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Israel prepares major escalation of Lebanon aggression
By Patrick Martin
28 July 2006
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The Israeli government issued orders Thursday to mobilize as
many as 40,000 additional reserve soldiers in preparation for
an escalation of its war of aggression against Lebanon. The action
was taken by the security cabinet of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
in response to mounting demands from the military brass and the
media for a full-scale invasion of south Lebanon.
The large-scale reserve call-up is but one indication that
Israel is preparing a massive escalation of violence against the
Lebanese population. Israeli Justice Minister Haim Ramon gave
an interview to Israels Army Radio in which he said that
the Israeli air force should bomb Lebanese towns and villages
before the ground forces enter in order to cut Israeli casualties.
Asked if this meant destroying villages and their civilian population,
he responded, These places are not villages. They are military
bases in which Hezbollah people are hiding and from which they
are operating.
Ramon hailed the outcome of the Rome conference of the major
imperialist powers and selected Arab countries, held Wednesday
to discuss the Lebanese crisis. US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice blocked all efforts to pass a resolution calling for an immediate
ceasefire. Ramon interpreted this outcomequite correctlyas
a green light for further Israeli destruction of Lebanon.
We received yesterday at the Rome conference permission
from the world... to continue the operation, this war, until Hezbollah
wont be located in Lebanon and until it is disarmed,
he declared.
The Israeli ruling elite has been shocked by the fierce resistance
which Hezbollah fighters have put up in towns like Bint Jbail
and Maroun el Ras, just across the border from Israel. Nine Israeli
soldiers were killed early Wednesday when they were sent into
a well-prepared trap in Bint Jbail.
As troops of the Golani Brigade entered the center of the town,
thinking that air strikes had reduced the resistance to a few
dozen men, hundreds of Hezbollah fighters opened fire on them
from all sides. It was an hour before the Israeli troops could
even mount serious return fire, and the town remains contested
despite incessant air and artillery pounding.
The setback at Bint Jbail triggered a firestorm of media criticism
of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) and the Olmert government.
Newspapers from the liberal Haaretz to the more conservative
Yediot Aharonot blasted the military tactics as inept,
demanded a commitment of tens of thousands of troops, and warned
that failure to inflict a highly visible military defeat on Hezbollah
would represent an enormous political, psychological and strategic
blow to the Israeli state.
In the daily newspaper Maariv, Amir Rappaport criticized
the enormous gap between the military challenge posed by
Hezbollah, a shadowy guerrilla organization equipped with the
best Iranian and Syrian weaponry, and the relatively smaller number
of troops that took part in the incursion.
In Yediot Aharonot, military correspondent Alex Fishman
declared, The public does not quite understand the ground
offensive and has the feeling that something about this machine
is not workingthat it is too slow, too limited, too many
accidents, that it should look different.
The long-time military affairs commentator for Haaretz,
Zeev Schiff, declared that Hezbollah must be destroyed
at any price, warning, If Hezbollah does not experience
defeat in this war, this will spell the end of Israeli deterrence
against its enemies. He expressed particular concern that
failure to destroy Hezbollah would inspire a new wave of resistance
from the Palestinian population of the West Bank, making the territory
uncontrollable.
The security cabinets order to mobilize three reserve
divisions was accompanied by assurances from Olmert that his government
had decided not to carry out a full-scale invasion of Lebanon
or press beyond the border area in which ground operations have
been confined. But as the Associated Press noted, the large
size of the mobilizationone division has 12,000 to 15,000
soldiersraised questions about officials insistence
that they were not contemplating a wider offensive.
Defense Minister Amir Peretz boasted that the campaign of bombing
and border incursions had already inflicted a strategic defeat
on Hezbollah, and he declared that the purpose of the offensive
was changing the reality on the northern border. But
despite this claim, Hezbollah was able to launch over 150 rockets
in the 24 hours ending Thursday night, Israeli time, the heaviest
bombardment of the two-week-long war. Rockets hit Kiryat Shmona,
Haifa, Safed, Carmiel, Maalot and Shlomi, among other cities and
towns.
A Likud member of the Knesset who heads a defense preparedness
committee, Yuval Steinitz, called for a far more aggressive prosecution
of the war both in the air and on the ground. Steinitz revealed
that secret committee hearings had debated the IDF plans for an
air war against Hezbollah two years ago. This underscores that
despite the media campaign to paint Israeli as the innocent victim
of terrorism, the war of aggression against Lebanon has been in
preparation for a long time, awaiting only a suitable pretext.
While invariably described in the American and Israeli media
as terrorists, Hezbollah has performed as a well-trained
military force in the first two weeks of war. Its fighters should
be called what they are: Arab soldiers fighting courageously for
their people and their land against an invading army which has
enormous superiority in firepower and numbers, and uncontested
control of the air.
The saturation bombing of Lebanon continues, with one report
estimating that more than 2,000 Israeli air strikes have been
conducted since the July 12, each strike delivering anywhere from
one to four tons of explosives in the form of bombs and missiles.
In addition, there has been constant shelling of border towns
and villages that are within the range of Israeli artillery, as
well as shelling of coastal areas by Israeli gunboats.
The cumulative bomb tonnage dropped on Lebanon has probably
already exceed the destructive power of the atomic bomb dropped
on Nagasaki (the equivalent of 10,000 tons of TNT), and will soon
approach that of Hiroshima (20,000 tons). This is a criminal devastation
of a largely defenseless country.
The Lebanese health minister said Thursday that at least 600
civilians have been killed in the bombing, including as many as
200 still buried in the rubble of destroyed buildings. Each day
brings new reports of atrocities committed by Israeli Air Force:
the targeting of ambulances, cars driven by refugees clearly marked
with white flags, trucks bringing medical supplies, food and water
to the hundreds of thousands trapped in the war zone.
The monitoring group Human Rights Watch charged that Israel
used cluster bombs on the Lebanese village of Blida July 19, killing
one woman and wounding 12 more civilians, seven of them children.
Major General Beni Gantz, the Israeli commander in the area, admitted
that the IDF has employed cluster bombs as part of the arsenal
of weapons unleashed on Lebanon, although he claimed, We
try to minimize their use.
Perhaps the most flagrant war crime was the deliberate destruction
of an outpost of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)
on Tuesday, killing four unarmed observers from China, Canada,
Austria and Finland.
UN officials have provided new details of the doomed effort
to persuade the Israeli Defense Forces not to target the outpost
and murder the four observers. Jane Holl Lute, assistant secretary
general for peacekeeping operations, told a Wednesday session
of the Security Council that UN officials in both New York and
Lebanon made repeated calls to the Israeli UN mission and the
IDF command after bombs and missiles began to strike the outpost
at Khiam in southern Lebanon.
Among those making the calls were Lute herself, deputy secretary
general Mark Malloch Brown, Khaled Mansour, a UN spokesman in
Lebanon, and Major General Alain Pellegrini, commander of UNIFIL.
Lt. Col. John Molloy, the senior Irish officer in the UN observer
force in south Lebanon, reported making six calls to his Israeli
counterparts before the strike on the post, according to an Irish
defense ministry spokeswoman. He warned the Israelis that
they were shelling in very close proximity to the post, and his
warnings were very specific, explicit, detailed and stark. Obviously
those warnings went unheeded, the spokeswoman said.
A total of 21 strikes were made on the Khiam post, 11 of them
air strikesin which the pilots would have had a clear view
of the UN flag and insigniaand at least six artillery strikes.
Lute noted that the UN post was well known and clearly marked
and said there had been no Hezbollah activity near it. The post
has been used by UNIFIL for decades.
When a UNIFIL force consisting of soldiers from India went
to relieve the outpost, eventually recovering the bodies of the
slain observers, Israeli forces continued firing on the position.
This war crime has two clear purposes, one tactical, the other
political. The IDF wanted no UN scrutiny of its cross-border ground
operations, which went into high gear shortly after the UN observers
were killed. More broadly, the Israeli regime is sending a message
to any country which might contribute troops to a future peacekeeping
force in the region: the IDF will brook no opposition to whatever
methods it chooses to employ against the Lebanese people or anyone
else it targets.
The Bush administration intervened in the UN Security Council
deliberations, as it did at the Rome conference, to block any
criticism of Israel. The Security Council adopted a resolution
declaring itself deeply shocked and distressed by
the attacks on UN peacekeepers, but any stronger language was
abandoned after the US ambassador, John Bolton, threatened a veto.
Bolton cited Israeli assurances that the killings were an
operational mistake and said that he had seen no evidence
to the contrary. He refused to permit language directly
condemning the killing of United Nations personnel in a resolution
adopted by the UNs highest body. Even a general statement
which made no reference to the Khiam atrocity or to Israelthe
Security Council condemns any deliberate attack against UN personnelwas
blocked. Bolton also insisted that the resolution should not call
for a UN investigation of the killing, but instead call on Israel
to investigate itself.
One only has to contrast this despicable cover-up to the response
from the Bush administration and the US media to the August 2003
bombing of the UN offices in Baghdad, in which the top UN official
in Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello, was killed. The targeting of
the United Nations, the US government declared, proved that the
bombers were the enemies of all humanity. There is no such conclusion
drawn after an equally deliberate strike on a UN facility by the
state of Israel.
See Also:
Rome conference on Lebanon
Appeasement 2006: Europe capitulates to American-Israeli aggression
[27 July 2006]
The case of the USS Liberty: anatomy
of an Israeli provocation
[27 July 2006]
Rice leaves bloody footprints in Lebanon
[26 July 2006]
Israel prepares to launch ground war
in Lebanon
[22 July 2006]
The real aims of the US-backed Israeli
war against Lebanon
[21 July 2006]
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