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Israeli attack on Lebanon threatens to engulf entire Middle
East in war
Statement of the Editorial Board
15 July 2006
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The Israeli onslaught on Lebanon, with bombings and missile
strikes and the imposition of an air and sea blockade, has brought
the Middle East to the brink of all-out war. The attack on Lebanon,
fully endorsed by the Bush administration, coincides with Israels
ongoing assault on the Palestinian population of Gaza, 1.5 million
people who are enduring the fourth week of a siege, with electricity
cut off and food supplies running low.
The Olmert government in Israel has seized on two incidents
involving the kidnapping of Israeli soldiers, first in Gaza on
June 25, and then on Wednesday on the Lebanese border, as pretexts
for an enormous military operation that was clearly prepared long
in advance. It remains to be seen how far the Israeli offensive
will goto Beirut, or even to Damascusbut it is clearly
aimed at accomplishing strategic objectives that have no relationship
to the incidents that supposedly provoked it.
No one can seriously suggest that bombing Lebanese towns and
villages, imposing a naval blockade and attempting to assassinate
Sheik Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, are methods likely to
win the freedom of the captured Israeli soldiers. The two soldiers
taken by Hezbollah are far more likely to die as a result, killed
either by their captors or by Israeli bombs.
Likewise in Gaza, the indiscriminate killing of dozens of Palestinians
with bombs, shells and air-to-ground missiles will do nothing
to win the release of Gilad Shalit, the private seized by Islamic
militants in their raid across the Gaza border into southern Israel.
There is a long history of Israel using such events as the
excuse for carrying out military actions that have a far broader
strategic purposegoing back to 1978, when a full-scale invasion
of Lebanon was launched using the shooting of the Israeli ambassador
to Britain by Palestinian militants as a pretext. Only much later
did it emerge that the invasion had been long planned, awaiting
only the proper incident to provide a suitable official justification.
The same pattern is repeated in Gaza and Lebanon today. The
Israeli regime has made no secret of its desire to smash up the
Hamas-led Palestinian Authority. The economic blockade imposed
in January, after Hamas won the Palestinian legislative elections,
has been escalated into a full-scale military blockade of Gaza,
where Hamas has its main political support.
In Lebanon, the goal of Israel is, at a minimum, the physical
destruction of Hezbollah, the Shiite Islamic movement which dominates
the southern third of the country. A full-scale invasion of southern
Lebanon by Israeli ground forces is more than likely. Israeli
Defense Minister Peretz said, If the government of Lebanon
fails to deploy its forces, as is expected of a sovereign government,
we shall not allow Hezbollah forces to remain any further on the
borders of the state of Israel. In other words, if the Lebanese
army does not suppress Hezbollahand no one expects it tothen
the Israeli army will do so.
US military intervention in Lebanon is also likely. US media
reports Friday suggested that the initial planning for such an
intervention was well advanced, with 2,200 Marines to be deployed
as a helicopter-borne force that would land near Beirut on the
pretext of protecting the 25,000 American citizens now trapped
in Lebanon by the Israeli blockade.
Separate or joint US and Israeli air strikes against Syria
and Iran, and even a ground invasion of Syria, are also possible.
Certainly the main focus of the Bush administration, the congressional
Democrats and Republicans, and the American media has been to
blame Syria and Iran for the crisis, claiming that those regimes
were pulling the strings in Hezbollah.
The US media has suggested that Hezbollahs kidnapping
of the two Israeli soldiers was specifically ordered by Tehran
in retaliation for the referral of Iran to the UN Security Council
earlier this week, in the ongoing dispute over its nuclear research
program. The Bush administration has likewise blamed Syria for
the ongoing insurgency in Iraqs Anbar province, since supplies
and recruits have come across the Syrian border.
The US invasion and occupation of Iraq have produced a holocaust
for the Iraqi people: a mounting slaughter in which tens of thousands
have been killed, by sectarian gangs and militia, by car bombs
and other terrorist acts, and by bombs, shells, missile attacks,
indiscriminate shooting or outright murder on the part of the
American occupiers.
Last week it was reported that 1,595 bodies had been brought
to the Baghdad morgue during June, the largest monthly death toll
yet in the escalating civil strife. The US military death toll
is well over 2,500. Combined with the death toll for US soldiers
in Afghanistan, Bush will soon be responsible for the destruction
of more American lives than the terrorists who attacked New York
and Washington on September 11, 2001.
The Bush administration will not retreat from Iraq and cannot
maintain the status quo, as the country slides deeper into civil
war and popular opposition to the war mounts among the American
people. A sizeable section of the US ruling elite, frustrated
by the quagmire in Iraq, believes that the only hope of military
success lies in expanding the problem, as Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has put it. They believe that Iran is
using its growing influence on the Iraqi Shiite parties and militias
to undermine US control of the puppet regime established in Baghdad,
and that a military confrontation with Tehran is inevitable.
The Wall Street Journal is the semi-official voice of
these layers, and it published an editorial Friday, entitled States
of Terror, which openly advocated military action against
both Syria and Iran. The editorial declared, There will
be no resolution in Lebanon and Gaza until the regimes in Syria
and Iran believe they will pay a price...
Criticizing Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice for her pro
forma appeal that all sides must act with restraint,
the Journal said, The White House has cited Syria
and Iran as the culprits behind this weeks events, but more
forceful words and action are called for.
The mushrooming crisis in the Middle East is a predictable
consequence of the massive military intervention by the United
States in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the increasingly aggressive
and reckless policy of American imperialism throughout the region.
This includes the carte blanche given by the Bush administration
to Israel to use its US-financed and US-built war machine against
its neighbors and against the persecuted and oppressed Palestinian
people.
The policy of United States and Israel is based on a never-ending
cycle of war. The Bush administration rests its entire foreign
policy on the belief that American military power and high-tech
weaponry can solve every problem. The Zionist project is similarly
predicated on unrestrained use of force against the Palestinians
and other targets, such as Hezbollah. Both policies have proven
to be disastrous for the people of the region, including the Jewish
population of Israel.
As a US client state, Israel has long been dependent on a vast
flow of economic and military aid from Washington. For the last
decade, it has sought to exploit the unchallenged international
supremacy of the United States, in the wake of the collapse of
the Soviet Union, to reject any negotiations for a territorial
settlement with the Palestinians and instead impose its dictates
unilaterally on the Palestinian Authority.
This was the content of the Sharon governments withdrawal
last year from Gaza, closing down a handful of unviable settlements
in order to draw an international border with 1.5 million Palestinians
on the other side, insuring a Jewish majority in Israel and the
remaining occupied territories for at least another decade.
Similar concerns are driving the Olmert governments policy
of wall-building and resettlement on the West Bank. While planning
to abandon a handful of Zionist settlements, Olmerts government
is drawing the new border unilaterally to give the best land to
the Israelis, including all of Jerusalem, while the Palestinians
are relegated to a rump state on barely 60 percent of the occupied
territory.
In the last few days, the American media has been filled with
denunciations of Hamas and Hezbollah, portraying them as terrorist
organizations and fitting targets for a massive escalation of
military force. But in the final analysis, the real target of
the United States and Israel is not this or that organization,
but the oppressed masses throughout the Middle East. They aim
to destroy the will to struggle of the tens of millions of people
who have never accepted the Zionist dispossession of the Palestinian
people, and who will never accept the US conquest of Iraq and
the establishment of a neo-colonial stooge regime in Baghdad.
There is a profound sense in which the policies of the United
States and Israel appear counterproductive and self-defeating.
The Bush administration played a major role in creating the current
Lebanese government, and the forced withdrawal of Syrian troops
from Lebanon has been touted as one of its few foreign policy
successes in the Middle East. Yet the Israeli attacks threaten
to undermine and discredit the regime in Beirut, which is compelled
to stand by impotently while Lebanese citizens are slaughtered,
now in the dozens, soon perhaps in the hundreds and thousands.
Similarly, it might appear irrational that an administration
which has been unable to subjugate Iraq (population 26 million),
would attack Syria (population 18 million) and even Iran (population
75 million). But such attacks are the logical outcome of the imperialist
perspective that it is possible for American imperialism to impose
its will on the Middle East, and obtain control of the regions
vast oil resources, through sheer force of arms.
In reality, the Bush administrations invasion of Iraq
has proven a strategic disaster for American imperialism. It has
aroused the population of the entire region, and literally billions
of people throughout the world, dispelling illusions that the
United States could be identified with democracy, freedom or opposition
to colonialism.
It is now 58 years since the state of Israel was established,
and 39 years since the Six-Day War which expanded Zionist control
of Palestinian territory to include the West Bank and Gaza. These
six decades have been an unending chain of violencewar,
repression, terrorism, assassination, the expulsion of populations.
Now a new and even more terrible war threatens.
The first premise of any solution to the crisis of the Middle
East is the removal of American imperialism from the region. The
World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality Party
demand the immediate withdrawal of all US troops from Iraq and
the Persian Gulf, and an end to Washingtons military and
financial sponsorship of Israeli domination over the Palestinian
people.
See Also:
Washington, Tel Aviv threaten Syria
and Iran
Ground invasion of Lebanon looms after Israel bombs Beirut airport,
imposes blockade
[14 July 2006]
Israel launches military assault on Lebanon
[13 July 2006]
Major powers complicit in Israeli war
crimes
[5 July 2006]
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