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Rice begins Mideast tour to promote US-Israeli war aims
By Patrick Martin
25 July 2006
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US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived in Beirut, Lebanon
Monday, the first stop in a trip whose purpose is to shore up
the joint US-Israeli military campaign against Hezbollah and give
more time for the Israeli military to use American bombs and weapons
to devastate Lebanon.
Rice visits Israel not, as media accounts suggest, to act as
a moderating influence on the Zionist regime. Rather, following
the logic of Bush administration foreign policy, Rice will pressure
the Israelis to intensify the violence in south Lebanon so as
to create the optimum conditions for joint Israeli and American
pressure against the Syrian regime of President Bashar Assad.
Inadvertently indicating the real rationale of US policy, Rice
declared on her arrival in Lebanon that the US government sought
to create a new Middle East. Washington has encouraged
the assault on Lebanon and supplied Israel with the necessary
arms and international backing because the Bush administration
sees this escalation as a way of breaking out of the strategic
stalemate in Iraq and weakening both Syria and Iran.
There is a strong element of recklessness and disorientation
in this perspective. The contradictions in US foreign policy are
evident: the Bush administration is seeking to consolidate a Shiite-dominated
government in Iraq at the same time that it attempts to liquidate
the Shiite-based Hezbollah in Lebanon and prepares for war with
the Shiite fundamentalist rulers of Iran.
Iraqs US-backed prime minister, Nouri Maliki, has issued
repeated denunciations of the Israeli attack on Hezbollah, and
important sections of the Shiite clergy have called on him to
postpone this weeks planned trip to Washington to protest
the rain of US bombs and missilesdelivered by Israels
US-built warplaneson the Shiite population of south Lebanon.
These contradictions are kept largely out of public view by
the servile American media, but they are well known in official
circles in Washington, and some criticism is being voiced within
the foreign policy establishment. Robert Malley, a former Clinton
administration Mideast expert, noted that Rices trip makes
no sense as diplomacy, since, according to the Bush administration,
there are six parties to the current conflictIsrael, the
Palestinian Authority, Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and Iranand
the US government refuses to talk to four of them.
Even more scathing was the assessment by former national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, who ridiculed Rices rhetoric
about the birth of a new Middle East. In an interview with the
German press, he warned, That was not a very happy formulation.
Labor pains sometimes end in the death of the infant. One must
try to know what these labor pains are actually producing. Otherwise
one is merely speculating, and playing a form of Russian Roulette
with history. This could all end for the United States in a disaster
in the Middle East.
Rices first stop in the region was an unscheduled visit
to Beirut on her way to Jerusalem. Her aim was to prop up the
government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, installed last year
after the US-backed campaign to force Syrian troops to withdraw
from Lebanon. Rice is seeking to organize whatever coalition of
Lebanese political forces can be cobbled together to support the
destruction of Hezbollah.
Two weeks into the joint US-Israeli war against the people
of Lebanon, the direct military assault is clearly facing a crisis,
with Israeli troops encountering unexpectedly tough resistance
on the ground, and saturation bombing of south Lebanon so far
failing to stop Hezbollah forces from launching rockets against
towns in northern Israel.
A large force of Israeli soldiers from the Golani division
fought their way into the Hezbollah stronghold of Bint Jbail on
Monday. Hezbollah fighters remained in control of the town, but
the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), equipped with tanks and armored
bulldozers, took control of a key hilltop. The intensity of the
fighting is demonstrated in the casualty totals: four Israeli
soldiers killed and 20 wounded, with only two Hezbollah fighters
taken prisoner. At least one Israeli tank was in flames.
Air power alone is proving insufficient to rout the guerrillas,
who are proving tough opponents on the ground as well, said
one report by the Associated Press. The dispatch continued: [S]mall-scale
pinpoint operations to root out guerrilla positions along the
border are proving far more daunting than expected, according
to soldiers returning from battle. The troops complain of difficult
terrain and being surprised by Hezbollah guerrillas who pop out
from behind bushes firing automatic weapons or rocket-propelled
grenades.
A second Associated Press writer described the scene as follows:
The heavy guns thundered before dawn Monday, sending deadly
shells crashing down into the Lebanese border town and paving
the way for the advancing Israeli tanks and troops. By daybreak,
bloody and bruised soldiers, shock etched deep in their faces,
were streaming back over the border into Israel.... Two Israeli
soldiers were killed and at least 20 were wounded Monday, the
army said, as guerrillas in the town, a Hezbollah stronghold,
issued a withering barrage of bullets, anti-tank missiles and
mortar shells.
The determination of the resistance has clearly stunned both
Israeli commanders and the rank-and-file soldiers of the IDF.
The Associated Press account described the use of an IDF tank
as an improvised ambulance: Having brought back his wounded
comrades, a tank driver sat on the turret clutching his head between
his gloved hands and crying while two crew members tried to console
him.
At a hospital in northern Israel where wounded soldiers were
being taken, 21-year-old Yishai Green, lying in his bed, gave
this description of the battle for Bint Jbail: Its
a real mess and I am not allowed to talk about it.
The Israeli military command seemed to be struggling to grasp
the scale of the resistance. Maj. Gen. Gadi Eizenkot, IDF chief
of operations, initially said 100-200 Hezbollah fighters were
dug in at Bint Jbail. Later the overall commander of the IDF,
Dan Halutz, estimated the Hezbollah force at over 500.
Despite the biggest Israeli ground offensive since the war
began July 12, with Israeli troops making penetrations into Lebanese
territory of up to five miles, along a 40-mile stretch of border,
Hezbollah units were able to launch nearly 100 rockets, keeping
up the pace of firing that they have maintained for the past two
weeks.
Whatever the outcome of the current border battlesand
no one can doubt that, with overwhelming firepower and control
of the air, the IDF will eventually prevail in any such tactical
conflictthere are clear indications that from a strategic
standpoint the long-planned US-Israeli military operation is in
difficulty.
The expectation that heavy bombing alone would suffice to cripple
Hezbollah has clearly not been fulfilled. Substantial resistance
remains, no prominent Hezbollah leaders have been killed, and
the missile firings continue unabated.
The principal impact on Lebanon has been to destroy, not Hezbollah,
but the bulk of the countrys civilian infrastructure, painstakingly
rebuilt over the last 15 years after the widespread devastation
of the civil war. According to media accounts Monday evening,
some 90 percent of Lebanese paved roads and 95 percent of bridgesa
vital feature in the mountainous terrainhave been rendered
unusable by Israeli bombs.
One of the most flagrant attacks on infrastructure came Sunday
night, with the destruction of two television towers in the Lebanese
highlands, populated by the Maronite Christians who were courted
by the Israelis in their previous invasions of Lebanon. While
one tower was used to broadcast the Hezbollah network, the other
was operated by the Maronite-based Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation.
The only reason for its destruction was to take down any source
of on-the-spot reporting about the devastating impact of Israels
bombing campaign.
This reflects the belief on the part of the Olmert government
in Israel that such reporting will inflame international opposition
to the bombing. But a more direct concern is the impact of such
reports on Israeli public opinion.
Despite the claims of virtual unanimity within the populace
in support of the bombing campaign, the Israeli political establishment
knows the history of the 1982 invasion of Lebanon and the subsequent
growth of popular outrage over the mass murders committed by the
IDF and its Lebanese allies in the fascistic Phalange. Then-defense
minister Ariel Sharon, the organizer of the invasion, was subsequently
found partially responsible for these crimes by an Israeli commission
and forced to step down.
The current assault on Lebanon is already a war crime of similar
dimensions. Although the American media uncritically parrots Israeli
and Bush administration propaganda, portraying Hezbollah as a
terrorist organization engaged in wanton attacks on civilians,
while Israel targets the terrorist combatants and seeks to avoid
civilian casualties, the real state of affairs can be seen in
the following figures:
As of Monday there were 39 Israeli deaths, of which 22 were
soldiers killed in combat and 17 were civilians. On the Lebanese
side, there are at least 384 deaths, of which only 31 are Lebanese
army soldiers (most blown up in their barracks by Israeli bombs)
or Hezbollah guerrillas, while 353 are civilians.
In other words, 42 percent of Israeli casualties are civilians,
while 91 percent of Lebanese casualties are civilians. Israel,
moreover, is using US-built laser-guided bombs and other weapons
that are far more precise in their targeting than the relatively
primitive Katyusha rockets of Hezbollah. If these weapons are
killing hundreds of Lebanese civilians, it is part of a deliberate
policy.
As the scale of the death and destruction inflicted on the
Lebanese people becomes apparentand as the casualty toll
among Israeli troops begins to mount as wella sharp swing
in Israeli public opinion is inevitable.
The military mobilization will also have a huge direct effect
on the Israeli population. Some 18,000 military reservists have
been called upthe equivalent of mobilizing 750,000 new soldiers
in the United States. Nearly ten percent of the entire Israeli
population, men, women and children, is enlisted in either the
IDF or in its reserve forces. As the Los Angeles Times
noted, such a mobilization has in the past sparked internal resistance
to military actions like the punitive operations in Palestinian
towns on the West Bank: Perhaps due to the perspective that
age and experience bring, reservists are likelier than their counterparts
in the regular army to question whether Israeli military actions
are justified by the threat the country faces.
The Israeli government is in evident crisis over Olmerts
decision, taken without consulting the cabinet, to launch a full-scale
military response to an incidentthe kidnapping of two soldersthat
in the past would have been handled through back-channel negotiations.
There is no consensus within the cabinet as to what the next step
is to be if, as is universally expected, Hezbollah continues to
reject demands to return the two soldiers, withdraw from the border
region and dismantle its stockpile of rockets.
Already the Olmert government has shifted its position on the
introduction of an international force into the border region,
a sign of weakness and internal disarray. Government spokesmen
who initially rejected any international force now suggest that
a NATO force would be acceptable.
However, it is entirely possible that the Israeli response
to its difficulties, under pressure from Rice and the Bush administration,
will be to escalate its violence in Lebanon and adopt an even
more provocative posture toward Syria and Iran.
See Also:
Rice's Middle East tour: "Diplomacy"
in furtherance of war
[24 July 2006]
The New York Times and the war
in Lebanon: A cynical defense of US-Israeli war crimes
[22 July 2006]
The real aims of the US-backed Israeli
war against Lebanon
[21 July 2006]
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