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“Honor First”; the liberation of Lebanon
By Mike Whitney
19/08/2006
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“To confront this accursed plan, to thwart the goals of
this war, to fight the battle to liberate, what remains of our land and
our prisoners, I state categorically under no circumstances will we accept
any term that is insulting to our country, our people, or our resistance.
We will not accept any formula at the expense of the national interest,
national sovereignty and national independence, especially after all these
sacrifices, no matter how long the confrontation lasts and no matter how
numerous the sacrifices may be. Our main and true slogan is “Honor
First”. Sheik Hassan Nasrallah |
08/19/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- One picture tells the whole story. The
photograph shows a long column of Israeli soldiers, grimy and bedraggled,
limping southwards towards the Israeli border. The lead soldier looks vacuously
at the camera with an expression of pure gloom and fatigue. In the background a
soldier is seen comforting another who is crying inconsolably.
This is what defeat looks like.
Back in Israel, the headlines are splattered with every detail of the ongoing
withdrawal from Lebanon. The op-ed pages and talk shows lash out at anyone even
remotely involved with the month-long debacle. Prime Minister Olmert has become
the favorite target of the media’s scathing criticism and the brunt of every
joke. His public approval has dipped from a pre-war high of 80% to a meager 40%.
Meanwhile, political rival Benjamin Netanyahu’s popularity has soared to a
hearty 57% making him the likely successor if Olmert is forced to step down.
Israel is drowning in collective angst and self-pity. The defeat has shattered
the national sense of self confidence and well being. A joke that is circulating
in Tel Aviv opines that Ariel Sharon’s condition suddenly worsened “when he
found out what was happening in Lebanon.”
The punch-line epitomizes the general state of malaise in Israel.
The coverage of the Lebanon fiasco in the Israeli media is alternately
narcissistic and hysterical. The details of the massive destruction to Lebanon’s
civil infrastructure and environment are brushed aside as inconsequential; the
1,300 civilian deaths, irrelevant. The only thing that matters is Israeli
suffering; everything else is trivial. While Lebanon is busy digging out another
300 or so corpses from the rubble of their destroyed homes, Israel is
preoccupied with its loss of “deterrents” or its battered sense of “invincibility”.
It is an interesting study in the prevailing megalomania of Israeli society, a
culture as pathologically self-absorbed as its American ally. It’s no wonder
security is so hard to come by when people are so lacking in empathy.
In Lebanon, the extent of the damage is just beginning to be grasped. Whole
cities in the south have been laid to waste and most of the vital infrastructure
has been ruined. Barucha Peller summed it up this way in a Counterpunch article
“This Pain has no Ceasefire”:
“The walls of homes that once protected families and cradled their lives are now
in pieces, shreds, fine dust. Sift through the rubble. Kick the rubble. Stand
still, silent, alone with the absoluteness of destruction and accompanied by the
millions of shattered pieces of everything that was here before. Leave the
rubble. Try to forget. Walk away from the terrible sight. But your mind is in
pieces, lives in pieces, people who never again will stand in the doorway with
greetings. You can walk away. There is a ceasefire. But missiles fall, they fall,
not from the skies, but behind Lebanese eyes, they fall forever in memory, they
are still crashing into what once was.”
“The absoluteness of destruction”; the faces that will never reappear “in the
doorway”; this nagging, life-long suffering goes unrecorded in the Israeli media
where the national obsession has turned to finger-pointing and empty
recriminations. The lives and the civilization that’s been decimated are a mere
footnote to Israel’s violated sense of security and the humiliation of losing to
an Arab adversary. Looking at the papers, it’s easy to believe that the entire
population is completely unaware of the misery they’ve caused. Instead, one gets
the uneasy feeling that the anger is just beginning to mount and could wash
across Lebanon in a second wave of hostilities.
Lebanon has been an embarrassing defeat for Israel, but this is probably just
Round One. As public rage grows, it will be more and more tempting for Olmert to
disregard the ceasefire and go on the offensive. He needs some way to acquit
himself in the eyes of his people and revenge is an unfailing cure-all. He also
needs to prove that he can be a reliable ally to the Bush team who gave him
carte blanche to pulverize Hezbollah while they stalled the ceasefire at the UN.
Israel needs to show that they can hold up their end of the bargain by cleaning
up matters in their own back yard. Olmert’s failure will not go down well with
the Washington neocons who’ve worked tirelessly to provide him with all the
weaponry and support he needed.
According to Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, Israel originally planned
an attack on Lebanon for September or October. This would have added an element
of surprise to the war which could have been disastrous for Lebanon. It also may
have affected the results of the 2006 congressional elections in the US.
The Bush administration has made no effort to conceal their involvement in the
conflict. They provided logistical and material support in the form of
satellite-intelligence and precision-guided missiles, and they blocked all
efforts at the UN for an immediate ceasefire. Bush has stubbornly portrayed the
war as “part of a broader struggle between freedom and terror”, but his
platitudes have had less impact on public perceptions than the photos of
bombed-out airports, bridges and factories which appear daily in the media.
The biggest champion of the war has been Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice who
characterized the vast and premeditated devastation as “birth pangs”. There now
hangs a banner in downtown Beirut with a ghoulish picture of Rice with fangs
dripping with blood which says, “The massacre of children at Qana is a gift from
Rice”. The Farragamo-draped princess has quickly become the most reviled
diplomat in US history. Move over Henry Kissinger.
It’s no surprise that she was rebuffed by President Siniora and told she wasn’t
welcome in Lebanon until the terms of a ceasefire were in place.
Rice’s most revealing statement appeared in a USA Today article when she
admitted that the Bush administration saw the conflict as an “opportunity to
create a fundamentally different situation” in the Middle East.
“Opportunity”? Is that how the Washington mandarins see the utter destruction of
an American-friendly ally?
Condi’s bromides only confirm Nasrallah’s claims that the plan to invade Lebanon
is actually part of a broader strategy for establishing US/Israeli hegemony
throughout the region so that they can “exclusively manage its affairs and
resources”. The main obstacles to this “New Middle East” are the resistance
organizations Hamas and Hezbollah as well as Syria and Iran. Bush and Olmert
conspired to disarm Hezbollah by pushing Syria out of Lebanon and creating a
political climate where (they believed) Hezbollah would be forced to give up
their weapons.
Their plan failed. Hezbollah joined the government but maintained its guerilla
network at the same time; accumulating the Katyushas and sophisticated anti-tank
rockets it needed to take on Israel’s advancing army. It should be noted that
Hezbollah was the only entity in Lebanon that wasn’t swept up in the heady
revival of Beirut and vigilantly awaited Israel’s next rampage.
Their success in battling Israel is due in large part to the Russian-made Kornet
anti-tank rockets they obtained from Syria. As reported in the UK Telegraph the
rockets are “some of the best in the world” and “require serious training to
operate which could be beyond the capabilities of some supposedly regular armies
in the Middle East….It is laser-guided, has a range of three miles and carries a
double-warhead capable of penetrating reactive amour on Israeli Merkava Tanks.”
Hezbollah used their anti-tank missiles with lethal efficiency during the
campaign taking out an estimated 20 tanks, armored vehicles and buildings where
troops were located. It was a critical part of the conflict and had a profound
effect on the outcome.
Still, there’s little chance that Hezbollah’s victory will stop Israel from
restarting the war. America and Israel are ideologically committed to
establishing their mutual hegemony throughout the Middle East and they won’t be
deterred by a bloody nose in south Lebanon. Israel will retool and return with
greater determination to crush the resistance and set up a proxy government in
Beirut. So far, they’ve enlisted the support of Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Nepal, France and Denmark to patrol the southern border while Germany has
offered “a rather substantive maritime component which could patrol and secure
the whole of the Lebanese coast.” The German ambassador said, “We could also
offer a substantial border patrol along the Syrian border.” (Al Jazeera) Germany
certainly understands that their actions will establish a de-facto blockade
which serves US/Israeli interests alone. This illustrates how Olmert and Bush
have manipulated the UN to compromise Lebanon’s sovereignty and create a
permanent state of siege. If Israel is able to cut Hezbollah’s supply-lines they
can easily move in and crush them at a later date.
So, the US and Israel have found accomplices they need to help them achieve
their goals of reshaping the Middle East and extending America’s dominance
throughout the oil-rich region. If they succeed, they will have a stranglehold
on the world’s most crucial natural resources and will be able to control the
growth of China, India, Japan, and other potential rivals in the 21st century.
Israel will also play a central role as regional leader in the oil trade;
opening pipeline routes from Ceyhan to the Far East and from Kirkuk to Haifa.
(check “Triple Alliance”: The US, Turkey, Israel and the war on Lebanon” Michel
Chossudovsky)
But we shouldn’t underestimate the growing strength of non state actors and
guerilla forces. In Iraq, the resistance has brought the world’s only superpower
to a grinding standstill; frustrating all attempts to establish security,
rebuild infrastructure, or transport vital resources.
Similarly, Hezbollah has won a stunning victory against a high-tech and
well-disciplined Israeli army. They have shown the world that they are
resourceful and ferocious fighters capable of forcing a fully-armed modern army
of 30,000 men to withdrawal. That’s no small feat.
They have shattered the illusion of Israeli invincibility and emboldened a new
generation of Arab youths to see beyond their present subjugation and despair
and aspire to reclaim their countries from the corrupt US-backed regimes.
The imperial juggernaut will continue lurching recklessly through the Middle
East until it is worn-down piecemeal by the bold actions of the resistance. Iraq
and Lebanon foreshadow an even wider war extending from the Caspian to the Red
Sea; destabilizing oil supplies and overturning the teetering Arab monarchies.
Bush and Olmert have thrown open Pandora’s Box thinking they can contain the
chaos within, but have failed to achieve any of their objectives. They continue
to misread the lessons of Afghanistan, Iraq, and Lebanon. High-altitude bombing
and trigger-happy soldiers only swell the ranks of the resistance and feed their
determination. If Bush and Olmert choose to fight a generation-long 4-G (4th
Generation) war, they should at least consider the modest goals set out by their
adversary, Hassan Nasrallah, in a recent public statement:
“We are not a classic army. We are waging guerilla warfare Therefore what is
important is the number of losses we inflict on the Israeli enemy. No matter how
deep the incursion the Israeli enemy might accomplish, and the enemy has great
capabilities in this area, it will not accomplish the goal of this incursion,
preventing the shelling of the settlements in north of occupied Palestine, This
shelling will continue no matter how deep the ground incursion and the
reoccupation the Zionist enemy is trying to accomplish. The occupation of any
inch of our Lebanese land will further motivate us to continue and escalate the
resistance…In the ground war we will have the upper hand. In the ground war ,
the criterion is the attrition of the enemy rather than what territory does or
does not remain in our hands because we are not fighting with the methods of a
regular army we will definitely regain any land occupied by the enemy after
inflicting great losses on it”.
Bush would be wise to pay attention to Nasrallah’s warnings. The conflict that
the US and Israel are facing has no central battlefield and no timeline. It is
war against men who know every street and every alleyway, and every cave in
every mountain. It is “death by a thousand lashes”; engaging and killing the
enemy and then disappearing into the shadows. The conflict only ends when every
American and Israeli soldier has left Arab soil. This is a “no win” situation.
Our leaders should recognize this and withdrawal.
As the resistance continues to mushroom in Iraq and Lebanon, we’re bound to see
more devastation, more retreating armies, and more hand-wringing in Washington
and Tel Aviv.
It could all be so easily avoided.