Hezbollah is blamed for Beirut

As if the Lebanese haven’t suffered enough. For
months, they have been caught between an economic meltdown, crumbling public
services, and a surging pandemic.
Now they must count the dead and survey the
extensive damage to their capital after two giant explosions on Tuesday. The blasts, especially the second, were so
huge they were reportedly heard and felt in Cyprus. At least 100 people are
reported to have been killed—that number will almost certainly rise—and
thousands injured.
A large expanse of the port and its immediate
neighborhood lies in smoking ruin; miles away, streets are full of shattered
glass. Prime Minister Hassan Diab’s
government says the explosions were caused when careless welding ignited about
2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly combustible material used as
fertilizer and for bomb-making.
By comparison, Timothy McVeigh used about 2.4 tons
of the same chemical in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. The 2015 disaster in
the Chinese city of Tianjin was caused by the explosion of 800 tons of ammonium
nitrate.
The equivalent of 2,000 Oklahoma City-sized bombs
could indeed account for the devastation and the reddish mushroom cloud that
plumed gaudily over the Beirut port. But it doesn’t mean Lebanese will simply
accept that the explosion was an unavoidable, force majeure event. Assuming the official account holds up, the
disaster again exposes the rot that is destroying the country—an especially
corrosive mix of corruption, ineptitude and malign intentions.
The ammonium
nitrate was apparently seized in 2013 from a Moldovan-flagged ship traveling
from Georgia to Mozambique. But someone—who, we don’t yet know—brought
it into Beirut; instead of returning, auctioning or disposing of it, the
port management inexcusably allowed it to be stored there for years.
There are no
prizes for guessing who in Lebanon might be interested in keeping such vast
quantities of explosive material close at hand. The U.S. Treasury and Israel
both believe Hezbollah controls many of Beirut’s port facilities.
Diab, whose government is entirely dependent on
political support from Hezbollah and its Maronite Christian allies, has vowed
to hold those responsible to account.
More than
likely, some minor officials will be fingered for permitting improper
storage of highly dangerous material.
Iran-backed Hezbollah, with its large and well-armed militia as well as
its political hold on the prime minister, has nothing to fear from the state.
But it will
not escape public opprobrium: Most Lebanese will assume the ammonium nitrate
belonged to the militia, for use in Syria and against Israel. Why the chemicals exploded is another matter,
rich with possibilities of conjecture.
In the court
of public opinion, the usual suspects will be rounded up from the ongoing
shadow war between Iran and Hezbollah on one side and Israel on the other.
President Donald Trump, who can be relied upon to make everything worse,
speculated it was a deliberate attack.
This
will be picked up and amplified by conspiracy theorists in the Middle
East. But suspicions of Hezbollah’s
culpability will intensify on Friday when a United Nations special tribunal for
Lebanon that has been looking into the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese
Prime Minister Rafik Hariri is expected to issue verdicts in cases against four
Hezbollah cadres being tried in absentia.
The men are in hiding, and have not been seen in
years; even if they are found guilty, no one expects them to be handed over.
Hariri, remember, was killed in a massive blast. A guilty verdict would increase domestic
pressure on Hezbollah, its allies and the government.
When Lebanese
have finished mourning their dead, anger will return—the kind that fueled the
massive street demonstrations that brought down Diab’s predecessor last
October. Even without the Beirut blasts,
the timing of the verdict would have been awkward for Diab, who is struggling
to negotiate an economic bailout with the International Monetary Fund: Among
the hurdles is Hezbollah’s resistance to the necessary reforms.
Hezbollah
finds itself uncomfortably positioned as the principal backer of the government
presiding over a thoroughgoing collapse of the Lebanese state and society. It
will not easily shake off blame for the Beirut blast, or for the Hariri
assassination.
Even in this
country that has suffered so much and for so long, the latest of Lebanon’s
tragedies will not soon be forgotten, nor its perpetrators forgiven.
This column
does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP
and its owners.