Recent destruction in Lebanon has put the 'unity of arenas' between Hezbollah and Iran on shakier ground. Reuters
Recent destruction in Lebanon has put the 'unity of arenas' between Hezbollah and Iran on shakier ground. Reuters
Recent destruction in Lebanon has put the 'unity of arenas' between Hezbollah and Iran on shakier ground. Reuters
Recent destruction in Lebanon has put the 'unity of arenas' between Hezbollah and Iran on shakier ground. Reuters


Hezbollah's decisions have upended its relations with Shiites, Lebanon as a whole and Iran


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October 08, 2024

Shortly after Israel assassinated the head of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan unit, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared his country was working to “change the Middle East”. The same refrain came from Israeli politician Naftali Bennett, who tweeted on October 2: “Israel has now its greatest opportunity in 50 years to change the face of the Middle East … This opportunity must not be missed.”

As Lebanon’s Shiite community looks at the wreckage all around, it must find such examples of Israeli hubris deeply disturbing, and not a little infuriating. The region has a gift for thwarting the most ambitious plans of major regional and international actors. As Israel celebrates what it regards as the defeat of Hezbollah, those Lebanese who back the party surely have a different interpretation.

And they may well be correct. Hezbollah is more than a political-military party; it is an organisation anchored in one of Lebanon’s largest religious communities. This not only has earned it formidable loyalty, but also something more potent in the context of the Lebanese sectarian system: identification with the fate of the Shiite community, so that anything that harms the party would be seen by many in the community as weakening all Shiites.

This should be remembered as we look ahead at what could happen to Hezbollah once the conflict in Lebanon ends. However, it’s a certainty the party will have a mountain to climb when the carnage comes to an end. Hezbollah opened a front against Israel that virtually no one in Lebanon wanted, since everyone was conscious of how vulnerable the country was only four years after its colossal, and still unresolved, financial collapse.

The party will have a mountain to climb when the carnage comes to an end

With entire villages, towns and quarters in Beirut’s southern suburbs now in ruins, as Israel has transposed the brutality it used in Gaza to Lebanon, the one question on everyone’s mind is: Who will rebuild what was destroyed? This time, there is a general belief that there will be no outside money for reconstruction, including from Gulf countries, some of whom contributed a significant amount in 2006. Nor does it seem that Iran can spare funds to rebuild Shiite-dominated areas.

While this need not mean that its supporters will turn fully against Hezbollah, resolving this problem and reviving a traumatised community will easily be a decade-long task, one that will neutralise the party militarily for many years ahead – as the 2006 war did for just under two decades. In that context, two questions stand out.

The first is what happened to the vaunted “unity of the arenas” strategy that Iran and Hezbollah formulated just last year? The macabre conclusion is that the arenas have been unified in ruination, as Lebanon’s Shiite-majority districts go the way of Gaza. The Palestinian and Lebanese fronts in this strategy appear to have been nullified, as the Israelis are able to escalate to ever-higher levels of destruction without Iran and its allies being able to do the same.

The second is that if Hezbollah is unable to rearm and mobilise its devastated community to support a new war against Israel in the foreseeable future, of what value is the party to Iran? Should the Iranians then consider whether it is time to alter their strategy focused on extending their military influence throughout the Arab world, thereby avoiding a head-on collision with most Arab states, the US and even Israel?

At this point, the outlook of Iran’s leadership apparently has not changed, and it is improbable it will for as long as supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is in power. But Iran’s two most potent regional allies in the fight against Israel — Hezbollah and Hamas — have undermined their respective publics’ ability to endure new wars, which has had a crippling effect on their, and Iranian, power.

What about Hezbollah’s margin of manoeuvre inside Lebanon? The party’s domestic hegemony has resulted in a gradual build-up of resentment in recent years, to the point where it is largely isolated in its fight against Israel today. No one is blaming the party openly, and animosity towards Israel is high, but few Lebanese endorse Hezbollah’s decision to open a southern front without bothering to consult its Lebanese partners, let alone the state.

This will have repercussions on Hezbollah’s ability to impose its priorities on the political class. It now seems improbable that the party will be able to bring in the president it favours, Suleiman Frangieh, against the wishes of Mr Frangieh’s Maronite Christian community. Many Christians regard Hezbollah’s insistence on Mr Frangieh as an example of arrogance, considering the party never allowed other communities to choose Shiite state officials.

With Hassan Nasrallah dead, and his probable successor and cousin Hashem Safieddine reportedly also dead, both killed by Israeli bombs, it’s unclear who has the authority and charisma to lead the religious Shiite community from now on.

Many eyes will now be turned to Nabih Berri, the 86-year-old Parliament Speaker, and most senior Shiite figure in the state. He sits at the centre of two logics dominating Lebanon today — a logic of Hezbollah-led resistance and a logic of the state, with many Lebanese believing no armed non-state actor should ever again be allowed to carry Lebanon unilaterally into a war. Mr Berri will play a major role in helping one of these logics to prevail. Which way will he lean? Lebanon’s fate may be determined by his choice. Didn't Naim Qassem, Hezbollah's interim secretary general, call the Speaker "our big brother" in a speech on October 8?

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Important questions to consider

1. Where on the plane does my pet travel?

There are different types of travel available for pets:

  • Manifest cargo
  • Excess luggage in the hold
  • Excess luggage in the cabin

Each option is safe. The feasibility of each option is based on the size and breed of your pet, the airline they are traveling on and country they are travelling to.

 

2. What is the difference between my pet traveling as manifest cargo or as excess luggage?

If traveling as manifest cargo, your pet is traveling in the front hold of the plane and can travel with or without you being on the same plane. The cost of your pets travel is based on volumetric weight, in other words, the size of their travel crate.

If traveling as excess luggage, your pet will be in the rear hold of the plane and must be traveling under the ticket of a human passenger. The cost of your pets travel is based on the actual (combined) weight of your pet in their crate.

 

3. What happens when my pet arrives in the country they are traveling to?

As soon as the flight arrives, your pet will be taken from the plane straight to the airport terminal.

If your pet is traveling as excess luggage, they will taken to the oversized luggage area in the arrival hall. Once you clear passport control, you will be able to collect them at the same time as your normal luggage. As you exit the airport via the ‘something to declare’ customs channel you will be asked to present your pets travel paperwork to the customs official and / or the vet on duty. 

If your pet is traveling as manifest cargo, they will be taken to the Animal Reception Centre. There, their documentation will be reviewed by the staff of the ARC to ensure all is in order. At the same time, relevant customs formalities will be completed by staff based at the arriving airport. 

 

4. How long does the travel paperwork and other travel preparations take?

This depends entirely on the location that your pet is traveling to. Your pet relocation compnay will provide you with an accurate timeline of how long the relevant preparations will take and at what point in the process the various steps must be taken.

In some cases they can get your pet ‘travel ready’ in a few days. In others it can be up to six months or more.

 

5. What vaccinations does my pet need to travel?

Regardless of where your pet is traveling, they will need certain vaccinations. The exact vaccinations they need are entirely dependent on the location they are traveling to. The one vaccination that is mandatory for every country your pet may travel to is a rabies vaccination.

Other vaccinations may also be necessary. These will be advised to you as relevant. In every situation, it is essential to keep your vaccinations current and to not miss a due date, even by one day. To do so could severely hinder your pets travel plans.

Source: Pawsome Pets UAE

Updated: October 09, 2024, 4:27 AM