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Dr. Geagea
Biography
Dr. Geagea was born in 1952 in the Ain
Roumaneh neighborhood of Beirut to a family of modest means from the
northern Lebanese village of Bsharri. The son of an adjutant in the
Army, Geagea came of age at a time when the barriers to
socio-economic advancement within the Christian community had begun
to weaken and record numbers of students were arriving at
universities on the strength of their intelligence and
self-discipline, rather than wealth or family connections. Geagea
was one of them, arriving at American University of Beirut (AUB) to
study medicine in 1972.
AUB, the birthplace of political
movements ranging from the Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SSNP) to
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), was a
hotbed of activism in the early 1970s. Although Geagea had been
active in the student branch of the Kata'ib (Phalange) party when he
was in high school, it was here that he found his leadership
calling.
After the outbreak of civil war in 1975, Geagea
interrupted his studies to participate in the defense of Christian
towns and villages from Palestinian attack. Although he would later
complete his studies at the University of St. Joseph, Geagea never
practiced medicine - the massacres and dislocations experienced by
the Christian community in the early war years impelled him to
devote his career to their defense. As the Lebanese Army splintered
and government authority crumbled, Geagea proved himself to be a
fearless soldier and able leader, quickly rising through the ranks
of Bashir Gemayel's Kata'ib militia and its successor, the Lebanese
Forces (LF).
The Palestinian threat to Lebanon had been
counteracted to a certain extent by the end of 1976, but the
Christian community faced an even more powerful threat with the
entry of Syrian forces into Lebanon that year. While the Kata'ib
staunchly opposed Syrian intervention, some Christian leaders who
had steadfastly fought (or sent their followers to fight) the PLO's
attempted takeover of the country were perfectly willing to
accommodate Syria's hegemonic ambitions so long as they obtained a
share of the post-war political spoils. Former President Suleiman
Franjieh, whose militiamen fought bravely against Palestinians with
whom he had no financial interests, defected from the Christian
alliance because of his long-standing business ties to Syrian
President Hafez Assad. By 1978, Franjieh's Zghorta-based militia,
commanded by his son, Tony, was coordinating directly with Syrian
military intelligence and waging a relentless wave of terrorism,
ambushes, and assassinations against the Kata'ib throughout north
Lebanon. When a local Kata'ib leader, Joud al-Bayeh, was murdered by
a Franjieh assassination squad on June 8, Gemayel tried to settle
the problem through negotiations via Maronite Patriarch Antonios
Khreich. When these negotiations failed, Gemayel decided to
retaliate with a reprisal raid deep into the warlord's domain and
hand-picked a special force to carry it out. One of the units was
led by 26-year old Geagea, whose hometown was traditionally at odds
with the Franjieh clan. The plan was to arrest Joud al-Bayeh's
assassins, who were seeking protection and refuge in Franjieh's
palatial summer residence in Ehden, a symbol of the family's
prestige and a major arsenal and communications center. On the
evening of June 12, Geagea's task force infiltrated the area at
night and began attacking the compound just before dawn. The
defenders refused to surrender and a long gun battle ensued in which
Geagea was seriously injured and fell unconscious on the road
leading to the compound. The operation involved close house to house
combat and was successful from a military standpoint, but when the
smoke cleared and Gemayel's men entered the compound, they
unexpectedly discovered among the dead Tony Franjieh and several
members of his family in one of the guards' hangars (the warlord's
unwillingness to surrender in spite of the imminent danger to his
family has remained an enduring mystery).
After recuperating
at a hospital in France, Geagea returned to Lebanon and was
appointed commander of LF forces in north Lebanon. Over the next
several years, he fortified LF outposts, expanded recruitment and
built new training centers. More importantly, he earned the
unswerving loyalty of roughly 1,500 militiamen under his direct
command. Most, like Geagea, had been dislocated from their villages
and towns in areas of north Lebanon controlled by Syria and its
militia allies - they lived in barracks, unlike LF soldiers in east
Beirut, who could return to their homes each night. Having tasted
insecurity so acutely, Geagea and his followers viewed the security
of the Christian community, not its political share of the post-war
spoils, as their top priority.
Lebanon's First Republic had
failed to provide this security. The LF's main function was to fill
the security void left by the breakdown of the army and government
administration - a mandate that also necessitated the development of
a highly organized civil infrastructure. Unlike their counterparts
in Syrian-occupied Lebanon, inhabitants of the LF-ruled enclave
enjoyed modern healthcare, affordable public transport, welfare
support, and personal security. What little prosperity the Lebanese
Christian community still enjoys today is largely due to the LF's
success in preserving an environment in which children could still
go to school - in sharp contrast to West Beirut, where the rule of
Muslim militias placed guns, not books, in children's
hands.
Bashir Gemayel's election as president following the
Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 briefly revived public hopes
that the First Republic could be fixed. These hopes were shattered
after Bashir's assassination and the ascension of his brother, Amin,
who invited American and European peacekeepers to the capital to
support his government. Geagea and other LF leaders staunchly backed
President Gemayel so long as he remained committed to the withdrawal
of Syrian forces, but the withdrawal of American and European
peacekeeping troops in February 1984 led the president to seek
rapprochement with Damascus. Moreover, Gemayel attempted to
strengthen his bargaining hand in negotiations with Syria by
asserting control over the LF. In November, the president succeeded
in securing the replacement of LF chief Fadi Frem with his nephew,
Fouad Abi Nader. However, a faction of the LF headed by Geagea and
LF intelligence chief Elie Hobeiqa sidelined Abu Nader and took
control over the Christian enclave in March 1985.
Hobeiqa
soon made an astonishing political turnabout of his own, aligning
himself with Damascus in hopes of reaching an accord with
Syrian-backed militias and assuming the presidency in a Syrianized
post-war republic. In spite of widespread Christian opposition,
Hobeiqa signed the December 1985 Tripartite Accord, a
Syrian-brokered agreement that would have legalized the Syrian
presence in Lebanon. In response, LF forces loyal to Geagea swiftly
took control over the Christian enclave and Hobeiqa fled to
Syrian-occupied territory, nursing an intense personal hatred of
Geagea.
Geagea's ability to mobilize the LF rank and file
twice against those who sought to accommodate Syria's hegemonic
ambitions had much to do with his incorruptibility. Unlike other
"warlords" in Lebanon, Geagea had "an almost puritanical disdain for
material concern," notes historian Theodor Hanf in his voluminous
study of the war. Even Washington Post correspondent Jonathan C.
Randal, who is scathingly critical of Maronite militia leaders in
his best-selling book on the war, described Geagea as "well-read,
thoughtful, and possessed of a revolutionary soul."
At the
time, Geagea's defiance of Damascus appeared risky. By the
mid-1980s, the LF had lost its principal external patron (Israel),
the Christian community's financial strength had been devastated by
the collapse of the Lebanese economy, American interest in
supporting Lebanon had dropped to nil, and Syrian forces or their
militia allies had gained control of most of the country. However,
Geagea managed to defend the Christian enclave and maintain close
relations with the United States. As Lebanon's Muslim militias
turned on each other with a ferocity not seen in Lebanon since the
height of the war in 1976, residents of the Christian enclave went
about with their lives as best they could.
Lebanese Forces.
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