Anti-Syria general feels Lebanese political chill
By Lin Noueihed
BEIRUT (Reuters) – Just days after returning from exile to a hero’s welcome, the Maronite Christian general who sees himself as Lebanon’s savior from Syrian tutelage has already collided with his country’s political realities. The countdown has begun to Lebanon’s first general election without direct Syrian influence for 33 years, but Michel Aoun and his followers have been excluded from the two anti-Syrian opposition tickets announced so far.
A month ago, when Aoun was nearing the end of a 14-year exile in Paris, he said he expected more than 40 members of his Free Patriotic Movement to stand. That looks unlikely now.
The tens of thousands of youthful, orange-clad supporters who welcomed Aoun in Beirut on May 7 hoped the uncompromising soldier’s return would mark a fresh start for Lebanon.
But bitterness at the cold shoulder he has received from other anti-Syrian politicians now prevails.