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January 21, 2007

All In The Family

Proudparents

TIME’s new Middle East blog has a visually interesting piece about Lebanon, and the way the political battle for hearts and minds, in that graphically-sophisticated country, is playing out rather large on the country’s billboards.

I encourage you to see the post, especially the dueling “I Heart” campaign.Too bad, though, Andrew Lee Butters simply reduces the battle into pro-Western and pro-Eastern (or pro-Washington and pro-Tehran) camps.  For TIME or TIME’s audience, it seems that’s as far as it goes.  What I was mostly interested in, however, was the image above, which Butter’s reports was too hot for a billboard, but has been circling the internet.

Doctoring a typical family photograph, the photo shows father Ahmadinejad and mother (Syrian President) Assad posing with daughter (Lebanese President) Emile Lahoud and and baby (Christian Free Patriot Movement leader and recent Hezbollah ally) Michel Aoun.  (Speaking of Hezbollah, by the way, its interesting to consider how Hassan Nasrallah fits into the family.  Butters indicates that the leader is so intimidating, though, anti-Hezbollah/Iranian/Syrian “visual activists” won’t touch him.  As the post notes, anytime Nasrallah’s supporters think he is being disrespected, they riot.)

So, how does the U.S. fit into the picture? 

The recent Iraq Study Group report urged the Administration to pursue dialogue with both Iran and Syria.  The White House, on the other hand, has propagated the impression that both are hard-core, untrustworthy antagonists and that neither would be receptive.

Recent events (if not, political reality), speak to differ.  First of all, to frame Iran in monolithic terms, or to speak of Iran and Ahmadinejad as synonymous is simply inaccurate.  The growing dissatisfaction with the Iranian President (both from clerical and secular quarters) clearly reveals a more complex and diverse set of forces at play.  If Ahmadinejad is the head of an adopted family in Lebanon, he’s got to be a very distracted dad with all the trouble he’s having with his brood back home.  (The fact that he and the missis are looking past each other seems to reflect as much.)

Most interesting of all, however, is that depiction of President Assad.

As much as Bush paints Assad as subservient, one might look at the English- and French-educated leader rather differently.  Forced into a political role only after his brother died in an auto accident, the enigmatic Bashar (married to a Syrian Sunni who grew up in England) is, if anything, subservient to the Syrian military.  That said, the enigmatic Assad seems well capable of playing forces against each other to perpetuate his own political survival.

Given the recent discovery that Damascus has spent the past two years negotiating  a peace deal with Israel, maybe with  a few flowers, and the offer of a little protection from Hezbollah, Israel and Tehran, perhaps George or Condi could be accused of cozying up with Assad too?

(image: JG. via TIME.com)

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  • lima

    Only “evil” breaks up a family.

  • itwasntme

    Actually, I think if you could get any four “arabs” to sit together like this in reality, you might get some actual peace for a change.
    East of Turkey, no faction will even pee in the same bucket to keep their kids alive.
    I don’t have to say “a pox on all their houses” because it’s already there.

  • ummabdulla

    I think it’s a clever picture. Ahmadinejad is instantly recognizable, although he looks like maybe should be the teenaged rebel son. I couldn’t identify Bashar al-Assad, though, without his tall, thin body and big ears. With that hair, he looks like some aged rock star.
    itwasntme, I assume that “arabs” is in quotes because you know that Ahmadinejad – and the vast majority of Iranians – aren’t Arabs?
    Which countries are you talking about “east of Turkey”?

  • ummabdulla

    I forgot to say that all indications are that Syria and Iran have both been willing to talk to the U.S. and negotiate. It’s obvious that the U.S. is trying to create the conditions to justify an attack. Does the average American actually believe that either Iran or Syria is a threat to them in any way?

  • itwasntme

    Yes, Ummabdulla, that’s why I put it in quotes. East of Turkey: the Lavant through to Pakistan.
    The average American isn’t thinking about this situation beyond how it affects them. I have a list up near my computer so I can keep track myself, and it looks like this:
    Hamas – Sunni
    Hezbollah – Shia
    Wahhabi – Orthodox Sunni/ Saudi
    Fatah – secular/National – largest organization in PLO
    Palestinians – most Sunni, some Druze
    Ba’ath – Syria/Iraq – secular (Sunni) or Arab socialist
    Palestinian Authority – head of PLO
    PLO – Recognized by Arab League – Separate Parliament/Polital orgs “factions”
    Kurds – Speak Kurdish; north Iraq; non-state nation, most Sunni also Yazdanism
    Iran – Shia. Persian (Farsi)
    Iraq – Was aligned Ba’ath/soc/secular, maj. Shia
    Al Qaida – Sunni Terror/”The Base”
    and it goes on and on. How can anybody expect Americans to keep all this in mind while trying to do their taxes, earn a buck and keep the kids in order. Egypt? Authoritarian and imploding. Lebanon? Can’t figure out which faction is going to assassinate Siniora. Saudi? Enigmatic as usual, with heavy ties to the entire Bush family.
    The Americans will believe anything they’re told. During Viet Nam era, the soldiers I met actually believed that if they weren’t over there fighting, the Vietnamese would physically come here and attack us. So, yes, people believe they will come here: in fact, some did, which gave that monkey we call our president all the excuse he needed to destabilize our constitutional underpinnings and throw 800 years of human rights progress into the toilet.
    Yes, Bush is looking for a wider fight in the ME and it’s scaring the bejesus out of me. He’s and idiot: mean and cowardly. Look what 20 people on three planes managed to accomplish. If Osama IS dead in some cave in the Hindu Kush, he’s surely in heaven now.

  • http://happening-here.blogspot.com/ janinsanfran

    Folks might want to check out this Lebanese commentary on the competing branding of the various forces. Enjoy.