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Is Beirut's Garbage Crisis Weakening Hezbollah?

We talked to members of the militant group and protesters on the street about what's going on in Lebanon.
A Lebanese woman berates security forces at a demonstration outside the Ministry of Environment in Beirut on September 1. Photos by the author

I'm shocked when Karim shakes my hand.

I've known the Hezbollah fighter (whose name has been changed for this story) for some time now. But he's never touched me before, because many religiously observant Muslim men—particularly those in Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese Shia militia and political party—consider it haram (forbidden) to have any physical contact with a woman who isn't their wife or close relative. This time, though, he reaches for my hand without hesitation. My surprise must show, because Karim offers a brief, grim smile.

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"I don't believe in any of that anymore," he says. "I've finally woken up. I think the Lebanese people are all waking up now."

Increasingly large demonstrations over a worsening garbage crisis in Beirut have rocked Lebanon's capital since late July. People are taking to the streets in the tens of thousands under the banner "You Stink," which expresses their disgust at the trash piling up in their city and the sectarian politicians who can't even agree on a company to dispose of the refuse as they argue over how to divide profits from the waste management. Last week, security forces brutally cracked down on the protesters, unleashing water cannons and shooting live rounds into the crowds, which numbered in the thousands, further fueling public outrage and swelling the demonstrations.

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Although Hezbollah announced public support for the protests, the declaration is perceived by most as insincere and politically motivated, and the Shia party has become a target for the protesters' anger. As they suffer increasingly high casualties battling the Islamic State, it appears that Hezbollah, which typically enjoys diehard loyalty from its followers, is shedding some of its supporters. Members say the protests were triggered by foreign governments, and it's true that Lebanon has a long history of other countries meddling in its affairs, both publicly and covertly. But mounting frustration at the paralyzed government, mired in squabbling to the point where it hasn't been able to elect a president for 15 months, is very real.

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The Lebanese government is divided between four major sects: Sunni and Shia Muslims, Christians, and Druze. Although other factions such as the Sunni-dominated March 14 coalition have been feeling the heat of the protests, Hezbollah has the most to lose if support wanes. They've been expecting trouble from neighboring Israel on the country's southern border since 2006, when the Jewish state invaded in a short-lived but bitter conflict—the worst since Lebanon's devastating 15-year civil war ended in 1990. Hezbollah has also been fighting the Islamic State in Syria and along the northeastern Lebanese border; this has put them in an alliance with Bashar al-Assad's notoriously ruthless regime.

But in addition to being a well-armed militia, Hezbollah is very much part of the Lebanese government. Led by Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, the party holds a third of the cabinet seats in the current, temporary "unity government," formed after the last government collapsed in 2013. The parliament has extended its own term twice because of infighting over presidential candidates. As a result, the group has become a target of the protesters' anger—which in addition to the costly battle in Syria, is causing some Hezbollah supporters to express disillusionment with their leadership.

Karim says he's become so frustrated that he's trying to defect and flee to Europe with his family—and that others in the group are starting to doubt their leaders. "Our fighters are beginning to smell the coffee now," he tells me bitterly. "I'm not the only one. Many of my friends are talking about defecting… Hezbollah is going crazy."

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Hezbollah provides a number of crucial social services in its territory, including medical care and education. But Karim claims the group's concern for the welfare of its citizens is actually socioeconomic exploitation. "We've started to understand that we are poor and the poverty in our neighborhoods is created by Hezbollah, so we'll stay with them, so we have to ask them for food and electricity," he explains.

According to Karim, the primary reason Hezbollah is losing followers is because the war in Syria has cost its fighters dearly. He says his defection opens him up to possible retaliation from the group's leadership.

"I don't want to go to Syria again because I don't want to die," Karim says. "But my life is in danger because I'm defecting. If I don't leave soon, they'll kill me. As long as you're with them, they give you everything you need, but the minute they smell that you're doubting them a little, you're an enemy."

Bilal Saab, senior fellow for Middle East security at the Atlantic Council, a DC-based think tank, says that Hezbollah is extremely sensitive to any loss in popularity, and the protests are a likely sore spot for the group. "Any type of Shi'ite political activism makes Hezbollah nervous," he writes in an email. "Anything that might shake their support base is a source of anxiety for Hassan Nasrallah. Protecting the core at a time when overall Shi'ite support is damaged due to Hezbollah's involvement in the Syrian conflict is a must. The demonstrations are potentially an annoying distraction for the group."

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"We've come to a point in Lebanon where things are just intolerable." –Joey Ayoub

I ask Thebian if he thinks it's true that Hezbollah is losing followers.

"I don't know," he counters. "I'm not directly in touch with the Hezbollah base."

"Can't you see this weakening them, though?" I ask. "And perhaps this might not be the best time to do so? Maybe things will get worse."

"What's worse?" he asks rhetorically. "A new civil war? It's not the decision of the Lebanese politicians to do this… If it is in the best interests of the international community to have war in Lebanon, it happens, and when it's not in their best interests, we don't. As long as there's an agreement between the Saudis and the Iranians or the USA and other players, then we're fine. When they don't agree, then we pay the price.

"Let's just say that all political parties have different types of followers," he continues. "There are the most brainwashed followers who nothing will prevent from following them, and then there are the people on the margin, who shift—they go and come back. It depends on how much you reach them. So yes, a lot of people are coming to these protests, and although they have their own leaders and political agendas—they say, 'We support Hezbollah' or, 'We support the Lebanese Forces.'—they also say they want a solution to all this political corruption. I don't know if they are honest about it, and if they will wake up and say, 'Fuck our political parties, we want to join another movement.' Until now, it's too early to judge."

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Protestors inside the Ministry of Environment in Beirut compound signal to fellow demonstrators on September 1

Meanwhile, tensions mount on the borders. There are media reports that Hezbollah has increased its alert level regarding a conflict with Israel in the south. When asked if he thinks Hezbollah weakening will prove detrimental to its ability to fight foes like Israel and the Islamic State, Saab, the Middle East fellow, says that's unlikely.

"I wouldn't discount this particular group's military capabilities and desire to fight Israel one bit," he writes. "On ISIS, I don't see it posing an existential threat to Lebanon as a whole. The Lebanon-Syria borders might be turbulent for some time until Syria calms down, and Hezbollah will continue to closely monitor ISIS and other jihadi movements, but that's the geographical scope and limit of that fight."

But Timur Goksel, former spokesman for the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), the international peacekeeping organization charged with mediating border conflicts between Israel and Lebanon, says he thinks Hezbollah losing popularity will render it more vulnerable to external threats.

"A weak Hezbollah would please Israel," he explains in an email. "Israel sees Hezbollah as the only true potential foe. A weak Hezbollah will enable Israel to focus more on its other key issues as Gaza and West Bank. Of course, it will also offer Israel a free hand in interfering in Lebanon. Daesh [a derogatory Arabic term for ISIS] will have similar benefits from any weakening of Hezbollah, but not immediately. Only if Daesh dominates the Syrian opposition scene will it be able to turn to Lebanon, not now. But a weak Shiite community in Lebanon will certainly facilitate whatever goals Daesh might have."

So Goksel thinks waning support for Hezbollah isn't exactly in Lebanon's best interest. "It will make Lebanon more vulnerable to external pressures and intervention by outside forces," he maintains. "Hezbollah, without Shiite popular support, is also a dangerous prospect internally because then the party will be more prone to use force to preserve its local standing."

But disillusioned fighters and former party supporters like Karim aren't thinking about the security situation right now, too frustrated with their leadership to consider the implications of their shift in allegiance.

"Why do the Shia always have to pay in blood?" he complains. "Why are we the only ones? [Hezbollah] wants to brainwash my kids and turn them into fighters…we've started to feel that something is wrong. They're using us like goats."

Follow Sulome Anderson on Twitter.