Michael Young | July 27, 2006
More than two weeks into the Lebanon war several thing are becoming slightly more obvious. The first is that the dynamics of the conflict are changing. Whereas for the first two weeks the Israelis imposed a blockade on all ports and systematically destroyed roads, bridges, Beirut's Shiite southern suburbs, and large areas of the mainly Shiite south and the northern Bekaa Valley, now we seem to have moved to a ground war focused in the border region. After the heavy casualties the Israelis took yesterday in Bint Jubail, I imagine Israel will escalate its air campaigns and essentially try to grind down and overcome the entrenched Hezbollah combatants through massive firepower. That will mean heavy civilian casualties.
Can it do so before a cease-fire? Because of the relative (and I mean very relative) normalization in the rest of the country, and the imminent opening of so-called humanitarian corridors to allow supplies and aid into Lebanon, it seems to me that Israel has bought several more weeks in which to hit Hezbollah, particularly in the south. There is also an embarrassed understanding, both inside Lebanon and out, that if things were to stop now, Hezbollah would emerge much stronger from the fight, and would be in a position to stage an effective coup against the Lebanese state, by virtue of its weapons and its ability (and visible desire today) to seek retribution against its critics.
Where will this lead? That depends on how well Hezbollah fights back. But the Israeli government has two contracts to fulfill: one toward its own people (and PM Ehud Olmert needs to prove that he can defend Israel, particularly if he goes through with a unilateral withdrawal from the West Bank in the future); and a contract with the Bush administration, which has asked Israel to cut down Hezbollah. Both objectives mean this is a fight Israel cannot afford to lose; and one Hezbollah cannot either.
On the diplomatic front, Condoleezza Rice's visit to Beirut earlier this week showed two things: that the U.S. doesn't have a clear idea how to deploy an international force in the border area; and that Rice is open to ideas. In a lunch session with representatives of political forces opposed to Syria, and critical of Hezbollah, she initially said that her plan called for clearing out a 20 kilometer area in the south where an international force would deploy. When the assembled politicians said this was ridiculous, since Hezbollah would only fire at Israel from behind the peacekeepers, Rice backtracked, saying that hers was only a proposal. She reportedly told assistant secretary David Welch to note that the plan had to be changed, and that the U.S. would aim for a demilitarization of the south. Quite how the U.S. intends to do this remains utterly unclear.
My own view is that this is a long work in progress, so that it is senseless to draw too many conclusions today. This is going to last for several more weeks, and the diplomacy will only really begin making inroads if Hezbollah agrees to compromise. We're far from that yet, but facing 500,000-700,000 displaced people, mounting economic costs estimated at $2 billion, the displeasure of much of Lebanese society, Hezbollah's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, needs his militia to come out of the Israeli land operation looking more or less intact, otherwise his margin to delay on a compromise will become narrower and narrower.
Most alarming, however, is that there are increasing calls in the U.S. for the Bush administration to engage Syria, so that it can help control Hezbollah, on the assumption that if you deal with Syria, you can isolate Iran. One wonders if those peddling the idea have any memory at all: it was under Syria that Hezbollah became a military power, and what the Syrians will demand, or maneuver to achieve, in exchange for "helping" would be onerous. They will want the international investigation of Rafiq Hariri's murder to be dropped, to save their regime that ordered the crime; and they will want oversight power over Lebanese affairs, which, with an armed Hezbollah as Praetorian Guard, would effectively mean they would again rule the country.
My own suspicion is that this is also Israel's Plan B if the international peacekeeping force project doesn't work out. The Israelis have always preferred dealing with predictable Syria in Lebanon than with a weak state that cannot control Hezbollah and is open to myriad outside irritants. Because the Israelis have no confidence in Lebanon's innate stability, they have no qualms about making that stability increasingly impossible.
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This article by Michael Totten is worth reading.
http://www.michaeltotten.com/archives/001203.html
Michael Young,
After the heavy casualties the Israelis took yesterday in Bint
Jubail, I imagine Israel will escalate its air campaigns and
essentially try to grind down and overcome the entrenched Hezbollah
combatants through massive firepower.
Sorry, but even for Israel, 9 killed doesn't qualify as "heavy
casualties" especially for taking a heavily fortified position.
Basically, it qualifies as a lucky shot. Israel won't switch back
to air power because most of what can be struck by air power has
already been hit. Air power won't let them dig out networked
bunkers. They have the Hez pinned down and now they are going to
root them out.
Lebanon needs Syria like Iraq needed Saddam Hussein. Not a perfect arrangement but the best that could be hoped for. Let Syria come back, keep Hezbollah in check and forget this democracy nonsense.
Having the opportunity to read analysis like this from Michael
Young makes subscribing to Reason seem like being a lousy tipper.
(I also have the Reason bumper sticker on my Geo Metro
"stickermobile," but that doesn't seem quite adequate
either.)
Let's do some brainstorming here in the Temple of the Vestal
Virgins about maybe a little human cyber-sacrifice.
The Reason Gods have been good. They deserve some
Thanksgiving.
(I, being of Scottish ancestry, am always more amenable to
non-monetary contributions.)
Nice posting by Michael Young, thank you.
And thanks to Jacob for that other link. An illuminating, if
depressing, article.
Why can't CNN and FOX get analysis like this?
Here are some taking points for discussion
Question: Why is Israel conducting military operations in
Lebanon?
Short Answer: �Israel is conducting military operations in Lebanon
in order to put an end to the threat Hezbollah poses to the Israeli
population.�
Explanation:
On July 12, 2006, Hezbollah a terrorist organization based in
Lebanon and represented in the Lebanese government killed 8 and
kidnapped two Israeli soldiers on sovereign Israeli
territory.
This unprovoked act of war made it necessary for Israel to
respond.
Israel could no longer allow its citizens to be threatened by
Hezbollah�s missile fire.
Israel would have been negligent in its responsibility towards its
citizens had it not responded.
Like Canadians, Israelis have the right to live their lives without
the threat of constant violence.
The purpose of this operation is to free the abducted soldiers and
to remove the threat that Hezbollah has posed and continues to pose
to the men, women and children of Israel.
Question: Is Israel using disproportionate force?
Short Answer: �Israel must respond with enough force to put an end
to the threat Hezbollah poses to the men, women and children of
Israel.�
Explanation:
Proportionality must be measured in terms of the extent of the
threat. With over 12,000 missiles targeted at Israel and a mandate
to oy the Jewish state. Hezbollah is a direct threat not only to
the one million Israelis who live within the range of the rockets,
but to the Jewish people as a whole.
All democratic nations have the obligation to defend their citizens
from attack and harm�s way.
Failure to face the threat head on and with the amount of force
needed to destroy it would be irresponsible.
Israel�s use of force is directly proportionate to the threat that
Hezbollah poses to Israeli civilians.
Question: Why does Israel bomb civilian buildings and
infrastructure in Lebanon?
Short Answer: �Israel does everything within its power to prevent
civilian casualties. Only terrorist groups like Hezbollah aim to
maximize civilian deaths.�
Explanation:
Israel is a democratic country with a moral army that makes every
effort to avoid involving civilians in conflicts and causing
civilian casualties.
By contrast, Hezbollah deliberately tries to maximize civilian
casualties by targeting major Israeli population centres and by
using civilians as human shields.
Israel only targets facilities in southern Lebanon which serve the
supply and command capacity of Hezbollah.
Israel targeted the runways of the Beirut airport and the
Beirut-Damascus highway in order to stop Hezbollah from smuggling
the two abducted Israelis out of Lebanon and to destroy the routes
through which Hezbollah is re-supplied with weapons.
Israel did not target the airport control tower or any other
installation not directly used by the terrorists.
Question: Is Israel not concerned about the growing number of
civilian casualties?
Short Answer: �Israel does everything it can to minimize civilian
casualties. When terrorists use civilians as human shields, it is
the terrorists and not Israel who are criminally responsible for
any loss of life.�
Explanation:
As a moral country, Israel does not target civilians and regrets
any loss of innocent life.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is a disciplined army which adheres
to a strict code of conduct.
In this current crisis, the IDF has gone out of its way to try and
save the lives of Lebanese civilians.
Prior to attacking an area, the IDF makes announcements and drops
pamphlets urging civilians to vacate Hezbollah areas.
Hezbollah, on the other hand, embeds itself in residential
neighborhoods, fires missiles out of private homes and cynically
uses civilians as human shields
When terrorists use civilians as human shields, it is the
terrorists who are criminally responsible for the deaths of
Lebanese civilians, not Israel.
Question: Following the July 16, 2006 death of 7 Canadians, what is
Israel doing to help foreign nationals get out of Lebanon?
Short Answer: �Israel is working with the international community
to ensure that foreign nationals leave Lebanon swiftly and
safely.�
Explanation:
Israel has expressed its profound sorrow to the government of
Canada over the tragic death of the Lebanese Canadian family.
Israel unconditionally regrets the deaths of any foreign nationals
in Lebanon who are not involved in the violence.
Israel has established a safe corridor and humanitarian task force
to facilitate the evacuation of people not involved in the
conflict.
Presently, over 70 evacuee ships have left Lebanon without
incident.
Q. What is Israel doing in order to help address the humanitarian
needs of the Lebanese population?
�Unlike Hezbollah, which seeks to inflict maximum pain and
suffering on the Israeli civilian population, Israel is doing
everything within its power to help Lebanese civilians.�
Explanation:
The government of Israel has created special passageways to allow
Lebanese civilians to vacate Hezbollah areas under attack.
It has created special corridors to allow for the free flow of
food, medicine and other necessities.
A new Israeli task force has been formed to coordinate the
distribution of humanitarian aid.
Most alarming, however, is that there are increasing calls
in the U.S. for the Bush administration to engage Syria, so that it
can help control Hezbollah, on the assumption that if you deal with
Syria, you can isolate Iran.
Syria was in the Gulf War I coalition. If Syria no longer
participated... That would be a good thing.
One wonders if those peddling the idea have any memory at all:
it was under Syria that Hezbollah became a military power, and what
the Syrians will demand, or maneuver to achieve, in exchange for
"helping" would be onerous. They will want the international
investigation of Rafiq Hariri's murder to be dropped, to save their
regime that ordered the crime; and they will want oversight power
over Lebanese affairs, which, with an armed Hezbollah as Praetorian
Guard, would effectively mean they would again rule the
country.
I don't doubt that Syria wants these things, still I hope our
leaders do what's best for the American people. I wish the best for
the people of Lebanon and people everywhere else in the world too,
but I can imagine how sometimes what's best for the American people
might not be what's best for everyone.
What do you guys think about the "It's all about Iran" hypothesis? The theory is that it doesn't matter what Israel does here. Unless Iran is crushed to rubble or at least positively contained from nuclear development, this goes on forever and in the latter case gets waaay out of hand.
""�Israel is conducting military operations in Lebanon in order
to put an end to the threat Hezbollah poses to the Israeli
population.�
"""
This will probably not be true because of a key phrase, "put an end
to". They failed the last time. They will have about equal success
this time.
Once Hezbollah gets knocked down some, they will change to
insurgency tactics. This will require Israel's attention for years
until they decide to withdraw. Can we say Iraq?
Air power won't let them dig out networked bunkers. They
have the Hez pinned down and now they are going to root them
out.
How odd - I was under the impression that the Israelis were
fighting an indigenous guerilla organization, not the Imperial
Japanese Army. I see zero indications that the Israelis have pinned
anyone down so far - the casualties they took the other day were in
a village that they had already declared "secured." The bit about
"rooting out" Hezbollah sounds like vintage material from the
Saigon Five O'Clock Follies, circa 1967.
Young's hypothesis that the Israelis might actually welcome the
Syrians back under "Plan B" hadn't occurred to me before, but it's
definitely a possibility. Hezbollah isn't some alien terrorist
group like Al-Qaeda - they are deeply embedded in the Shia
community of south Lebanon, which is how they ended up with 20% of
the seats in the Lebanese Parliament. Trying to wipe them out or
forcibly disarm them would probably require the depopulation of
most of southern Lebanon, a fairly impractical proposition at this
time. Israel could very well consider dealing with a Syria directly
in control of Lebanon again to be preferable.
Good to see Michael around again.
Shannon Love that's what I thought too. But it was about a week ago
that diminishing marginal returns hit Israeli air power. I expected
ground operations to start Sunday. They didn't. I am afraid that
Olmert is working from an unfinished manual left by Sharon.
It seems to me Israel took the bait Hezbollah wanted them to
take -- overreact to a small incursion into Israel with full war
but no plan or means to win. Its not like the border was quite
before the kidnappings, there were recent Israeli incursions before
and Hez missiles shot into Israel in the recent past. I think
Israel overreacted, overplayed its hand and was over confident and
it now finds itseld in a quagmire that will not destory Hezbollah
and cannot win, and shows the Arab world that the Israeli military
is simply competent and not some superhuman structure able to
defeats anyone in six days or less.
I also have a sneaking feeling Israel don't like stable, prosperous
Arab nations moving in a more liberal and positive direction...
Thanks for the update Michael, I'm also glad to see you
around.
Thanks too for the link Jacob, very interesting.
I find it exceedingly difficult to tell what all details really
matter, and in some ways what the truth really is.
Is Hezbollah a Syrian or Iranian pawn/front? Neither, either, or
both? See for example
http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=072806C
(though I'm often skeptical of what I find here). If it's true that
Shias outside Iran, don't generally take direction from Iran, then
this problem really is local and not a regional power play. From my
reading of history I could see the Arabs not being too cozy with
Persia.
None of which changes the immediate problem the Israelis face, but
it has entirely different long term strategic implications for the
region.
Far as I can tell Hezbollah has been getting ready for some kind of
confrontation (given how well dug in they are). Whether they'd
expected the show down to happen right now or not is an open
question. But either way, I am still left to conclude that the
Israelis have called it right by confronting Hezbollah now instead
of later. Poor Lebanon....
I have seen reports claiming that Hezbollah has declared itself
dedicated to destroying Israel, and others claiming "that's just
made up BS".
But if all this really was just a local mess, and Hezb. really is
the only serious armed force in Lebanon, then why the hell did they
hit Israel at all? Why not just impose their rule on Lebanon
directly?
And why did Hezb. hit Israel, and kidnap soldiers, at the same as
Hamas? These things lead me to believe it's more than just a local
Lebanese problem.
But this is something like the lead-up to Iraq. Look around and you
can find websites that will tell you almost anything you want to
believe.
a) "There are clearly WMDs in Iraq."
b) "There are at least good reasons to believe WMDs exist in Iraq."
(which made a lot of sense to me before and now).
c) "There are clearly no WMDs in Iraq."
To someone who is trying to be rational and objective, it often
isn't easy to tell who's giving you the truth and who isn't. I was
never sure about a) and c). I just never understood why, if you're
going to hit a major ME country, you would choose Iraq. Didn't seem
like the biggest fish in the pond needing to be shot at.
Not that it matters now. I'm just saying, it's hard figuring out
the truth.
Well, it's still way better than having no info at all.
Thanks for the update Michael, I'm also glad to see you
around.
Thanks too for the link Jacob, very interesting.
I find it exceedingly difficult to tell what all details really
matter, and in some ways what the truth really is.
Is Hezbollah a Syrian or Iranian pawn/front? Neither, either, or
both? See for example
http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=072806C
(though I'm often skeptical of what I find here). If it's true that
Shias outside Iran, don't generally take direction from Iran, then
this problem really is local and not a regional power play. From my
reading of history I could see the Arabs not being too cozy with
Persia.
None of which changes the immediate problem the Israelis face, but
it has entirely different long term strategic implications for the
region.
Far as I can tell Hezbollah has been getting ready for some kind of
confrontation (given how well dug in they are). Whether they'd
expected the show down to happen right now or not is an open
question. But either way, I am still left to conclude that the
Israelis have called it right by confronting Hezbollah now instead
of later. Poor Lebanon....
I have seen reports claiming that Hezbollah has declared itself
dedicated to destroying Israel, and others claiming "that's just
made up BS".
But if all this really was just a local mess, and Hezb. really is
the only serious armed force in Lebanon, then why the hell did they
hit Israel at all? Why not just impose their rule on Lebanon
directly?
And why did Hezb. hit Israel, and kidnap soldiers, at the same as
Hamas? These things lead me to believe it's more than just a local
Lebanese problem.
But this is something like the lead-up to Iraq. Look around and you
can find websites that will tell you almost anything you want to
believe.
a) "There are clearly WMDs in Iraq."
b) "There are at least good reasons to believe WMDs exist in Iraq."
(which made a lot of sense to me before and now).
c) "There are clearly no WMDs in Iraq."
To someone who is trying to be rational and objective, it often
isn't easy to tell who's giving you the truth and who isn't. I was
never sure about a) and c). I just never understood why, if you're
going to hit a major ME country, you would choose Iraq. Didn't seem
like the biggest fish in the pond needing to be shot at.
Not that it matters now. I'm just saying, it's hard figuring out
the truth.
Well, it's still way better than having no info at all.
The pro-Hezbollah Christian Science Monitor ;) says Hez support
in Lebanon is now at 87%
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0728/p06s01-wome.html
"The stakes are high for Hizbullah, but it seems it can count on an
unprecedented swell of public support that cuts across sectarian
lines.According to a poll released by the Beirut Center for
Research and Information, 87 percent of Lebanese support
Hizbullah's fight with Israel, a rise of 29 percent on a similar
poll conducted in February. More striking, however, is the level of
support for Hizbullah's resistance from non-Shiite communities.
Eighty percent of Christians polled supported Hizbullah along with
80 percent of Druze and 89 percent of Sunnis."
Is this true? Is it temporary if true?
"it's hard figuring out the truth."
Some things are not so hard to figure out.
Maybe Hizbollah is recruiting it's militants from the Shia
population of Lebanon, but who is financing them and supplying all
those rockets ?
Of course, Iran, via Syria.
They also supply the rabid Islamist and anti Israel ideology - a
genocide ideology.
If Lebanon had been left alone, the Lebanese shia have no special
motivation to sacrifice their lives toward the attempt to
annihilate Israel.
The United Nations had no right to take land away from the
Palestinians to give to the Israelis in 1947. The Israelis had no
right to forcibly take land away from the Palestinians in 1948.
Sure, the Jews once controlled that land, but so did the Indians
once control America. How would we feel if the United Nations gave
America back to the Indians?
This doesn't mean that the Israelis should give all of Palestine
back to the Palestinians or that we should give America back to the
Indians. What's done is done. The Israelis should at the least stop
treating the Palestinians as second rate citizens. These are the
roots of the Palestinians' rebellion just as the Indians
rebelled.
I know this is kind of off the subject as far as Lebanon goes, but
I just wanted to enter this into the dialogue.
" The Israelis should at the least stop treating the
Palestinians as second rate citizens. These are the roots of the
Palestinians' rebellion "
"the roots of the Palestinians' rebellion " is their unwillingness
to accept the existence of Israel, and their never ending attempts
to annihilate Israel, which entails genocide.
"Israel could no longer allow its citizens to be threatened by
Hezbollah�s missile fire."
It was Israel that fired first. The Hezbollah missile fire was self
defense. Granted, the Hezbollah did start it with capturing Israeli
soldiers, but the Israeli response is overkill, especially when
civilians are targeted, especially civilians in ambulances. The
Israelis are even going after wounded civilians.
Jacob, does Israel have a right to exist? Did the UN have the right
to take land from others to give Jews a homeland? That is the
beginning of all this violence. Even Michael Neuman realizes that.
Michael Neuman is a German Jew who sympathises with Israel and the
Jews, but looking at it objectively, he feels that most of the
blame for all the violence lies with Zionism. Read his book "The
Case Against Israel".
"Hezbollah deliberately tries to maximize civilian casualties by
targeting major Israeli population centres and by using civilians
as human shields."
Isn't Israel's placing munitions plants in Arab districts a case of
using human shields?
"The Hezbollah missile fire was self defense."
Eh, that is generous. The rockets and missiles they are firing may
be many things, but self defense against the IDF is not among them.
They were an escalation tactic.
"I also have a sneaking feeling Israel don't like stable,
prosperous Arab nations moving in a more liberal and positive
direction..."
Agreed. The neocons may love Israel, but Israel doesn't seem to be
on board with their Arab Democracy Crusade. The Israelis seem to be
pretty hard core practitioners of realpolitik. Remember the head of
Shin Bet predicted that Israel would miss Saddam Hussein?
It's easy to say you support something like supporing democracy
when doing so furthers your realist foreign policy goals - we're
going to disarm Saddam Hussein, eliminate a belligerent government
and, oh yeah, spread democracy.
But the real test of your commitment to a foreign policy ideal is
you willingness to support it when there is a cost, when it
conflicts with something else you want to achieve.
So, uh, how many of the Bush supporting, neoconservative war hawks,
the ones who pointed to the so-called "Cedar Revolution" as the
most importantant development in the Levant in decades and gave
Georeg Bush all the credit, have been spotted criticizing the
Israeli government for undermining that democracy?
My count is zero.
"Jacob, does Israel have a right to exist?"
That's a somewhat academic question... not terribly useful.
The fact is that as long as you try to annihilate Israel - which
enatils the murder of some 5 million people - you get a war on your
hands... maybe you think it's a just war, but still it is a war,
and wars have ugly and unpredictable consequences.
Those who keep talking about Israel having no right to exist are in
fact promoting total war.
Some things are not so hard to figure out.
...who is financing them and supplying all those rockets ? Of
course, Iran, via Syria.
If Lebanon had been left alone, the Lebanese shia have no
special motivation to sacrifice their lives toward the attempt to
annihilate Israel.
All of which goes to say, the "it's just a local Lebanese thing"
thesis doesn't hold water. And this means, those who would like to
claim it's not about destroying Israel are full of it.
Which means, in turn, that the Israelis are in fact doing the right
thing in trying to root Hezb. out now rather than waiting.
Which is the conclusion I'd already been coming to.
I've read a lot of history, but even at that the problem is that I
don't know anywhere near enough about people's motives in the ME to
always be sure what makes sense and what doesn't. Sometimes have to
do a lot of sifting.
The Israelis should at the least stop treating the
Palestinians as second rate citizens. These are the roots of the
Palestinians' rebellion
What Israel wants, more than anything else, is security. Until
they've got it, every other thing you can put up on the table is
going to be a secondary consideration.
The US didn't stop treating Indians as "second class citizens"
until long after the Indians no longer posed any sort of threat.
Israel will not be much different. Saving your own hide is priority
one.
I agree that carving Israel out of the ME back in '47-'48 was a
really stupid idea. But it's done. Everybody has to deal with it
now.
A year or two ago a major international survey found, much to
the surprise and horror of most American pundits, that the world
viewed Israel and the U.S. as greater threats to peace than they
did China, Iran, or N. Korea. This was across the board, save of
course for Israel and US. It seems that recent events have indeed
validated the world's opinion. The United States has invaded two
nations in the last five years and now Israel has invaded two (I
count the Palestenian Authority as a nation).
So let's forgive groups like Hez if they fail to disarm per
Israel's request. They, and many Lebanese, know that Lebanon or the
world will not stand up to Israel's aggressions (this is their
third invasion of Lebanon). That they call for Israel's destruction
is a little more understandable when you realize that Hez was
created to kick out Israel when they occupied their territory in a
blatant invasion that was condemned by the UN.
The Hez attack on Israel and the abduction of two soldiers must be
considered with the fact that Israel has literally dozens of
Lebanese citizens in their prisons. Ditto for the
Palestinians.
Israel bolsters this view of them as scary to their neighbors by
their (US sanctioned) devil-may-care attitude, blowing up the Red
Cross, children, civilian infrastructure, UN observers, etc. They
appear to have little or no restraint...
Hold on there, Genghis. The involvement of foreign parties =
it's about destroying Israel?
First of all, as America's support of terrorist gangs and
governments in central America during the 1980s, as well as the
French crown's support for the American Revolution, demonstrate, it
is quite common for the locals to have different goals than foreign
patrons.
Second, Syria spent decades ruling Lebanon as a fiefdom with the
help of Hezbollah, and Iran is currently being called before the
world for its nuclear program. And you can't think of any reasons
why these two countries would support a Hezbollah offensive besides
a desire to wipe out Israel?
Joes post seems to come straight from the IDF or FOX. Its
ridiculous. Where did you hear that:
"The government of Israel has created special passageways to allow
Lebanese civilians to vacate Hezbollah areas under attack.
It has created special corridors to allow for the free flow of
food, medicine and other necessities.
A new Israeli task force has been formed to coordinate the
distribution of humanitarian aid."
In fact, independent monitors find otherwise:
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2006/07/22/lebano13799.htm
Here's another laugher:
"The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is a disciplined army which
adheres to a strict code of conduct.
In this current crisis, the IDF has gone out of its way to try and
save the lives of Lebanese civilians."
UN observers, Red Cross, literally hundreds of civilians. Man, I'd
hate to see them undisciplined without a strict code of
conduct.
Sorry for the broken link. You can go here and see HRW's
position on a variety of Israel-Lebanon issues.
http://hrw.org/doc/?t=news
No snark here. I've forgotten some of the positions people are
staking out.
To those who view this as unjustified Israeli aggression. What was
the correct course of action for Israel to have followed? What
should they do now?
To those who view this as something in excess of an appropriate
response, what is the appropriate response?
UN observers, Red Cross, literally hundreds of civilians.
Man, I'd hate to see them undisciplined without a strict code of
conduct.
Well, Ken, that might look alot more like the Hez tactics, the
Taliban tactics, and al Qaeda tactics...except that without
discipline and democratic system, they'd probably just drop the
bomb on Lebanon.
The US didn't stop treating Indians as "second class
citizens" until long after the Indians no longer posed any sort of
threat.'
For some reason, that analogy doesn't do much to assure me of the
righteousness of Israel's cause.
UN observers, Red Cross, literally hundreds of civilians.
Man, I'd hate to see them undisciplined without a strict code of
conduct.
(1) The UN outposts that were hit were legitimate tactical targets
because Hez was using them. Email from UN observers on the spot
confirms this. The blame for any attacks on any location being used
by Hez falls on Hez.
(2) Red Cross ambulances have been used by Hez to transport ammo,
supplies, and fighters. The blame for any attacks on ambulances
being used by Hez.
(3) Hez dresses as civilians, making their corpses hard to
distinguish from the innocent. Hez also uses civilians as human
shields. The blame for any deaths of civilians being used as human
shields by Hez falls on Hez.
I'm sure there are a few attacks and deaths that don't fall into
these categories, but I think they are far fewer than you seem to
imagine, Ken.
RC
I'd like some proof of those assertions. According to the Globe and
Mail (and every other major world newspaper that I have seen) the
following is reported:
"The Israel Defence Forces received repeated and increasingly
urgent warnings, both in the field and from New York, that they
were targeting a United Nations monitoring post before they
delivered a bomb that killed four peacekeepers, including a
Canadian, UN officials said yesterday."
The Times Online (England) reports of Joe's famous IDF facilitation
of corridors of escape and assistance for civilians:
""This talk of a humanitarian corridor should not mask the real
situation," said Christopher Stokes, director of operations for
Medecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) Belgium.
"In effect there is no real humanitarian access in the south. And
we are deluding ourselves, the international community is deluding
itself, if it believes there is."
In response to Jason, the destruction of Hez's leaders compound
was, in my opinion, the only appropriate response to the
abductions.
There was mention that Israel may be lacking in intelligence and possibly underestimated the strength of Hezbollah. As there seems to be vast storage of missiles hidden underground, have there been investigations into the usage of underground tunnels from Syria to Lebanon for the transport of missiles from Syria to Hezbollah?
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