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News ID: 46393
Publish Date : 12 November 2017 - 23:36
Sources Close to Lebanese PM Tell Reuters:

Hariri Forced Out for Refusing to Confront Hezbollah



BEIRUT (Dispatches) -- Saad Hariri was forced by Saudi Arabia to step down as Lebanese prime minister earlier this month because of his unwillingness to confront Hezbollah, according to sources close to Hariri.
Sources told Reuters that Hariri believed he had convinced Saudi officials of the need to maintain an entente with Hezbollah for the sake of Lebanon's stability.
During a visit by Hariri to the kingdom prior to his resignation on November 4, Prince Muhammad bin Salman had arranged for him to see senior intelligence officials and Persian Gulf Affairs Minister Thamer al-Sabhan, the Saudi point man on Lebanon.
Hariri came back to Beirut from that trip "pleased and relaxed," sources in his entourage said. He posted a selfie with Sabhan, both of them smiling. He told aides he had heard "encouraging statements" from the crown prince, including a promise to revive a Saudi aid package for the Lebanese army.
"What happened in those meetings, I believe, is that (Hariri) revealed his position on how to deal with Hezbollah in Lebanon: that confrontation would destabilize the country. I think they didn't like what they heard," said one of the sources, who was briefed on the meetings.
Rumors have swirled over the condition of Hariri since he announced his resignation in a statement from the capital Riyadh.
While Hariri cited the overwhelming influence of Iran and Hezbollah on Lebanese politics as the reason for his departure from office, there have been many indications that he is being kept against will in Saudi Arabia.
"When Hariri's plane landed in Riyadh (on his subsequent visit on the weekend of November 4), he got the message immediately that something was wrong," a Hariri source told Reuters.
"There was no one was waiting for him."
Multiple Lebanese sources say Riyadh hopes to replace Saad Hariri with his older brother, Bahaa.
Bahaa is believed to be in Saudi Arabia, and members of the Hariri family have been asked to travel there to pledge allegiance to him, but they have refused, the sources say.
Lebanese President Michel Aoun told ambassadors to Lebanon that Saudi Arabia had kidnapped Hariri, a senior Lebanese official said. On Friday, France said it wanted Hariri to have "all his freedom of movement."
In his resignation speech, Hariri said he feared assassination and accused Iran and Hezbollah of sowing strife in the region. He said the Arab world would "cut off the hands that wickedly extend to it," language which one source close to him said was not typical of the Lebanese leader.
Hariri's resignation came as more than 200 people, including 11 Saudi princes, current and former ministers and tycoons, were arrested in an anti-corruption purge in Saudi Arabia.
Initially there was speculation Hariri was a target of that campaign because of his family's business interests. But sources close to the Lebanese leader said his forced resignation was motivated by Saudi efforts to counter Iran.
For his part, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has accused Saudi Arabia of declaring war on Lebanon, and said that the kingdom had incited the occupying regime of Israel to strike Lebanon.
"Saudi Arabia is inciting Israel to launch a war against Lebanon," said Nasrallah, speaking in a televised speech on Friday. "I speak here about facts, not analysis. Saudi Arabia is ready to pay tens of billions of dollars to Israel for that," he said.
Nasrallah also drew parallels between the current situation and 2006, when Hezbollah fought a devastating war with Zionist forces in southern Lebanon.
"We know now through Israeli media that the 2006 war on Lebanon was prolonged by Saudi when Israel wanted it to end."