civil war.
There are differences both between and among
Muslim and Christian parties regarding the role
of religion in state affairs. There is a very
high degree of political activism among
religious leaders across the sectarian spectrum.
The interplay for position and power among the
religious, political, and party leaders and
groups produces a political tapestry of
extraordinary complexity.
In the past, the system worked to produce a
viable democracy. The civil war resulted in
greater segregation across the confessional
spectrum. Whether in political parties, places
of residence, schools, media outlets, even
workplaces, there is a lack of regular
interaction across sectarian lines to facilitate
the exchange of views and promote understanding.
Some Christians favor political and
administrative decentralization of the
government, with separate Muslim and Christian
sectors operating within the framework of a
confederation. Muslims, for the most part,
prefer a unified, central government with an
enhanced share of power commensurate with their
larger share of the population. The trajectory
of the Ta'if Agreement points towards a
non-confessional system, but there has been no
real movement in this direction in the decade
and a half since Ta'if.
Palestinian refugees, predominantly Sunni
Muslims, who numbered 405,525 in 2006 according
to UNWRA, are not active on the domestic
political scene. Nonetheless, they constitute an
important minority whose
naturalization/settlement in Lebanon is
vigorously opposed by most Lebanese, who see
them as a threat to Lebanon's delicate
confessional balance. During 2002, parliament
enacted legislation banning Palestinians from
owning property in Lebanon. The Labor Ministry
opened up professions previously closed to
Palestinians in June 2005. The number of Iraqi
refugees is approximately 50,000 and is believed
to have stabilized as of 2008.
ECONOMY
Lebanon has a free-market economy and a strong
laissez-faire commercial tradition. The Lebanese
economy is service-oriented; main growth sectors
include banking and tourism. According to the
Lebanese Ministry of Economy and Trade, Lebanon
posted 5% real growth in 2004, with inflation
running at 3%. There are no restrictions on
foreign exchange or capital movement, and bank
secrecy is strictly enforced. Lebanon has
adopted a law to combat money laundering. There
are practically no restrictions on foreign
investment; however, the investment climate
suffers from red tape, corruption, arbitrary
licensing decisions, high taxes, tariffs, and
fees, archaic legislation, and a lack of
adequate protection of intellectual property.
There are no country-specific U.S. trade
sanctions against Lebanon.
Lebanon embarked on a massive reconstruction
program in 1992 to rebuild the country's
physical and social infrastructure devastated by
both the long civil war (1975-90) and the
Israeli occupation of the south (1978-2000). In
addition, the delicate social balance and the
near-dissolution of central government
institutions during the civil war handicapped
the state as it sought to capture revenues to
fund the recovery effort. Monetary stabilization
coupled with high interest rate policies
aggravated the debt service burden, leading to a
substantial rise in budget deficits. Thus, the
government accumulated significant debt, which
by 2005 had reached $36 billion, or 185% of GDP.
Unemployment is estimated at 18% officially, but
in the absence of reliable statistics, some
estimate it could be as high as 20-25%.
The government also has maintained a firm
commitment to the Lebanese pound, which has been
pegged to the dollar since September 1999. The
government passed an Investment Development Law
as well as laws for the privatization of the
telecom and the electricity sector, signed the
Euro-Med Partnership Agreement with the European
Union (EU) in March 2003, and is working toward
accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO).
In order to increase revenues, the government
introduced a 10% value added tax (VAT) that
became applicable in February 2002 and a 5% tax
that became applicable in February 2003.
Plagued by mounting indebtedness, Lebanon
submitted a comprehensive program on its
financing needs at the Paris II donors
conference in November 2002 and succeeded in
attracting pledges totaling $4.4 billion,
including $3.1 billion to support fiscal
adjustment and $1.2 billion to support economic
development projects. Despite the substantial
aid it had received, the government made little
progress on its reform program, and by 2006,
even before the war, the debt problem had grown
worse. After the war, $940 million in relief and
early reconstruction aid was pledged to Lebanon
August 31, 2006 at a donors conference in
Stockholm, and an additional $7.6 billion in
assistance for reconstruction and economic
stabilization was pledged January 25, 2007 at
the International Conference for Support to
Lebanon, "Paris III". Unlike the Paris II aid,
much of the Paris III aid was to be contingent
on Lebanon's meeting agreed benchmarks in
implementing its proposed five-year economic and
social reform program. The International
Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed to initiate a
Post-Conflict Program and to assign a team to
Lebanon to provide technical assistance, to
monitor the progress of reforms, and to advise
donors on the timing of aid delivery.
The U.S. enjoys a strong exporter position with
Lebanon, generally ranking as Lebanon's
fifth-largest source of imported goods. More
than 160 offices representing U.S. businesses
currently operate in Lebanon. Since the lifting
of the passport restriction in 1997 (see below),
a number of large U.S. companies have opened
branch or regional offices, including Microsoft,
American Airlines, Coca-Cola, FedEx, UPS,
General Electric, Parsons Brinkerhoff, Cisco,
Eli Lilly, and Pepsi Cola.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
The foreign policy of Lebanon reflects its
geographic location, the composition of its
population, and its reliance on commerce and
trade. Lebanon's foreign policy has been heavily
influenced by neighboring Syria, which has also
long influenced Lebanon's internal policies as
well. Reflecting lingering feelings in Syria
that Lebanon was unjustly separated from Syria
by European powers, Syria and Lebanon have never
formally agreed on their mutual boundaries, and,
rather than having normal diplomatic relations,
the two countries are linked by a Higher Council
for Bilateral Relations. Syria has no embassy or
equivalent office in Beirut, while Lebanon has
an "Interest Office" in Damascus. The framework
for relations was first codified in May 1991,
when Lebanon and Syria signed a treaty of mutual
cooperation. This treaty came out of the Ta'if
Agreement, which stipulated "Lebanon is linked
to Syria by distinctive ties deriving strength
from kinship, history, and common interests."
The Lebanese-Syria treaty calls for
"coordination and cooperation between the two
countries" that would serve the "interests of
the two countries within the framework of
sovereignty and independence of each." Numerous
agreements on political, economic, security, and
judicial affairs have followed over the years.
Syria maintained troops in Lebanon from 1976
until 2005; however, even after the withdrawal
of Syria's military troops, it is believed to
have maintained intelligence assets in Lebanon.
In any case, Syrian influence in Lebanese
politics remains strong.
Lebanon, like most Arab states, does not
recognize Israel, with which it has been
technically at war since Israel's establishment.
Lebanon participated in the 1948 Arab-Israeli
War, and despite the 1948 Lebanon-Israel
armistice, Lebanon's lack of control over the
border region resulted in repeated border
hostilities, initiated mainly by Palestinian
exile groups from 1968 to 1982 and later by
Hizballah. These attacks led to Israeli
counterattacks, including a 1978 invasion, a
1982 invasion and occupation which ended in
2000, and the 2006 war. Lebanon did not
participate in the 1967 or 1973 Arab-Israeli
wars, nor in the 1991 Gulf War. The success of
the latter created new opportunities for Middle
East peacemaking. In October 1991, under the
sponsorship of the United States and the
then-Soviet Union, Middle East peace talks were
held in Madrid, Spain, where Israel and a
majority of its Arab neighbors conducted direct
bilateral negotiations to seek a just, lasting,
and comprehensive peace based on UN Security
Council Resolutions 242 and 338 (and 425 on
Lebanon) and the concept of "land for peace."
Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, and representatives of
the Palestinians continued negotiating until the
Oslo interim peace accords were concluded
between Israel and the Palestinians in September
1993 and Jordan and Israel signed an agreement
in October 1994. In March 1996, Syria and Israel
held another round of Madrid talks; the Lebanon
track did not convene. Lebanon has repeatedly
called for a solution of the Israeli-Palestinian
problem as a prerequisite to peace with Israel.
Lebanon concluded negotiations on an association
agreement with the European Union in late 2001,
and both sides initialed the accord in January
2002. Lebanon also has bilateral trade
agreements with several Arab states and is
working toward accession to the World Trade
Organization. Aside from Syria, Lebanon enjoys
good relations with virtually all of the other
Arab countries (despite historic tensions with
Libya, the Palestinians, and Iraq), and hosted
an Arab League Summit in March 2002 for the
first time in more than 35 years. Lebanon also
is a member of the Organization of Islamic
Conference and maintains a close relationship
with Iran, largely centered on Shi'a Muslim
links. Lebanon is a member of the Francophone
countries and hosted the Francophone Summit in
October 2002.
U.S.-LEBANESE RELATIONS
The United States seeks to maintain its
traditionally close ties with Lebanon, and to
help preserve its independence, sovereignty,
national unity, and territorial integrity. The
United States, along with the international
community, supports full implementation of UN
Security Council Resolution 1559, including the
disarming of all militias and the deployment of
the Lebanese Armed Forces throughout Lebanon.
The United States believes that a peaceful,
prosperous, and stable Lebanon can make an
important contribution to comprehensive peace in
the Middle East.
One measure of U.S. concern and involvement has
been a program of relief, rehabilitation, and
recovery that from 1975 through 2005 totaled
more than $400 million in aid to Lebanon. For
relief, recovery, rebuilding, and security in
the wake of the 2006 war, the U.S. Government
substantially stepped up this program, pledging
well over $1 billion in additional assistance
for the 2006 and 2007 fiscal years. This support
reflects not only humanitarian concerns and
historical ties but also the importance the
United States attaches to sustainable
development and the restoration of an
independent, sovereign, unified Lebanon. Some of
current funding is used to support the
activities of U.S. and Lebanese private
voluntary organizations engaged in rural and
municipal development programs nationwide,
improve the economic climate for global trade
and investment, and enhance security and
resettlement in south Lebanon. The U.S. also
supports humanitarian demining and victims'
assistance programs.
Over the years, the United States also has
assisted the American University of Beirut (AUB)
and the Lebanese American University (LAU) with
budget support and student scholarships.
Assistance also has been provided to the
Lebanese-American Community School (ACS) and the
International College (IC).
1993, the U.S. resumed the International
Military Education and Training program in
Lebanon to help bolster the Lebanese Armed
Forces (LAF)--the country's only nonsectarian
national institution--and reinforce the
importance of civilian control of the military.
Sales of excess defense articles (EDA) resumed
in 1991 and have allowed the LAF to enhance both
its transportation and communications
capabilities, which were severely degraded
during the civil war. Security assistance to
both the LAF and the Internal Security Forces
(ISF) increased significantly after the 2006
war, in order to support the democratically
elected Government of Lebanon as it carries out
the requirements of UNSCR 1701 and asserts its
sovereignty over the whole of Lebanese
territory.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Michele
Sison
Deputy Chief of Mission--William Grant
Defense Attaché--Lt. Col. David Alley
USAID Director--Denise Horbel
Political/Economic/ Chief--Susanne Rose
Economic/Commercial Officer--Amy Tachco
Consul--Kirk Smith
Management Officer--Michelle Esperdy
Public Affairs Officer--Cherie J. Lenzen
Regional Security Officer--Thomas Depenbrock
The U.S.
Embassy operates
in Awkar, Lebanon (tel. 961-4-543600,
961-4-542600). In September 1989, all American
officials at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut were
withdrawn, when safety and operation of the
mission could not be guaranteed. A new U.S.
Ambassador returned to Beirut in November 1990,
and the Embassy has been continuously open since
March 1991. In 1997, reflecting improvements in
Lebanon's security climate, the United States
lifted the ban it had imposed on
American-citizen travel to Lebanon in 1985. The
ban was replaced by a travel warning.
Nonetheless, remaining security concerns
continue to limit the size of the American staff
and visitor access to the Embassy. American
Citizen Services are available, and the Embassy
resumed full nonimmigrant visa services in June
2003.