Antoine Lahad (1927 – 10 September 2015) was a Lebanese military officer and the leader of the South Lebanon Army (SLA) from 1984 until 2000, when the army withdrew from Southern Lebanon and was dissolved.

Antoine Lahad
Lahad c. 1988
Born1927 (1927)
Kfar Qatra, French Lebanon
DiedSeptember 10, 2015(2015-09-10) (aged 87–88)
Paris, France
Service / branchSouth Lebanon Army
RankGeneral

Early life

edit

Born into a Maronite Catholic family in 1927 in the village of Kfar Qatra, Chouf District. He graduated from the Lebanese Military Academy in 1952.

Military career

edit

Lahad took control of the SLA in 1984, following the death of Saad Haddad the founder of the SLA. After several meetings with many political leaders in Lebanon from all religions he agreed to take on the problematic south because his career and stature would allow him to hold together an army from all the Lebanese religions. Lahad was a Lebanese Army major general who was close to the Lebanese President, Camille Chamoun, a Maronite.

Military career in the SLA

edit
 
Antoine Lahad (right) with the President of Israel, Chaim Herzog, and the commander of the Northern Command Yossi Peled.

While commanding the SLA General Lahad formed three regiments mainly from Druze, Shia and Christians who fought together to take back control of Lebanese territory from all the Palestinian factions who controlled much of southern Lebanon. During his service he never cut contact with the capital and all leaders from all political factions and religions kept visiting him asking him for help on several matters. He re-instated the salaries of the Lebanese army soldiers in the south which had previously been cut off.[citation needed]

Trouble with Lebanon and Hezbollah

edit

Lahad was condemned to death by Hezbollah following Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon. Men were required to sign written pledges not to visit with Lahad or his people if they were traveling into southern Lebanon. His headquarters were at Marjayoun, which flew an Israeli flag flanked by two flags of Lebanon.

Assassination attempt

edit

In 1988, 21-year-old Souha Bechara tried to assassinate Lahad. She had been raised in the Eastern Orthodox Church and had become a member of the Communist party. She was tasked with assassinating Lahad. Bechara disguised herself as an aerobics instructor to visit with Lahad's family. On November 7, 1988, while she was having tea with Lahad's wife, he returned home. Bechara shot him twice in the chest. She was detained by his security team. Lahad spent eight weeks in the hospital and suffered health complications leaving his left arm paralyzed. Soha Bechara was arrested and sent to the Khiam Israeli prison. She spent ten years in Khiam prison and suffered six years of solitary confinement in a tiny cell.[1][2]

Israeli withdrawal

edit

When Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon in 2000, Lahad was determined to carry on against Hezbollah. He pleaded for support from Israel:

"I need three things: 1 - I need Israel not to stop the money, keep the flow of money coming so I can keep paying my soldiers; 2- I need logistical support so the SLA will have adequate ammunition; 3- I need the border to remain open because I don't have sophisticated hospitals in the South, and in this instance all my wounded should be transported to northern Israel to be treated. When I'll have those three things, I can hold for 200 years. That's all I need."[3]

SLA collapse

edit

Lahad never received the support he asked for, and the SLA collapsed following Israel's withdrawal from southern Lebanon. At the time, Lahad was in Paris trying to convince the French authorities to send troops to replace his army.

He came to Israel after the remainder of the SLA disintegrated. In Lebanon, Lahad was sentenced to death for treason in absentia in case he ever returned.[4] In a meeting with the Israeli Government Coordinator, Uri Lubrani, in May 2000, Lahad expressed deep concern surrounding the appropriate treatment of SLA members who ended up in Israel following the withdrawal. Contrary to contemporary media reports, Lahad stated that Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Barak, had not tricked him. He highlighted the importance of his country's cooperation with Israel and cited the United Nations Security Council resolution 425 as a legitimate reason for Barak's withdrawal of Israeli armed forces. Lubrani assured Lahad that SLA members would receive appropriate treatment and thanked him and his men for their "long struggle for peace". Soon afterwards Lahad went to France to meet up with his family. Despite having family members living in France, the French authorities denied him permission to live in the country.

Retirement to Israel and death

edit

After being refused the right to settle in France, Lahad moved to Israel. He released a Hebrew language autobiography in 2004, entitled, In the Midst of a Storm: An Autobiography.

In November 2006, Lahad had an interview with Ynet. He asserted his opinion that Syria was behind the assassination of Lebanese Industry Minister Pierre Amine Gemayel,

“I have no doubt about who assassinated Lebanese Minister Pierre Gemayel last week. It was the Syrians, there’s no question. It could be that one of their proxies in Lebanon carried out the actual assassination, but the order came from Damascus.”

In May 2014, a Lebanese court sentenced him to death in absentia for high treason, intelligence with the enemy and accessory to kidnapping, violence and murder.

Lahad died in Paris on 10 September 2015 from a heart attack.[5]

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ Béchara, Souha [with Gilles Paris], Résistante (N.P.: J. C. Lattès, 2000); trans. as Soha Bechara, Resistance: My Life for Lebanon (Brooklyn, NY: Soft Skull P, 2003)
  2. ^ Middle East International No 338, 18 November 1988, Publishers Lord Mayhew, Dennis Walters MP; Jim Muir p.10
  3. ^ "Israeli Politicians, Brass Eulogize Staunch Ally, Former South Lebanon Army Commander". Algemeiner Journal. September 16, 2015. Retrieved 2013-12-21.
  4. ^ "South Lebanon Army: Return of war-time 'collaborator' shines spotlight on brutal legacy of Israel's militia". The New Arab.
  5. ^ "Antoine Lahd, ancien chef de l'ALS, est décédé à Paris". L'Orient-Le Jour. 11 September 2015.

References

edit
  • Lahad, Antoine. In the Midst of a Storm: an Autobiography (Tel Aviv: Yedioth Ahronoth Publ. 2004), ed. Estelle Golan. In Hebrew. [1]
  • Ynetnews, Interview with Antoine Lahad, 26 November 2006. [2]
  • Harald List: Antoine Lahad. in: ORIENT 2/88 p. 179-187. Biography in German.
  • Hussein Assi: LF Seeks to Pass "Amnesty" for Antoine Lahd and Company!. in: Al-Manar TV 19 March 2009 [3][permanent dead link]
  • Augustus Richard Norton: Hizballah and the Israeli Withdrawal from Southern Lebanon. in: Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 30, No. 1 (Autumn, 2000), pp. 22–35 [4]
  • Professor M. Kahl: Baraq's Betrayal of Israel and Israel's Lebanese Allies. in: LFP 2001 [5]
  • David Hirst: South Lebanon: The War that Never Ends?. in: Journal of Palestine Studies. Vol. 28, No. 3 (Spring, 1999), pp. 5–18. [6]
  • "Le Crépuscule de l'ALS", interview by Michel Zlotowski in Politique internationale. In French. [7]
  • "ISRAEL: LEBANON COORDINATOR LUBRANI MEETS GENERAL LAHAD." IPR Strategic Business Information Database (May 28, 2000): NA. General OneFile. Gale. University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. 7 Apr. 2009
  • ITOF.
  • BBC report.
edit