Chapter 2 The relisting of Hizballah’s ESO
2.1
The current review is for the relisting of an organisation previously
listed and fully reviewed. The Committee has previously asked that the
information presented to justify each relisting contain a sufficient degree of
currency in the evidence to warrant the use of its power of executive
discretion. Therefore, the Committee has asked that the emphasis in the
material be on the activities of the organisation in the period since the last
listing. [1]
2.2
To be specified as a terrorist organisation for the purposes of
paragraph (b) of the definition of terrorist organisation in section 102.1 of
the Criminal Code, the Attorney-General must be satisfied on reasonable grounds
that:
n the
organisation is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing, planing,
assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not the
terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or
n the organisation advocates
the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occurred or
will occur).[2]
2.3
The Director-General of ASIO previously advised the Committee of ASIO’s evaluation
process in selecting entities for proscription under the Criminal Code.
Factors included:
n engagement in
terrorism;
n ideology and links to
other terrorist groups/networks;
n links to Australia;
n threat to Australian
interests;
n proscription by the
UN or like-minded countries; and
n engagement in
peace/mediation processes.[3]
2.4
The Committee has used these criteria as the basis of its reviews over
the last three years.
2.5
After the following brief discussion about where the ESO fits into the
Hizballah organisation, an assessment of the relisting of the ESO will be made
against the above criteria using the statement of reasons and other open
sources.
Hizballah, the ESO and the IR
2.6
Hizballah is a Lebanese Shi’a political organisation with deep roots in
Lebanese society. It is said to have widespread and loyal following amongst
the Lebanese Shi’a who are the largest and poorest of the ethno-religious
communities that make up Lebanese society.
2.7
Hizballah has grown and changed significantly since it began and ‘has
developed into both a legitimate Lebanese political party and an umbrella
organisation for myriad social welfare institutions’[4].
Professor Hogg stated:
[Hizballah] has a strong reputation for honesty and
competence that for many observers, including its critics, distinguish it from
many other political organisations and politicians in Lebanon. … Hizballah is a pragmatic organisation that is firmly rooted in and strongly
responsive to its national constituency. [5]
2.8
After the 2005 elections, Hizballah won fourteen seats in the 128-member
Lebanese Parliament and it has two ministers in the government.
2.9
In its statement of reasons, regarding the relationship between the ESO
and Hizballah, ASIO told the Committee only that Hizballah’s ESO ‘constitutes a
distinct terrorist wing within Hizballah’s structure’[6].
Dr Patrick Emerton argues that the statement of reasons does not discuss:
The relationship (if any) between Hizballah’s political
activities and its military activities, and the relationship (if any) between
the military activities of the ESO and those of the Lebanese army. [7]
2.10
Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre (Jane’s) says of the ESO:
[Hizballah] is also said to have a formidable international
wing which has been blamed for significant terrorist attacks in the 1980s and
early 1990s. The suspected leader of Hizballah’s external wing, Imad Mughniyah, remains one of the world’s most wanted men.[8]
2.11
Separate from the ESO, Hizballah’s guerrilla wing in Lebanon is the Islamic Resistance (IR). IR is widely regarded as ‘the most capable
non-state armed group in the Middle East’.[9] The Committee heard
that ‘there is a very clear hierarchy that separates the ESO from the IR’[10].
2.12
In July 2006, the IR wing of Hizballah triggered a 34-day conflict with Israel[11]
when it captured two Israeli soldiers. The performance of Hizballah’s military
wing during the conflict ‘reinforced the conviction that it is one of the most
formidable guerrilla organisations in the world … prepared to take on the might
of the Israeli army’[12].
2.13
The ESO, according to Jane’s, ‘is even more secretively run’ than the
IR, however, Jane’s also notes that there is now some debate as to whether the ESO
continues to exist, given Hizballah’s renewed focus on internal Lebanese
politics and defence and the lack in recent years of any terrorist attacks
carried out overseas in the ESO’s name. Other commentators believe that the
ESO is now no more than ‘… an umbrella name under which all the terrorist acts
associated with [Hizballah] are lumped’[13].
2.14
At the private hearing, the Committee asked ASIO what evidence it has
that the ESO does, in fact, still exist. ASIO told the Committee that due to
the clandestine nature of the ESO, its activities do not have a high profile
and the ESO does not claim responsibility for terrorist attacks so it is
difficult to confirm its existence. However, ASIO stated there is no reason to
believe the organisation has relinquished its worldwide capability even though
this is hard to prove, using open source material. ASIO stated:
… the ESO has a global reach which has been detected in
countries around the world. The ESO has mounted international terrorist
attacks and there is no reason to believe the organisation has relinquished
this worldwide capability.[14]
Engagement in terrorism
2.15
Both the statement of reasons and Jane’s attribute to the ESO responsibility
for a series of suicide bomb attacks, aircraft hijackings and kidnappings of
Western and Israeli/Jewish targets in Israel, Western Europe and South America, dating back to the early 1980s and into the early 1990s.
2.16
Jane’s most recent information about specific ESO activity is the
2002 killing of five Israeli civilians and one Israeli Defence Force soldier in
northern Israel.[15]
2.17
Despite lack of evidence of recent ESO activity, ASIO told the
Committee that:
The ESO maintains its capacity to undertake significant
terrorist attacks and, in February 2007, there were renewed reports that
Mughniyeh [the ESO’s suspected leader] was undertaking contingency planning for
future attacks. It is assessed such planning includes identification and
surveillance of prospective targets.[16]
Ideology and links to other terrorist groups/networks
Ideology
2.18
When Hizballah formed in 1982, its stated aim was the establishment of a
radical Shi’a Islamic theocracy in Lebanon and the destruction of the state of Israel. While those goals remain core ideological pillars, since the end of the Lebanese
civil war in October 1990:
… [Hizballah] has evolved into a more pragmatic
socio-political movement. It has gained political legitimacy, with a credible
holding of seats in Lebanon’s parliament and a social service that far
outperforms the state’s cumbersome bureaucracy.[17]
2.19
The statement of reasons makes no mention of this shift in Hizballah’s
aims. It states only that ‘ultimately, Hizballah aims to create a Shi’a Islamic state in Lebanon and remove all Western and Israeli influences in the
region’[18].
2.20
Hizballah’s ideology has, according to various commentators, evolved
since 1982 and the organisation now no longer actively seeks to impose an
Islamic agenda on Lebanon:
Hizballah has genuinely adjusted to the sectarian fabric of Lebanon’s society, gradually emphasizing muqawama[19] instead of Islamism in
its rhetoric and ideology. Hizballah has not abandoned its Islamist ideal, but
to the extent that this goal complicates its ability to pursue muqawama
or erodes its image, Hizballah is willing to do away with it.[20]
2.21
The International Crisis Group states that Hizballah is now adopting ‘a
stance of relative passivity’, and:
Pressured to undertake a strategic shift, it faces a decision
whether its future is one among many Lebanese political parties or whether it
will maintain the hybrid nature, half political party and half armed militia,
part local organisation and part internationalist movement.[21]
Links to other terrorist groups/networks
2.22
In the statement of reasons the Attorney-General told the Committee
that:
Hizballah, including the ESO, receives substantial support
from Iran, including financial, training, weapons, political and military
assistance. Syria is also a significant supporter, particularly in the
provision of political and military assistance.[22]
2.23
Jane’s notes that during 2002 there were reports that Hizballah was
co-ordinating with militant Palestinian groups in the confrontation with Israel. The groups were said to include Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Ahmed Jibril’s Democratic
Front for the Liberation of Palestine. However, Hizballah is reputedly wary of
alliances with other guerrilla organisations and is mistrustful of outsiders, believing
most Palestinian groups are riddled with informants. [23]
Links to Australia
2.24
At the hearing the Committee sought further information on whether there
are any Australian links with the ESO. Evidence was given on this matter.
2.25
The Committee took evidence as to whether financial support had been
provided to the ESO from Australia. No Australians have been prosecuted for
financial support to the ESO, in line with the existing proscription.
Threat to Australian interests
2.26
Nothing in the statement of reasons refers to ESO activity as having had
any direct impact on any Australian citizen either domestically or overseas.
Proscription by the UN or like-minded countries
2.27
Hizballah’s External Security Organisation has been listed as a
terrorist organisation by the government of the United Kingdom. Hizballah
(including the ESO) has been listed as a terrorist organisation by the
governments of the United States and Canada.
Engagement in peace/mediation processes
2.28
The statement of reasons does not address this criterion. However, any
discussion of participation in peace processes would presumably involve
Hizballah in general, with the ESO participating as part of that organisation.
2.29
The International Crisis Group reports that United Nations’ Resolution
1701—which was accepted by Israel, Lebanon and Hizballah to bring the 2006
conflict to an end—‘brought quiet but no sustainable peace to the border
region’[24].
2.30
Following ‘post-war restrictions on the IR’, Hizballah has been
‘undergoing a major re-assessment of its options’ and is ‘resisting domestic
and international calls to disarm’[25]. Further, ‘Hizballah’s
insistence on maintaining the IR has created serious political and sectarian
rifts in Lebanon which show no sign of dissipating in the coming months and may
indeed worsen’. [26]
Conclusion
2.31
At the hearing, the Committee sought confirmation from ASIO that it is
satisfied beyond doubt that the ESO is still a dangerous organisation. ASIO
stated that:
… the ESO continues to prepare and plan for terrorist acts.
It is the ESO that is responsible for planning and coordinating Hizballah’s
international terrorist related activities. … the absence of terrorist
operations against Western interests during the past decade reflects a
calculated policy decision rather than any lack of capability.[27]
2.32
As with some previous reviews of listings and relistings, the Committee
will err on the side of caution with respect to this relisting and will not
recommend to the Parliament that the regulation be disallowed.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee does not recommend the disallowance of the
regulation made to proscribe Hizballah’s External Security Organisation.
|
The Hon David Jull, MP
Chairman
24 July 2007