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| NCO ![]() | http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/13/wo...rtner=homepage By STEVEN ERLANGER JERUSALEM, Aug. 12 — Israel’s move to triple its ground forces in Lebanon a day before it is expected to accept a cease-fire has two goals: to cause as much damage to Hezbollah as possible before leaving and to conclude the conflict with something that could be viewed as a victory for an Israeli government under domestic pressure. Having begun the war by proclaiming that the aim was the destruction and disarmament of Hezbollah, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will only be able to claim that Hezbollah is badly hurt and, with the help of international troops, effectively restrained — even without the robust new international force or disarming of the militia that Israel initially demanded. In this last army push, which many here regard as awkwardly handled and coming too late to make a big difference, Mr. Olmert wants to ensure that the Iranian-backed militia and its stockpiles are at least cleared out of southern Lebanon. The hope is that inhabitants of the north will be able to emerge from bomb shelters and live without the daily fear of rockets falling on them. The Israeli cabinet is scheduled to meet Sunday to discuss the U.N. resolution. But the Israeli Army will be pressing forward at least until Monday, if not beyond, trying to destroy Hezbollah rockets and assets. That is a task that Israel does not believe the Lebanese Army, even accompanied by an expanded United Nations force, will dare to do. Mr. Olmert and his defense minister, Amir Peretz, have been wounded by the perception that they mishandled the war and were overly reluctant to commit sizable ground forces when there was still enough time to accomplish the government’s stated goals. The life of the government is likely to have been shortened. The debate in Israel has not been over the war’s legitimacy — that is widely accepted. The attacks on the government have been over its handling of the assault. In a familiar pattern of backbiting — the best indication that the war has not gone well — the army leadership is complaining that the politicians did not let the military do its job, and the politicians are complaining that the army promised that the task could be accomplished in a week or two and largely with air power. As usual in Israel, the army is more popular than the politicians, and it’s bound to win the argument. But the army’s performance against Hezbollah will lead to considerable introspection and criticism about failures in strategic analysis, intelligence, training and preparedness, especially among the reserves. There will also be sharp criticism of governmental preparedness, with the image of many thousands of poorer Israelis huddling for a month in decrepit bomb shelters with inadequate public services and supplies. Mr. Olmert, who leads the centrist Kadima party, is going to face a postwar onslaught from the right, in particular from Benjamin Netanyahu. The Likud leader favored a major military operation to destroy what he called “an Iranian army division” fighting in “a war conceived, organized, trained and equipped by Iran, with Iran’s goal of destroying Israel and its fantasy ideology of building a once-glorious Muslim empire in which we are merely the first pit stop.” There is more of this talk to come, and from another rival on the right: Avigdor Lieberman, who is already very popular among the Russians who make up a large number of the Jewish Israelis living in the north, many of whom were too poor to seek shelter in southern towns. Mr. Olmert’s plan to extend the policy of unilateralism by removing up to 70,000 Israeli settlers from the West Bank, behind the separation barrier, also appears moribund. The rocket wars have made the barrier look flimsy, and one year after Ariel Sharon and Mr. Olmert pulled 9,000 Israeli settlers unilaterally out of Gaza, many onetime supporters of the plan say that critics like Mr. Netanyahu appear to have been correct — that the disengagement provided little security or stability. The plan to hand over more territory in the West Bank to a Hamas-led Palestinian Authority that could use more sophisticated rockets to hit Tel Aviv is now being dismissed as folly by many in the center, not just on the right — an unexpected gift to the settler movement. “A year after the withdrawal of Gaza, there is a huge ‘I told you so’ hanging in the air, and it’s hard to argue with, when Qassams are still flying out of Gaza and nothing has moved forward,” said Tom Segev, an Israeli historian. “Like Oslo, Gaza disengagement was a good idea, but it was managed very badly. But instead of criticizing the management, we criticize the thing itself.” Itamar Rabinovich, a former ambassador to Washington and president of Tel Aviv University, said bluntly: “Two notions have died. First, unilateralism, and second, separation by the fence. Missiles dwarf the fence.” Israelis also fear there has been damage done to their relationship with the United States, where some may complain that the Israelis were given time to clobber Hezbollah and didn’t get the job done. Mr. Segev compares this to “dissatisfied customers, yelling: ‘We ordered a war and you gave us this?’ ” Mr. Rabinovich is more sanguine. “Part of the reckoning will be our reputation as a strategic partner, when we tell the Americans, ‘Give us the tools and we’ll do the job,’ ” he said. “Part of our self-image is of military miracle workers, and we didn’t do that this time.” Still, he said, Lebanon reinforces Israel’s contention that the real danger in the region is Iran, Hezbollah’s creator and patron, and that the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran is aimed at Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan too. The United States understood that Israel was fighting for it against Iran in Lebanon, Mr. Rabinovich suggested. For Mr. Segev, the Lebanese war, even unfinished, seems like a side show to Israel’s main and persisting problem: the Palestinians. Israel still faces a crisis in Gaza, with the fate of another soldier, captured June 25, still unclear, a continuing military campaign to try to free him and an unresolved crisis over the Hamas-led government. “This war is a huge detour from the real problem, like an accident that shouldn’t have happened,” Mr. Segev said. “The Palestinian problem persists, and again the government looks to be bad managers.” |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Head Zookeeper ![]() | Tactically Israel has committed an incredible blunder. Perhaps not as bad as the United States has in Iraq but a tactical blunder none the less. Their wanton destruction of the surrounding region was a major overreaction on their part. Regardless of your feelings for justification, one needs to remove the emotion from their argument/viewpoint and look at it in strictly the lens of effectiveness, and the future ramifications of security in this border region. They likely have made this area, which was rebounding Democratically as far as the city of Beirut and the Lebanese government is concerned, into a devestated, cratered and blown up cauldron of resentment.
__________________ Support Our Troops: Bring Them Home! |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
![]() | I agree Dan about Israel. The fact is they lost the political battle. Sure they showed they will use force, big deal everyone knew that already. They should have used the support they had in the start to cause far more damage to Hezbollah, now all they have is a stronger one. Sad really at first I thought they were going to do something with all that political capital, instead they wasted and have really done nothing and things are worse now then before July 12th.
__________________ "It's only hubris if I fail." |
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