Rout

It wasn't a battle, really. Hezbollah, and its hangers-on, simply strutted into all of West Beirut and the Future Movement supporters laid down their weapons. There doesn't seem to be enough casualties to suggest that anybody put up a very serious attempt to stop them.
Well -- what are the consequences of such a development? On the political level, it means that the central government is put in an increasingly untenable position. The power of bureaucrats issuing edicts from the Grand Serail is based on the assumption that someone, somewhere on the streets, is going to implement them. If they are just scribbling on pieces of paper, it is going to become increasingly hard to justify their hold on power.
On the other hand, Hezbollah is now occupying territory which is fundamentally hostile to their presence. There is going to be a lot of crowing in the next few days about Hezbollah's superior military capabilities. Very well. There was a lot of crowing in America in April 2003, when the military brought down Saddam Hussein's regime. I have no idea if the retaliation from the Sunni, Druze, and Christian communities will come tomorrow, or five years from now. But I am certain that the sanctity of the "Resistance," in the eyes of non-Shia Lebanese, has been lost forever.
