Lebanese
Forces (LF) (Arabic: القوات اللبنانية al-quwat al-lubnāniyya)
is a Lebanese political party and a former militia, which
fought on the Christian side during the civil war that
ravaged Lebanon from 1975 to 1990. After the civil war
ended, the movement reinvented itself as a political party.
In 1994, it was banned, and the activities of its militants
repressed by the Lebanese and Syrian intelligence services
in Lebanon and the pro-Syrian government. The LF returned as
legal party after the Cedar Revolution in early 2005
resulted in a withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon. The
movement is officially secular, but in practice it has
always been supported almost exclusively by Christians,
mainly Catholic Maronites as well as Orthodox, Evangelicals,
and the Armenian Lebanese. Its leader since 1986 is Samir
Geagea.
Early history (1976–1982)
Formation
The Lebanese Forces "LF" were informally organized in 1976
under the leadership of Bachir Gemayel, son of Pierre
Gemayel, the founder of one of the main Christian political
groups, the Phalanges or Kataeb party. It began as the
military wing of the Phalanges and extended later to all
other Christian military factions of the joint Lebanese
Front. The main reason behind the formation of the LF was to
strengthen the Christian side against the alliance of
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), including the
Palestinian factions of the Rejectionist Front, Muslim
militias, and the Lebanese National Movement, an umbrella of
leftist Militias. From the start, the LF included the
Lebanese Phalanges, the National Liberal Party (or Ahrar),
the Al-Tanzim, the "Christian Connections" ("al Rawabit al
masihiya") and the Guardians of the Cedars led by Etienne
Saqr.
Clashes with Chamoun
In July 1980, following months of intra-Christian clashes
between the Tigers and the Phalangists, Bachir Gemayel
launched an operation dubbed «Unification of the Rifle», in
an attempt to unite all the Christian militias under his
command. This operation resulted in a massacre of tens of
Tigers' members and their families at the Marine beach
resort in Safra, 25 km north of Beirut. Camille Chamoun's
silence was interpreted as condonation because the Tigers
led by his son Dany were getting out of his
control.[citation needed]
Siege of Zahle
On April 2, 1981, the Syrian army heavily bombarded the city
of Zahle, the largest Catholic city in the Middle East.
There were less than a hundred LF fighters in the city at
the beginning of the battle. Zahle was sieged for three
months during which it was violently shelled, but the
population refused to surrender. Meanwhile, protests were
held in East Beirut urging the end of the siege. It finally
ended with the withdrawal of the Syrian troops (and snipers)
from around the city, and the evacuation of LF fighters to
Beirut. The LF combatants were honored at their arrival to
the LF headquarters in Karantina.
Israeli invasion
In 1982, Israel invaded Lebanon, arguing that a military
intervention was necessary to root out PLO guerrillas from
the southern part of the country. Israeli forces eventually
moved towards Beirut and laid siege to the city, aiming to
reshape the Lebanese political landscape.
After the PLO had been expelled from the country to Tunisia,
in a negotiated agreement, LF leader Bachir Gemayel was
promoted by Israeli and American governments as president of
Lebanon. He was elected by the parliament in September; most
Muslim members of parliament boycotted the vote. Nine days
before he was to take office, on September 14, 1982, he was
killed along with 25 others in a bomb explosion in the
Kataeb headquarters in Achrafieh. The attack was carried out
by a member of the Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SSNP),
believed by many to have acted on instructions of the Syrian
government of President Hafez al-Assad. Israel then moved to
occupy the city, allowing Phalanges and LF members to enter
the centrally located Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and
Shatila; a massacre followed, which killed 5000 women and
childern in about 3 hours, which caused an international
uproar.
The Amine Gemayel years (1982–1988)
Battles
Mountain War
After the Israeli invasion, the IDF troops settled in the
Chouf and Aley districts in Mount Lebanon. This, along with
the election of Bachir Gemayel as president of the republic
led to the return of the Christian refugees that fled their
homes at the beginning of war. The LF returned back to the
positions in the villages they were in seven years ago. Some
individual vengeance acts committed against the Druze
population caused anger and resentment among them. This will
be one of the reasons behind the atrocities perpetrated
during the Mountain War. The LF participated in the
"Mountain War," but could not prevent the evacuation of the
majority of the Christian population and the destruction of
many Christian villages by the Druze Progressive Socialist
Party "PSP" and allied Palestinian militias.
The LF also fought battles against the Palestinians, Druze
PSP and Syrians east of the southern city of Sidon. The
outcome was a PSP militia victory and a contigous Druze
Chouf district with access to the sea.
Internal power struggles
After the death of Bachir, his brother Amine Gemayel had
replaced him as President, and his cousin, Fadi Frem, as
commander of the LF. The two had a frosty relationship, and
in 1984, pressure from Amine led to Frem's replacement by
Fuad Abou Nader, a nephew of Gemayel's.
On March 12, 1985, Samir Geagea, Elie Hobeika and Karim
Pakradouni rebelled against Abou Nader's command, ostensibly
to take the LF back to its original path. The relationship
between Geagea and Hobeika soon broke down, however, and
Hobeika began secret negotiations with the Syrians. On
December 28, 1985, he signed the Tripartite Accord, against
the wishes of Geagea and most of the other leading Christian
figures. Claiming that the Tripartite Accord gave Syria
unlimited power in Lebanon, Geagea mobilized factions inside
the LF and on January 15, 1986, attacked Hobeika's
headquarters in Karantina. Hobeika surrendered and fled,
first to Paris and subsequently to Damascus. He then moved
to Zahle with tens of his fighters where he prepared for an
attack against East Beirut. On September 27, 1986, Hobeika's
forces tried to take over the city of Achrafieh but the LF
held them back.
This failed attempt by Hobeika was the last episode of
internal struggles in East Beirut during Amine Gemayel's
mandate. As a result, the LF led by Geagea were the only
major force on the ground. During two years of frail peace,
Geagea launched a drive to re-equip and reorganize the
Lebanese Forces. He also instituted a social welfare program
in areas controlled by the LF. The LF also cut its relations
with Israel and emphasized relations with the Arab states,
mainly Saudi Arabia, Irak, Jordan, Egypt and the PLO.
On August 18, 1988,the LF detained several members of the
Lebanese Parliament, thereby preventing the return to the
Presidency of Suleiman Franjieh who was pro-Syrian.
The Aoun years (1988–1990)
Two rival governments contended for recognition following
Amine Gemayel's departure from the Presidency in September
1988. The LF initially supported the military government led
by Gen. Michel Aoun, the commander of the Lebanese Army.
However, clashes erupted between the LF militia and the
Lebanese Army under the control of Michel Aoun on February
14, 1989, since the LF controlled many ports illegally.These
clashes were stopped, and after a meeting in Bkerké, the LF
handed the national ports which it controlled to Aoun's
government under pressure from the Lebanese National army.
Geagea initially supported Aoun's "Liberation War" against
the Syrian army, but then agreed to the Taif Agreement "Taif,"
which was signed by the Lebanese deputies on 24 October
1989, which demanded an immediate ceasefire. Aoun's main
objection to "Taif" was its vagueness as to Syrian
withdrawal from the country. He rejected it vowing that he
"would not sign over the country." Syrian occupation would
last another 15 years. Fierce fighting in East Beirut broke
out between the army and the LF, called the "Elimination
War" by on January 30, 1990.
The Second Republic (1990–2005)
After Aoun surrendered on 13 October 1990 to the rival
Syrian-backed President, Elias Hrawi, Geagea was offered
ministerial posts in the new government. He refused several
times, saying that he was opposed to Syrian interference in
Lebanese affairs, and his relationship with the new
government deteriorated On March 23, 1994, the Lebanese
government ordered the dissolution of the LF. On April 21,
1994, Geagea was arrested on charges of setting a bomb in
the church in Zouk, of instigating acts of violence, and of
committing assassinations during the Lebanese Civil War.
Although he was acquitted of the first charge, Geagea was
subsequently arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment on
several different counts, including the assassination of
former Prime Minister Rashid Karami in 1987. He was
incarcerated in solitary confinement, with his access to the
outside world severely restricted. Amnesty International
criticized the conduct of the trials and demanded Geagea's
release, and Geagea's supporters argued that the
Syrian-controlled Lebanese government had used the alleged
crimes as a pretext for jailing Geagea and banning an
anti-Syrian party.
After the Cedar Revolution
The LF was an active participant in the Cedar Revolution of
2005, when popular protests and international pressure
following the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq
al-Hariri combined to force Syria out of Lebanon. In the
subsequent parliamentary election held in May and June, the
LF formed part of the Rafik Hariri Martyr List (LF, Future
Movement, Popular Socialist Party, the reformed Phalanges,
and other political parties), allied with the powerfull
(Hizbollah and Amal) against General Aoun and his Free
Partiotic Movement and subsequently gained a majority in the
Lebanese Parliament based on a controversial election law
which was written by the Syrians to control Lebanon. The
political alliance with Hizbollah and Amal would soon end,
as Hariri used the alliance to win the elections with an
unfair law called "2000's law"; these parties and movements
would later form the March 14 Alliance, opposed to the
oppositional March 8 Coalition backed by Hizbullah and Amal
and the Free Patriotic Movement lead by General Aoun.
Geagea was freed on 18 July 2005.
Present political representation
The LF currently holds 5 out of the 128 seats (4%) in the
Lebanese Parliament, and are represented in the Siniora
government, formed in July 2005, by the minister of Tourism
Joseph Sarkis. In the last by-elections conducted on the
August 5, 2007, the Lebanese Forces and the Kataeb lost the
elections.
Leaders of the LF
Bachir Gemayel (1976-1982)
Fadi Frem (1982-1984)
Fouad Abou Nader (1984-1985)
Samir Geagea (1986-present)
.
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