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Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Foreign Policy and National Defense
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Snuffysmith
http://www.counterpunch.org/bowyer07282006.html

Good Morning Beirut"
When Condi Came to Ramallah
By RENEE BOWYER

West Bank, Palestine.

Ramallah turned its back on the Secretary of State when she arrived for her exclusive meeting with the President of Palestine. A meeting that totally excluded the government of this struggling people.

When we first dared the early morning heat we were surprised at the locked shop-doors and the empty streets and were a little angry. Why should these people lose a days work and income (small enough as it is) because this woman with no womanly feelings has decided to streak through the city in a bullet-proof windowless car?

But then on thinking a little deeper it became clear that the closed shops and the empty streets were the only means by which the people of Ramallah could say they did not want to acknowledge the presence of the Secretary, or allow her in any way to participate in the life of the city. It was their way of turning their backs on American policy in this region, too closely allied with Israel's. The people of Ramallah have precious little except the vibrancy of their always lively streets, and in protest that vibrancy was put behind locked doors to preserve it from the woman of America who had come smiling to gloat over their poverty.

I am sure that Condoleezza Rice, (called Kundara by many people here, which is Arabic for shoes) has no need for the pulsing life of Ramallah but I was glad all the same that she would only see it at its most depressing.

When the new front of Israel's war opened two weeks ago there was a strange mixture of relief and sadness in the West Bank, outweighed most noticeably by total sympathy for the people of Lebanon who were about to be bombed out of their homes and villages and cities. The relief was two fold for the people of Ramallah. Relief that the people of Gaza were not totally alone in their desperate need to fight a military regime so much stronger than them, and relief that the Israelis, occupying their land and interfering so much in their daily lives, were not totally untouchable.

There were just a few hours of thanksgiving.

Of course no one doubted there would be reprisals, but the action of Hezbollah in capturing two Israeli soldiers was an act directed specifically against a military target and it was against the military regime which has caused so much bloodshed in Gaza and so much of it here in the West Bank as well. For a few brief hours the people of Palestine were grateful.

The second reason for relief was far more specific and short-lived: the Atara checkpoint leading in and out of Ramallah has caused hours of delay everyday for all Palestinians who need to enter Ramallah, whether to work or study or stock-up on supplies that are sorely lacking in the villages. This checkpoint has been constantly manned for the past 6 months and was unmanned for ten hours on the day that Hezbollah attacked the military outpost on the northern border of Israel.

By the time I passed through it at 9 pm on my way to a village for the weekend, it was manned again; and by very angry soldiers. But it was impossible to ignore the relief in the village that evening when Atara was talked about; how services had passed straight through to Ramallah and how the younger men from the village did not have to get out and be searched and interrogated at will and maybe sent back home.

For ten brief hours the people in the Ramallah region of the West Bank could travel unstopped between their homes and the city in which they worked or studied.

But it is heartbreaking to realize at what cost these few hours of relief for the people of the West Bank came.

A cartoon has started circulating again in Palestine.

A poignant and tragic reminder of how much these two countries have suffered in like at the hands of a U.S backed Israel.

It shows Hamoodi, that strange little symbol of Palestinian resistance offering a flower to a maiden who is gazing down at Hamoodi through a gaping hole in a wall, caused by an exploding shell.

''Good Morning Beirut'' little Hamoodi says to the maiden.

''Welcome to our struggle.we weep with you we, we suffer with you, we know how brutal your enemy can be.

We too are suffering.

Our sisters and brothers in Gaza are being buried every day.

Buried beneath the rubble of collapsing buildings, and beneath the sands blown by the desert winds in anger against the failure of the World leaders to act.

We have been waiting here for a long time.

We greet you and offer you a flower. The ruins left by the inhuman military machine has devastated your people as it has ours. And now all we in Palestine have to offer you is a flower.

We have nothing else.

I have not faced the world for a long time, because the world does not want to know what I have to say. Nor could it bare to see the scars on my face. But you, sweet maiden, can see my face because you are suffering like us''

The soldiers of Israel are suffering too.

I can scarcely bear to see them loading their weapons into their tanks and jeeps and airplanes, and having to live out in reality, the action-movie unreality of war.

These poor men who we see, rushing to evacuate wounded friends and press -- reporting their successes against the ''terrorists'' they have been conditioned to hate, are inadvertently being forced to serve a cause that is bent on destroying the very basis of justice and equality and humanity.

''We blow up their tunnels if we can, but we know that we will have to enter as well, at some time, and in the dark tunnel come face to face with a terrorist,'' some soldier reported to BBC.

It is frightening to witness how the education of these young Israeli soldiers has dehumanized their neighbors into a term: one single word they use to describe a whole people. A word that justifies killing and maiming and terrorizing.

Used to justify in the eyes of the common soldier as surely as in the eyes of the International world of Diplomats who have to sit and listen to Condoleezza Rice as she uses this word to justify calling for a cease-fire that is not immediate.

How can a cease-fire not be immediate?

Next week, next month there will need to be a cease-fire. After a week, a month of useless bloodshed and horror. It is like some horrible nightmare that two weeks of the onslaught in Lebanon has passed and one month of the killing in Gaza has passed and the leaders of the US and Britain have not enough humanity to say enough is enough.

And the leaders of the EU have not enough clout to be heard, and the leaders of the UN have been targeted because they were too vocal.

(The UN personnel based in south Lebanon were in the process of investigating claims by Lebanese doctors that the Israelis were using phosphorous in their air-attacks when their building was hit and four UN personnel were killed. Will the UN continue this investigation?)

Let there be a cease-fire and allow a channel of assistance to reach the unreached civilians in this tragedy and then see what to do next!
Sometimes the priority of being a human being ought to override the desperation of being the toughest and most powerful regime in the area.

Of course the Lebanese and the Palestinians are not the only ones suffering at the moment. The citizens of Israel are suffering too. But still the World Leaders allow Kundara to speak only about a cease-fire that is not immediate.

The word Terrorist has been strategically placed alongside the names of Hezbollah and Syria and Iran and, up until last week, Hamas as well. But a knew strategy has emerged this week which sees Hamas no longer being named with the other members of the ''Axis of Evil''. This is cause for concern.

It is as if, by mentioning Hamas, people might get a vague pang of conscience or sadness about that devastated strip of land they had forgotten since the Lebanese crisis. Maybe the World Leaders don't like to deal with the conscience of the International Community on too many issues at once. And Gaza is an easy place to forget.

This frightens us in the West Bank. And people are growing angry too, as Gazans continue to die.

There is precious little safety routes for the people of Lebanon to take, bombed out of their homes and off the roads if they attempt to escape, but there is even less possibility for the people of Gaza.

As foreign nationals are rescued from the bloodshed on the northern front of this war, there are all but no foreign nationals in Gaza to be focused on. No rescue ships will drop their anchors off the blood-stained beaches of Gaza. There is no road to Damascus for these terrorized people.

Yesterday 23 more people were killed in Gaza and shocking pictures are being aired on Aljazeera of the continual violence. Today a medical Relief team has been denied entry into that war-zone whose only wish is to provide assistance to the population who are being killed.

Our call from the West Bank is that Gaza be not forgotten. It is hard to focus on too many horrors at once but we are obliged to do this.
The morality of the western world is at stake; while the leaders and heads of state and secretaries continue to neglect the human aspect of this conflict, the rest of the community has to work harder to focus on it.

Unfortunately at this time I have little of good-cheer to report on. The people of the West Bank are in daily mourning for the deaths in Gaza and Lebanon and are waiting to see where Israel will turn next. Maybe Syria and maybe here.

As I finish writing the drone of a reconnaissance plane is keeping me company. It has been circling and circling for hours overhead. It has no lights and its grey bulk in the midnight sky is a little unnerving.

Some friends have left for the mountains an hour since saying that the assassinations of people from Nablus and Ramallah will begin again. A local policeman just called to say that the men in the station up the road might take to the park for the night

The streets are often quiet now and there is far less bravado around And this too is saddening.

The war machine seems to be grinding away at the very fabric of human life. Here, in Lebanon, in Gaza and in all countries where indifference has started to take hold

Hamoodi wants to show you his face, but for the moment as the flower of sympathy is offered to the people of Lebanon by those of Palestine, the face of Hamoodi remains hidden.
jeffmoskin
http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print....s06/0728-24.htm




The Middle East and the Barbarism Of War From the Air
by Tom Engelhardt


Barbarism seems an obvious enough category. Ordinarily in our world, the barbarians are them. They act in ways that seem unimaginably primitive and brutal to us. For instance, they kidnap or capture someone, American or Iraqi, and cut off his head. Now, isn't that the definition of barbaric? Who does that anymore? The eighth century, or maybe the word "medieval" -– anyway, some brutal past time -- comes to mind immediately, and to the mass mind of our media even faster.

Similarly, to jump a little closer to modernity, they strap grenades, plastic explosives, bombs of various ingenious sorts fashioned in home labs, with nails or other bits of sharp metal added in to create instant shrapnel meant to rend human flesh, to maim and kill. Then they approach a target -- an Israeli bus filled with civilians and perhaps some soldiers, a pizza parlor in Jerusalem, a gathering of Shiite or Sunni worshippers at or near a mosque in Iraq or Pakistan, or of unemployed potential police or army recruits in Ramadi or Baghdad, or of shoppers in an Iraqi market somewhere in that country, or perhaps a foreigner on the streets of Kabul and they blow themselves up. Or they arm backpacks or bags and step onto trains in London, Madrid, Mumbai, and set them off.

Or, to up the technology and modernity a bit, they wire a car to explode, put a jihadist in the driver's seat, and drive it into -- well, this is now common enough that you can pick your target. Or perhaps they audaciously hijack four just-fuelled jets filled with passengers and run two of them into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon, and another into a field in Pennsylvania. This is, of course, the very definition of barbaric.

Now, let's jump a step further into our age of technological destruction, becoming less face-to-face, more impersonal, without, in the end, changing things that much. They send rockets from southern Lebanon (or even cruder ones from the Gaza Strip) against Israeli towns and cities. These rockets can only vaguely be aimed. Some can be brought into the general vicinity of an inhabited area; others, more advanced, into specific urban neighborhoods many tens of miles away -- and then they detonate, killing whoever is in the vicinity, which normally means civilians just living their lives, even, in one recent Hezbollah volley aimed at Nazareth, two Israeli Arab children. In this process, thousands of Israelis have been temporarily driven from their homes.

In the case of rockets by the hundreds lofted into Israel by an armed, organized militia, meant to terrorize and harm civilian populations, these are undoubtedly war crimes. Above all, they represent a kind of barbarism that -- with the possible exception of some of those advanced Hezbollah rockets -- feels primitive to us. Despite the explosives, cars, planes, all so basic to our modern way of life, such acts still seem redolent of ancient, less civilized times when people did especially cruel things to each other face to face.

The Religion of Air Power

That's them. But what about us? On our we/they planet, most groups don't consider themselves barbarians. Nonetheless, we have largely achieved non-barbaric status in an interesting way -- by removing the most essential aspect of the American (and, right now, Israeli) way of war from the category of the barbaric. I'm talking, of course, about air power, about raining destruction down on the earth from the skies, and about the belief -- so common, so long-lasting, so deep-seated -- that bombing others, including civilian populations, is a "strategic" thing to do; that air power can, in relatively swift measure, break the "will" not just of the enemy, but of that enemy's society; and that such a way of war is the royal path to victory.

This set of beliefs was common to air-power advocates even before modern air war had been tested, and repeated unsuccessful attempts to put these convictions into practice have never really shaken -- not for long anyway – what is essentially a war-making religion. The result has been the development of the most barbaric style of warfare imaginable, one that has seldom succeeded in breaking any societal will, though it has destroyed innumerable bodies, lives, stretches of countryside, villages, towns, and cities.

Even today, we find Israeli military strategists saying things that could have been put in the mouths of their air-power-loving predecessors endless decades ago. The New York Times's Steven Erlanger, for instance, recently quoted an unnamed "senior Israeli commander" this way: "He predicted that Israel would stick largely to air power for now… ‘A ground maneuver won't solve the problem of the long-range missiles,' he said. ‘The problem is the will to launch. We have to break the will of Hezbollah…'" Don't hold your breath is the first lesson history teaches on this particular assessment of the powers of air war; the second is that, a decade from now, some other "senior commander" in some other country will be saying the same thing, word for word.

When it comes to brutality, the fact is that ancient times have gotten a bad rap. Nothing in history was more brutal than the last century's style of war-making -- than those two world wars with their air armadas, backed by the most advanced industrial systems on the planet. Powerful countries then bent every elbow, every brain, to support the destruction of other human beings en masse, not to speak of the Holocaust (which was assembly-line warfare in another form), and the various colonial and Cold War campaigns that went on in the Third World from the 1940s on; which, in places like Korea and Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, substituted the devastation of air power locally for a war between the two superpowers which might have employed the mightiest air weaponry of all to scour the Earth.

It may be that the human capacity for brutality, for barbarism, hasn't changed much since the eighth century, but the industrial revolution -- and in particular the rise of the airplane -- opened up new landscapes to brutality; while the view from behind the gun-sight, then the bomb-sight, and finally the missile-sight slowly widened until all of humanity was taken in. From the lofty, godlike vantage point of the strategic as well as the literal heavens, the military and the civilian began to blur on the ground. Soldiers and citizens, conscripts and refugees alike, became nothing but tiny, indistinguishable hordes of ants, or nothing at all but the structures that housed them, or even just concepts, indistinguishable one from the other.

One Plane, One Bomb

As far as anyone knows, the first bomb was dropped by hand over the Italian colony of Libya. According to Sven Lindqvist's A History of Bombing, one Lieutenant Giulio Cavotti "leaned out of his delicate monoplane and dropped the bomb -- a Danish Haasen hand grenade -- on the North African oasis Tagiura, near Tripoli. Several moments later, he attacked the oasis Ain Zara. Four bombs in total, each weighing two kilos, were dropped during this first air attack."

That was 1911 and the damage was minimal. Only thirty-four years later, vast armadas of B-17s and B-29s were taking off, up to a thousand planes at a time, to bomb Germany and Japan. In the case of Tokyo -- then constructed almost totally out of highly flammable materials -- a single raid carrying incendiary bombs and napalm that began just after midnight on March 10, 1945 proved capable of incinerating or killing at least 90,000 people, possibly many more, from such a height that the dead could not be seen (though the stench of burning flesh carried up to the planes). The first American planes to arrive over the city, wrote historian Michael Sherry in his book, The Rise of American Air Power, "carved out an X of flames across one of the world's most densely packed residential districts; followers fed and broadened it for some three hours thereafter."

What descended from the skies, as James Carroll puts it in his new book, House of War, was "1,665 tons of pure fire… the most efficient and deliberate act of arson in history. The consequent firestorm obliterated fifteen square miles, which included both residential and industrial areas. Fires raged for four days." It was the bonfire of bonfires and not a single American plane was shot down.

On August 6, 1945, all the power of that vast air armada was again reduced to a single plane, the Enola Gay, and a single bomb, "Little Boy," dropped near a single bridge in a single city, Hiroshima, which in a single moment of a sort never before experienced on the planet did what it had taken 300 B-29s and many hours to do to Tokyo. In those two cities -- as well as Dresden and other German and Japanese cities subjected to "strategic bombing" -- the dead (perhaps 900,000 in Japan and 600,000 in Germany) were invariably preponderantly civilian, and far too distant to be seen by plane crews often dropping their bomb loads in the dark of night, giving the scene below the look of Hell on Earth.

So 1911: one plane, one bomb. 1945: one plane, one bomb -- but this time at least 120,000 dead, possibly many more. Two bookmarks less than four decades apart on the first chapter of a history of the invention of a new kind of warfare, a new kind of barbarism that, by now, is the way we expect war to be made, a way that no longer strikes us as barbaric at all. This wasn't always the case.

The Shock of the New

When military air power was in its infancy and silent films still ruled the movie theaters, the first air-war films presented pilots as knights of the heavens, engaging in courageous, chivalric, one-on-one combat in the skies. As that image reflects, in the wake of the meat-grinder of trench warfare in World War I, the medieval actually seemed far less brutal, a time much preferable to those years in which young men had died by their hundreds of thousands, anonymously, from machine guns, artillery, poison gas, all the lovely inventions of industrial civilization, ground into the mud of no-man's-land, often without managing to move their lines or the enemy's more than a few hundred yards.

The image of chivalric knights in planes jousting in the skies slowly disappeared from American screens, as after the 1950s would, by and large, air power itself even as the war film went on (and on and on). It can last be found perhaps in the film Top Gun; in old Peanuts comics in which Snoopy remains forever the Red Baron; and, of course, post-Star Wars, in the fantasy realm of outer space where Jedi Knights took up lethal sky-jousting in the late 1970s, X-wing fighter to X-wing fighter, and in zillions of video games to follow. In the meantime, the one-way air slaughter in South Vietnam would be largely left out of the burst of Vietnam films that would start hitting the screen from the late 1970s on.

In the real, off-screen world, that courtly medieval image of air power disappeared fast indeed. As World War II came ever closer and it became more apparent what air power was best at -- what would now be called "collateral damage" -- the shock set in. When civilians were first purposely targeted and bombed in the industrializing world rather than in colonies like Iraq, the act was initially widely condemned as inhuman by a startled world.

People were horrified when, during the Spanish Civil War in 1937, Hitler's Condor Legion and planes from fascist Italy repeatedly bombed the Basque town of Guernica, engulfing most of its buildings in a firestorm that killed hundreds, if not thousands, of civilians. If you want to get a sense of the power of that act to shock then, view Picasso's famous painting of protest done almost immediately in response. (When Secretary of State Colin Powell went to the UN in February 2003 to deliver his now infamous speech explaining what we supposedly knew about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction, UN officials -- possibly at the request of the Bush administration -- covered over a tapestry of the painting that happened to be positioned where Powell would have to pass on his way to deliver his speech and where press comments would be offered afterwards.)

Later in 1937, as the Japanese began their campaign to conquer China, they bombed a number of Chinese cities. A single shot of a Chinese baby wailing amid the ruins, published in Life magazine, was enough to horrify Americans (even though the actual photo may have been doctored). Air power was then seen as nothing but a new kind of barbarism. According to historian Sherry, "In 1937 and 1938, [President Roosevelt] had the State Department condemn Japanese bombing of civilians in China as ‘barbarous' violations of the ‘elementary principles' of modern morality." Meanwhile, observers checking out what effect the bombing of civilians had on the "will" of society offered nothing but bad news to the strategists of air power. As Sherry writes:

"In the Saturday Evening Post, an American army officer observed that bombing had proven ‘disappointing to the theorists of peacetime.' When Franco's rebels bombed Madrid, ‘Did the Madrilenos sue for peace? No, they shook futile fists at the murderers in the sky and muttered, ‘Swine.' His conclusion: ‘Terrorism from the air has been tried and found wanting. Bombing, far from softening the civil will, hardens it.'"

Already similar things are being written about the Lebanese, though, in our media, terms like "barbarism" and "terrorism" are unlikely to be applied to Israel's war from the heavens. New York Times correspondent Sabrina Tavernise, for instance, reported the following from the site of a destroyed apartment building in the bomb-shocked southern Lebanese port of Tyre:

"Whatever the target, the result was an emotional outpouring in support of Hezbollah. Standing near a cluster of dangling electrical wires, a group of men began to chant. ‘By our blood and our soul, we'll fight for you, Nasrallah!' they said, referring to Hezbollah's leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah. In a foggy double image, another small group chanted the same thing, as if answering, on the other side of the smoke."

World War II began with the German bombing of Warsaw. On September 9, 1939, according to Carroll, President Roosevelt "beseeched the war leaders on both sides to ‘under no circumstances undertake the bombardment from the air of civilian populations of unfortified cities.'" Then came, the terror-bombing of Rotterdam and Hitler's Blitz against England in which tens of thousands of British civilians died and many more were displaced, each event proving but another systemic shock to what was left of global opinion, another unimaginable act by the planet's reigning barbarians.

British civilians, of course, still retain a deserved reputation for the stiff-upper-lip-style bravery with which they comported themselves in the face of a merciless German air offensive against their cities that knew no bounds. No wills were broken there, nor would they be in Russia (where, in 1942, perhaps 40,000 were killed in German air attacks on the city of Stalingrad alone) -- any more than they would be in Germany by the far more massive Allied air offensive against the German population.

All of this, of course, came before it was clear that the United States could design and churn out planes faster, in greater numbers, and with more fire power than any country on the planet and then wield air power far more massively and brutally than anyone had previously been capable of doing. That was before the US and Britain decided to fight fire with fire by blitz- and terror-bombing Germany and Japan. (The US moved more slowly and awkwardly than the British from "precision bombing" against targets like factories producing military equipment or oil-storage depots -- campaigns that largely failed -- to "area bombing" that was simply meant to annihilate vast numbers of civilians and destroy cities. But move American strategists did.) That was before Dresden and Hiroshima; before Pyongyang, along with much of the Korean peninsula, was reduced to rubble from the air in the Korean War; before the Plaine des Jarres was bombed back to the Stone Age in Laos in the late 1960s and early 1970s, before the B-52s were sent against the cities of Hanoi and Haiphong in the terror-bombing of Christmas 1972 to wring concessions out of the North Vietnamese at the peace table in Paris; before the first President Bush ended the first Gulf War with a "turkey shoot" on the "highway of death" as Saddam Hussein's largely conscript military fled Kuwait City in whatever vehicles were at hand; before we bombed the rubble in Afghanistan into further rubble in 2001, and before we shock-and awed Baghdad in 2003.

Taking the Sting Out of Air War

Somewhere in this process, a new language to describe air war began to develop -- after, in the Vietnam era, the first "smart bombs" and "precision-guided weapons" came on line. From then on, air attacks would, for instance, be termed "surgical" and civilian casualties dismissed as but "collateral damage." All of this helped removed the sting of barbarity from the form of war we had chosen to make our own (unless, of course, you happened to be one of those "collateral" people under those "surgical" strikes). Just consider, for a moment, that, with the advent of the first Gulf War, air power -- as it was being applied -- essentially became entertainment, a Disney-style, son-et-lumière spectacular over Baghdad to be watched in real time on television by a population of non-combatants from thousands of miles away.

With that same war, the Pentagon started calling press briefings and screening nose-cone photography, essentially little Iraqi snuff films, in which you actually looked through the precision-guided bomb or missile-sights yourself, found your target, and followed that missile or smart bomb right down to its explosive impact. If you were lucky, the Pentagon even let you check out the after-mission damage assessments. These films were so nifty, so like the high-tech video-game experience just then coming into being, that they were used by the Pentagon as reputation enhancers. From then on, Pentagon officials not only described their air weaponry as "surgical" in its abilities, but showed you the "surgery" (just as the Israelis have been doing with their footage of "precision" attacks in Lebanon). What you didn't see, of course, was the "collateral damage" which, when the Iraqis put it on-screen, was promptly dismissed as so much propaganda.

And yet this new form of air war had managed to move far indeed from the image of the knightly joust, from the sense, in fact, of battle at all. In those years, except over the far north of Korea during the Korean War or over North Vietnam and some parts of South Vietnam, American pilots, unless in helicopters, went into action (as Israeli ones do today) knowing that the dangers to them were usually minimal -- or, as over that Iraqi highway of death nonexistent. War from the air was in the process of becoming a one-way street of destruction.

At an extreme, with the arrival of fleets of Hellfire-missile-armed unmanned Predator drones over Iraq, the "warrior" would suddenly find himself seven thousand miles away at Nellis Air Force Base near Las Vegas, delivering "precision" strikes that almost always, somehow, managed to kill collaterally. In such cases, war and screen war have indeed merged.

This kind of war has the allure, from a military point of view, of ever less casualties on one end in return for ever more on the other. It must also instill a feeling of bloodless, godlike control over those enemy "ants" (until, of course, things begin to go wrong, as they always do) as well as a sense that the world can truly be "remade" from the air, by remote control, and at a great remove. This has to be a powerful, even a transporting fantasy for strategists, however regularly it may be denied by history.

Despite the cleansed language of air war, and no matter how good the targeting intelligence or smart the bomb (neither of which can be counted on), civilians who make the mistake of simply being alive and going about their daily business die in profusion whenever war descends from the heavens. This is the deepest reality of war today.

Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon… [Fill in the Blank]

In fact, the process of removing air power from the ranks of the barbaric, of making it, if not glorious (as in those visually startling moments when Baghdad was shock-and-awed), then completely humdrum, and so of no note whatsoever, has been remarkably successful in our world. In fact, we have loosed our air power regularly on the countryside of Afghanistan, and especially on rebellious urban areas of Iraq in "targeted" and "precise" attacks on insurgent concentrations and "al-Qaeda safe houses" (as well as in more wholesale assaults on the old city of Najaf and on the city of Fallujah) largely without comment or criticism. In the process, significant parts of two cities in a country we occupied and supposedly "liberated," were reduced to rubble and everywhere, civilians, not to speak of whole wedding parties, were blown away without our media paying much attention at all.

Our various air campaigns -- our signature way of war -- have hardly been noticed, and almost never focused on, by the large numbers of journalists embedded with US forces or in one way or another on-the-ground in Iraq and Afghanistan. Remember, we're talking here about the dropping of up to 2,000 pound bombs regularly, over years, often in urban areas. Just imagine, if you live in a reasonably densely populated area, what it might mean collaterally to have such bombs or missiles hit your block or neighborhood, no matter how "accurate" their aim.

Until Seymour Hersh wrote a piece from Washington last November for the New Yorker, entitled "Up in the Air," our reporters had, with rare exceptions, simply refused to look up; and despite a flurry of attention then, to this day, our continuing air campaigns are largely ignored. Yet here is an Air Force summary of just a single, nondescript day of operations in Iraq, one of hundreds and hundreds of such days, some far more intense, since we invaded that country: "In total, coalition aircraft flew 46 close-air support missions for Operation Iraqi Freedom. These missions included support to coalition troops, infrastructure protection, reconstruction activities and operations to deter and disrupt terrorist activities."

And here's the summary of the same day in Afghanistan: "In total, coalition aircraft flew 32 close-air support missions in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. These missions included support to coalition and Afghan troops, reconstruction activities and route patrols." Note that, in Afghanistan, as the situation has worsened militarily and politically, the old Vietnam-era B-52s, the carpet-bombers of that war, have been called back into action, again without significant attention here.

Now, with the fervent backing of the Bush administration, another country is being "remade" from the air -- in this case, Lebanon. With the highest-tech American precision-guided and bunker-busting bombs, the Israelis have been launching air strike after strike, thousands of them, in that country. They have hit an international airport, the nation's largest milk factories; a major food factory; aid convoys; Red Cross ambulances; a UN observer post; a power plant; apartment complexes; villages because they house or support the enemy; branches of banks because they might facilitate Hezbollah finances; the telecommunications system because of the messages that might pass along it; highways because they might transport weapons to the enemy; bridges because they might be crossed by those transporting weapons; a lighthouse in Beirut harbor for reasons unknown; trucks because they might be transporting those weapons (though they might also be transporting vegetables); families who just happen to be jammed into cars or minivans fleeing at the urging of the attackers who have turned at least 20% of all Lebanese (and probably many more) into refugees, while creating a "landscape of death" (in the phrase of the superb Washington Post reporter Anthony Shadid) in the southern part of the country. In this process, civilian casualties have mounted steadily -- assumedly far beyond the figure of just over 400 now regularly being cited in our press, because Lebanon has no way to search the rubble of its bombed buildings for the dead; nor, right now, the time and ability to do an accurate count of those who died more or less in the open.

And yet, of course, the "will" of the enemy is not broken and, among Israel's leaders and its citizens, frustration mounts; so threats of more and worse are made and worse weapons are brought into play; and wider targeting fields are opened up; and what might faintly pass for "precision bombing" is increasingly abandoned for the equivalent of "area bombing." And the full support system -- which is simply society -- for the movement in question becomes the "will" that must be broken; and in this process, what we call "collateral damage" is moved, by the essential barbaric logic of air power, front and center, directly into the crosshairs.

Already Israeli Prime Minister Olmert is "vowing" to use the "most severe measures" to end Hezbollah rocket attacks -- and in the context of the present air assault that is a frightening threat. All this because, as in Iraq, as elsewhere, air power has once again run up against another kind of power, a fierce people power (quite capable of its own barbarities) that, over the decades, the bomb and missile has proved frustratingly incapable of dismantling or wiping out. Already, as the Guardian's Ian Black points out, "The original objective of ‘breaking Hizbullah' has been quietly watered down to ‘weakening Hizbullah.'"

In such a war, with such an enemy, the normal statistics of military victory may add up only to defeat, a further frustration that only tends to ratchet the destruction higher over time. Adam Shatz put this well recently in The Nation when he wrote:

"[Hezbollah leader] Nasrallah is under no illusions that his small guerrilla movement can defeat the Israeli Army. But he can lose militarily and still score a political victory, particularly if the Israelis continue visiting suffering on Lebanon, whose government, as they well know, is powerless to control Hezbollah. Nasrallah, whom the Israelis attempted to assassinate on July 19 with a twenty-three-ton bomb attack on an alleged Hezbollah bunker, is doubtless aware that he may share the fate of his predecessor, Abbas Musawi, who was killed in an Israeli helicopter gunship attack in 1992. But Hezbollah outlived Musawi and grew exponentially, thanks in part to its followers' passion for martyrdom. To some, Nasrallah's raid may look like a death wish. But it is almost impossible to defeat someone who has no fear of death."

As the Israelis are rediscovering -- though, by now, you'd think that military planners with half a brain wouldn't have to destroy a country to do so -- that it is impossible to "surgically" separate a movement and its supporters from the air. When you try, you invariably do the opposite; fusing them ever more closely, while creating an even larger, ever angrier base for the movement whose essence is, in any case, never literal geography, never simply a set of villages or bunkers or military supplies to be taken and destroyed.

Degrading Behavior

Someday someone will take up the grim study of the cleansing language of air power. Every air war, it seems, now has its new words meant to take the sting out of its essential barbarism. In the case of the Israeli air assault on Lebanon, the term -- old in the military world but never before so widely adopted in such a commonplace way -- is "degrading," not as at Abu Ghraib, but as in "to impair in physical structure or function." It was once a technical military term; in this round of air war, however, it is being used to cover a range of sins.

Try Googling the term. It turns out to be almost literally everywhere. It can be found in just about any article on Israel's air war, used in this fashion: "CBS News senior White House correspondent Bill Plante reports that around the world the US's opposition to a cease-fire is viewed as the US giving Israel a ‘green-light' to degrade the military capability of Hezbollah." Or in a lead in a New York Times piece this way: "The outlines of an American-Israeli consensus began to emerge Tuesday in which Israel would continue to bombard Lebanon for about another week to degrade Hezbollah's capabilities, officials of the two countries said." Or more generally, as in a Washington Post piece, in this fashion: "In the administration's view, the new conflict is not just a crisis to be managed. It is also an opportunity to seriously degrade a big threat in the region, just as Bush believes he is doing in Iraq." Or as Henry A. Crumpton, the State Department's coordinator for counterterrorism, wielded it: "It's not just about the missiles and launchers… [I]t's about the roads and transport, the ability to command and control. All that is being degraded. But it's going to take a long time. I don't believe this is going to be over in the next couple of days." Or as an Israeli general at a Washington think tank told the Washington Times: "Israel has taken it upon itself to degrade Hezbollah's military capabilities." Sometimes degradation of this sort can be quantified: "A senior Israeli official said Friday that the attacks to date had degraded Hezbollah's military strength by roughly half, but that the campaign could go on for two more weeks or longer." More often, it's a useful term exactly because it's wonderfully vague, quite resistant to quantification, the very opposite of "precision" in its ambiguity, and capable of taking some of the sting out of what is actually happening. It turns the barbarity of air war into something close to a natural process -- of, perhaps, erosion, of wearing down over time.

As air wars go, the one in Lebanon may seem strikingly directed against the civilian infrastructure and against society; in that, however, it is historically anything but unique. It might even be said that war from the air, since first launched in Europe's colonies early in the last century, has always been essentially directed against civilians. As in World War II, air power -- no matter its stated targets -- almost invariably turns out to be worst for civilians and, in the end, to be aimed at society itself. In that way, its damage is anything but "collateral," never truly "surgical," and never in its overall effect "precise." Even when it doesn't start that way, the frustration of not working as planned, of not breaking the "will," invariably leads, as with the Israelis, to ever wider, ever fiercer versions of the same, which, if allowed to proceed to their logical conclusion, will bring down not society's will, but society itself.

For the Lebanese prime minister what Israel has been doing to his country may be "barbaric destruction"; but, in our world, air power has long been robbed of its barbarism (suicide air missions excepted). For us, air war involves dumb hits by smart bombs, collateral damage, and surgery that may do in the patient, but it's not barbaric. For that you need to personally cut off a head.

[Note on Other Websites: For keeping me up-to-date on the present crisis in the Middle East, I would especially like to thank (and recommend to readers): Juan Cole's Informed Comment website (his recent essays there have been inspired); Antiwar.com, which provides an incredible range of Middle Eastern coverage that no one could collect on his or her own; the War in Context whose editor has an especially good eye for the telling article (and a sharp tongue for the absurdities of our moment); and Truthout and Common Dreams on which I rely regularly for so many things.]

Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com ("a regular antidote to the mainstream media"), is the co-founder of the American Empire Project and the author of The End of Victory Culture, a history of American triumphalism in the Cold War. His novel, The Last Days of Publishing, has just come out in paperback.
Istoodforu
[quote=jeffmoskin,Jul 29 2006, 09:56 AM]
http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print....s06/0728-24.htm
The Middle East and the Barbarism Of War From the Air
by Tom Engelhardt

"As the Israelis are rediscovering -- though, by now, you'd think that military planners with half a brain wouldn't have to destroy a country to do so -- that it is impossible to "surgically" separate a movement and its supporters from the air. When you try, you invariably do the opposite; fusing them ever more closely, while creating an even larger, ever angrier base for the movement whose essence is, in any case, never literal geography, never simply a set of villages or bunkers or military supplies to be taken and destroyed.

Isreal has the right to defend itself against attack, but this dilemma is inescapable when air power is used to "separate a movement and its supporters from the air."

When I flew transport missions from South Vietnam to Bankok over the Ho Chi Minh trail, it looked like the surface of the moon----but we could see convoys of trucks winding their way thru the craters. The trail would be essentially repaired w/in hours after each bombing raid.
TheRestofUs
That article written by Engelhardt posted by Jeffmoskin was one of the best I recently read. I saw Zogby on Washigton Journal answering questions and read his article too. Very intelligent, informed and I think a wise man.

There are sane and intelligent minds chiming in on this crisis. There are wise ones too. But it seems those people, the sane, the intelligent, and the wise especially are almost never listened to, barely given a forum. And when they are however briefly, they are shouted at by people who seem to feel that more bloodshed is always called for to answer for bloodshed, and that this is the only "sane" way.

It has never worked. Once the first innocent blood has been spilled, lashing out blindly just to spill more blood, will only get you more innocent blood.

It seems that having failed to protect ourselves here at home (Bush stayed on vacation clearing brush when warned we were in danger). We didn't do the first thing we should have done. Find out what went wrong. As soon as Bush resisted and then handpicked a whitewash Commission. We should have called for immediate Judiciary Committee Hearings as to why he was resisting. Immediately! That instead of determining how this could have happened we chose war with the wrong country, should have woken us all up to a stench coming from the WH. The answer was War! Aside from going after those who sent the attack our way, we should have determined why nothing was done when Bush and Rice were warned? We should have fired those leaders who didn't do their most fundamental duty to protect us.

That single act would have made us safer!


Yet we didn't do it. Instead more of our people were killed in the form of American causualties in Iraq. Possibly hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have been killed. In a country that never attacked us and had no means to, nor any connection with those who did. Bush has declared "War on Terrorism". Yet the Terrorists came from Saudi Arabia. A Dictatorship that holds Telethons for Terrorists.

Those who attacked us are living in a country run by a military Dictator who has nukes, where 90% of the population hates us and loves and shelters Al-Qeada.

By not holding our leaders responsible for their failures to do their duty and make sound decisions we are no closer to being safer but more and more at risk.

Israel has made a choice. They have been making a series of poor decisions IMO. They should step back from this road of mistakes and reflect on the road we Americans have taken. They should look at their leader's decision making and check the results. Or they are going to end up where we are.

Nowhere good, and up a well known stinking creek, without a paddle.
Snuffysmith
BIRTH PANGS OF A NEW MIDDLE EAST - MARC LYNCH (ABU AARDVACK, JULY 26): Condoleeza Rice's remark that the Lebanon war represented the 'birth pangs of a New Middle East' is spectacularly ill-considered remark. This is the sort of thing which real public diplomacy could have avoided. Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Karen Hughes should quit immediately.
http://abuaardvark.typepad.com/abuaardvark..._pangs_of_.html
SEE ALSO
http://duckofminerva.blogspot.com/2006/07/amen.html


ROME CONFERENCE FAILS MARC LYNCH (ABU AARDVACK, JULY 26): The Lebanon war will go down in history as one of the greatest missed opportunities in recent American diplomatic history. No public diplomacy in the world could overcome the fiasco which is America's policy.
http://abuaardvark.typepad.com/abuaardvark...conference.html


RAVE REVIEWS FOR RICE'S GALA PERFORMANCE (GULF TIMES, QATAR, JULY 28): Rice's decision to take the stage alone was a relief to some of her entourage. Karen Hughes, former spin doctor for President George W. Bush, now czar of US public diplomacy, admitted she had been let off the hook. 'I can't even hum,' she confessed on the eve of the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF) gala.
http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/prin...45&parent_id=25


KAREN HUGHES AWOL? (NOTHING BUT WORDS AND PICTURES, WORTH THOUSANDS BLOG, JUNE 26): It is remarkable that there is clearly no plan from Hughes -- not even a 'quick-hit' one -- to even try to put a good face on it for the many millions in the Arab Middle East TV audience.
http://www.toppa.com/politics/politics-2006/397


RADICALIZING THE MUSLIM WORLD - SEAN-PAUL KELLEY (AGONIST BLOG, JULY 27): Isn't radicalizing the Muslim world what Karen Hughes, as head of public diplomacy, was supposed to prevent?
http://agonist.org/sean_paul_kelley/200607...he_muslim_world


FOR SYRIA'S ENVOY, NO CALLS FROM THE WHITE HOUSE - THOM SHANKER (INERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, JULY 27): With no movement toward a significant dialogue with the government, Syria's ambassador to the United States, Imad Moustapha, engages in public diplomacy to take his nation's case to America.
http://www.iht.com/bin/print_ipub.php?file.../news/envoy.php


THE FIRES OF THE MIDDLE EAST CANNOT BE CONTAINED - DAVID GARDNER (FINANCIAL TIMES, JULY 27): The US has forfeited nearly all legitimacy in the Arab and Muslim world where. Polls show that sentiment is determined by hostility towards US policies rather than western values.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2aa83e4a-1d96-11db...00779e2340.html
PAID SUBSCRIPTION

ANGER IN THE ARAB WORLD - RASHID I. KHALIDI (NATION, JULY 27): The pro-American Arab regimes that initially foolishly aligned themselves with the United States and Israel over the Lebanese crisis have shown their regret by backpedaling as fast as they can. Public opinion in their countries is massively against their position (Al Jazeera's viewership is way up; that of the Saudi-run Al Arabiya is way down) and is making itself felt.
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060814/khalidi

TOP AL-QAIDA FIGURE URGES HOLY WAR AGAINST ISRAEL: CALLING WORLD BATTLEFIELD, AL-ZAWAHRI SEEKS ISLAM EMPIRE FROM SPAIN TO IRAQ - KIM GAMEL, ASSOCIATED PRESS (BALTIMORE SUN, JULY 27): The White House dismissed an Al-Quaeda tape as propaganda aimed at inciting violence.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nationwor...0,5570665.story


REIGN OF ERROR - PAUL KRUGMAN (NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 28): The propaganda machine that supports the current administration is still at work, seeking to flush facts down the memory hole.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/07/28/opini...agewanted=print
PAID SUBSCRIPTION

THE MIDDLE EAST: SPUN AGAIN? - EDMUND BURKE III (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, JULY 27): Are Americans being spun into backing an even more reckless adventure in the Middle East? Can history be so easily wished away? What price are we willing to pay as a society for a new Middle East?
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?...&type=printable


2 STEPS BACK: RICE'S CAREFUL DIPLOMACY FALTERS UNDER RENEWED ASSERTIVENESS BY THE U.S. - HELENE COOPER (NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 28): At the Rome conference, Rice lost the public relations war.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/28/world/mi...agewanted=print


ON THE EVE OF MADNESS - THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN (NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 28): 'Condoleezza Rice must have been severely jet-lagged when she said that what's going on in Lebanon and Iraq today were the 'birth pangs of a new Middle East' ... . The world hates George Bush more than any U.S. president in my lifetime.'
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/07/28/opini...agewanted=print
PAID SUSBCRIPTION


TIDE OF ARAB OPINION TURNS TO SUPPORT FOR HEZBOLLAH - NEIL MACFARQUHAR (NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 18) Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's brief visit to the region sparked widespread criticism of her cold demeanor and her choice of words, particularly a statement that the bloodshed represented the birth pangs of a ?new Middle East.?
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/28/world/mi...agewanted=print


A WAR OF HER OWN - EUGENE ROBINSON (WASHINGTON POST, JULY 28): Now, in her first real test as secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice her own war to sort out, and all she's done so far is scare people with her talk of somehow making the world's tinderbox into something "new."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...2701220_pf.html


CONDI DECORATES THE LIVING ROOM WHILE THE BEDROOM IS IN FLAMES - JOSEPH A. PALERMO (HUFFINGTON POST, JULY 27): Rice's disingenuous stance of refusing to negotiate a ceasefire because we cannot "return to the status quo ante" and "we need a lasting peace" is nothing but a stalling tactic to give the Israeli Defense Forces more time to "degrade" Lebanon.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joseph-a-pal...html?view=print


FAILURE UPON FAILURE - BOB HERBERT (NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 27): Condoleezza Rice is in charge of the diplomatic effort regarding Lebanon. She
s been about as effective at that as the president was in his response to Katrina.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/07/27/opini...agewanted=print
PAID SUBSCRIPTION

DOMINO DIPLOMACY: CONDI RICE AND CO. ARE USING THE CONFLICT IN LEBANON AS A PROXY WAR WITH IRAN THAT WILL SOMEHOW RESCUE THE U.S. FROM FAILURE IN IRAQ - SIDNEY BLUMENTHAL (SALON, JULY 27): Since Rice became secretary of state she has been in search of what she has called "transformational diplomacy." At last, she has discovered the transformation by abandoning the diplomacy.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/20...east/print.html


DUMP CONDI: FOREIGN POLICY CONSERVATIVES CHARGE STATE DEPT. HAS HIJACKED BUSH AGENDA INSIGHT (JULY 25): The critics said Miss Rice has adopted the approach of Mr. Burns and the State Department bureaucracy that most -- if not all -- problems in the Middle East can be eased by applying pressure on Israel.
http://www.insightmag.com/Media/MediaManager/Condi2.htm
SUBSCRIBERS ONLY
SEE ALSO
http://www.humanevents.com/rightangle/inde...i_support_condi


FINISHING THE JOB - MORTIMER B. ZUCKERMAN (U.S. WORLD & NEW REPORT, JULY 23): The United States and Britain are right not to endorse calls for a cease-fire just yet.
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/opinion/artic...0723/31edit.htm


CEASE-FIRE NOW? - MONA CHAREN (WASHINGTON TIMES, \JULY 26): A cease-fire stops the guns for a week. A victory can stop them for years.
http://www.washtimes.com/functions/print.p...25-092622-1398r


CEASE-FIRE CALLS RING HOLLOW IN LIGHT OF WWII HISTORY - THOMAS SOWELL (BALTIMORE SUN, JULY 27): In WWII we didn't cease firing until our enemies were defeated. Mr. Annan and today's "world opinion" would not have liked that.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/o...-oped-headlines


ONLY AFTER A CLEAR SUCCESS EDITORIAL (HAARETZ, JULY 27): The American effort to establish a new multinational force instead of the weak UNIFIL is justified, as is the approach of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who is working toward a stable cease-fire -- in other words, a cease-fire after Hezbollah is weakened.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/743210.html
Snuffysmith
TRY TO WIN THE HEART AND MINDS OF THE ARABS - ZIAD J. ASALI (GULF NEWS, JULY 27): There has been much talk in recent years about the need to win hearts and minds in the Middle East, but most efforts at American public diplomacy in the region have born little fruit.
http://www.gulfnews.com/opinion/columns/region/10055477.html

NEGOTIATING THE PEACE: DIPLOMATS MUST SET ASIDE IDEOLOGY AND FOCUS ON THE RESOLVABLE LEBANESE-ISRAELI DISPUTE. ONLY THEN CAN THE WIDER CONFLICT BETWEEN THE U.S. AND ISRAEL, AND THE ARAB WORLD, BE ADDRESSED - RAMI KHOURI (SALON, JULY 26): The outcome of diplomatic efforts could in turn be decisive for the wider Arab-Israeli conflict, and broad relations between the United States and the Arab world and Iran.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2006/...ouri/print.html


TIME TO TALK (TO THE BAD GUYS) - LESLIE H. GELB (WALL STREET JOURNAL, JULY 28): Mr. Bush needs to use the present crisis to justify new and wide-ranging talks with Syria and Iran, and, if necessary, indirectly with Hamas and Hezbollah.
http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB1154...6616019990.html
PAID SUBSCRIPTION

RAMALLAH STIRS: THE ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN DISPUTE REMAINS THE CORE ISSUE IN THE REGION, AND THERE ARE HINTS OF A WAY FORWARD AMIDST THE CHAOS - JO-ANN MORT (AMERICAN PROSPECT, JULY 25): As the crisis deepens in the region, now might be the time for Bush administration officials to make an attitude adjustment and encourage re-engagement between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?sectio...articleId=11756


ENDGAME IN LEBANON: EVERYONE AGREES ON HOW THE WAR SHOULD END, BUT DOES ANYONE KNOW HOW TO GET THERE? EDITORIAL (WASHINGTON POST, JULY 27): The truth is that there is no reasonable compromise to be made with the extremists who began this war.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...2601824_pf.html


'BIRTH PANGS OF A NEW MIDDLE EAST'? - LEON HADAR (ANTIWAR.COM, JULY 27): Washington should remake its policy of remaking the Middle East before it's too late.
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/hadar.php?articleid=9416


AT THE HEART OF THE LEBANON CRISIS LIE THE LETHAL MISTAKES OF GEORGE BUSH: INSTEAD OF PURSUING A MIDDLE EAST PEACE DEAL, THE WHITE HOUSE'S BIG IDEA HAS BEEN TO BOMB PEOPLE INTO DEMOCRACY - JONATHAN FREEDLAND (GUARDIAN, JULY 26/COMMON DREAMS)
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0726-30.htm


LABOR PAINS OF A STILLBORN FOREIGN POLICY - ROBERT SCHEER (TRUTHDIG, JULY 26/COMMON DREAMS): The Bush foreign policy, from coddling Pakistan's
nuclear bomb-making to cheerleading Israel's attacks on the Gaza Strip and Lebanon, is in a free fall of such alarming consequence that it may be difficult to grasp.
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0726-22.htm


A TIME TO ACT - WARREN CHRISTOPHER (WASHINGTON POST, JULY 28): Every day America gives the green light to further Israeli violence, our already tattered reputation sinks even lower. It is time for the United States to step forward with the authority and balance that this moment requires.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...2701420_pf.html


MIDDLE EAST WAR: MADE IN EUROPE: THE TORTURED HISTORY OF THE ISRAELI-ARAB CONFLICT EVENTUALLY LEADS BACK TO THE CONTINENT - TIMOTHY GARTON ASH (LOS ANGELES TIMES, JULY 27): The diplomatic key lies in the full engagement of the U.S., using its influence with Israel and negotiating as directly as possible with all partners to the conflict, however unsavory.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-...inion-rightrail
Snuffysmith
MIDDLE EAST TURMOIL PROVIDES U.S WITH OPPORTUNITY OPINION (PEOPLE
S DAILY, JULY 27): The United States should stop Israel, the most important and reliable ally in the Mideast region, from using its forces as disproportionate.
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/27/eng...727_287331.html


OVERSEAS TENSIONS FORCE BUSH TO CHANGE DIRECTION - PETER BAKER (WASHINGTON POST, JULY 27): The stark difference between the pro-Israel stance in Washington and the criticism of Israel in many European and Arab capitals underlines the impact on Bush's foreign policy.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...2601815_pf.html


BURNING LEBANON: ISRAEL'S NEW MIDDLE EAST - TANYA REINHART (COUNTERPUNCH, JULY 26): The new axis of the four enemies of the Bush administration (Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran) are bodies viewed by the Arab world as resisting U.S. or Israel's rule, and standing for Arab liberation. From Bush's perspective, he only has two years to consolidate his vision of complete U.S. control of the Middle East.
http://www.counterpunch.org/reinhart07272006.html


LEBANON: WINNERS AND LOSERS: BIN LADEN WINS, AND WE LOSE JUSTIN RAIMONDO (ANTIWAR.COM, JULY 26): Israel's invasion of Lebanon serves the interests of two major players in the Middle East -- Israeli interests and Osama bin Laden -- and America is not among them.
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=9413


WASHINGTON'S LATEST MIDDLE EAST WAR : FACED WITH AN ISRAELI ATTACK THAT IS TANTAMOUNT TO WAR CRIMES, THE AMERICAN PEACE MOVEMENT MUST DO MORE - PHYLLIS BENNIS (MOTHER JONES, JULY 27): What Israel is doing now, with full US support through military and economic aid, diplomatic protection, and political support, aims to remap a new Israeli-dominated Middle East.
http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/colu...ngtons_war.html

THE VIEW FROM ISRAEL - HILLEL SCHENKER (NATION, JULY 27): Jewish fundamentalism is a major obstacle to a peaceful resolution of the conflict. And Christian fundamentalism is one of the underpinnings of George W. Bush's political power and simplistic view of the world, which divides everything and everyone into good and evil, with no apparent room for the subtleties of nonviolent conflict resolution or compromise.
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060814/schenker


MIDEAST REALITIES - HELLE DALE (WASHINGTON TIMES, JULY 26): To the credit of the Bush administration, it has resisted putting pressure on Israel for a ceasefire, recognizing who provoked this conflict in the first place.
http://www.washtimes.com/functions/print.p...25-092628-2111r


COORDINATED ATTACK - HERBERT LONDON (WASHINGTON TIMES, JULY 27): To his credit, President Bush seems to recognize what the State Department has not. He has made it clear Israel has the right to defend itself.
http://www.washtimes.com/functions/print.p...26-103049-1611r


THE CHALLENGE OF CRIPPLING HEZBOLLAH EDITORIAL (WASHINGTON TIMES, JULY 26): The United States and other nations that are serious about defeating Islamofascism have a vital interest in helping Israel succeed in crippling Hezbollah and should be generous in providing Israel with what it needs to get the job done.
http://www.washtimes.com/functions/print.p...25-092625-7982r


JUST CAUSE - MARTIN PERETZ (NEW REPUBLIC, JULY 27): 'Let's face it: Aside from fighting for themselves, the Israelis are also fighting for us.'
http://www.tnr.com/docprint.mhtml?i=20060807&s=peretz080706
Snuffysmith
HIZBULLAH'S REAL GOAL IS RACIST: TO FREE THE MIDDLE EAST HOLY LANDS OF JEWS - ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, JULY 27): The fight against Hizbullah is a fight against anti-Jewish, anti- Christian, and humanistic values. If Hizbullah terrorism is not stopped in southern Lebanon, it will be coming to a theater, church, or synagogue near you.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0727/p09s01-coop.html'


'DISPROPORTIONATE' IN WHAT MORAL UNIVERSE? - CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER (WASHINGTON POST, JULY 28): To hear the world pass judgment on the Israel-Hezbollah war as it unfolds is to live in an Orwellian moral universe. With a few significant exceptions (the leadership of the United States, Britain, Australia, Canada and a very few others), the world -- governments, the media, U.N. bureaucrats -- has completely lost its moral bearings.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...2701725_pf.html
Snuffysmith
The “Honest Broker’s” Plan for occupying Southern Lebanon

By Mike Whitney

The Bush administration has played an integral part in the war on Lebanon. They blocked the “peace initiative” proposed by the 15-member coalition at the Rome Conference and they supplied “precision-guided weapons” during the hostilities so Israel could continue to pulverize Beirut and the cities in the south. They have been as engaged in the fighting as any combatant in the field and should not be regarded an “impartial arbiter”.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article14269.htm
Snuffysmith
Lebanese Die as Condi Plays Piano in Malaysia

By Kurt Nimmo

The Lebanese, facing “the geopolitical realities” of Israeli aggression and indiscriminate murder, are not having a good time, but then they hardly matter, as became obvious the moment Rice’s plane touched down and she engaged in “discussions” with the Israelis, talks designed to do little more than provide the Israelis with more time to kill Lebanese civilians.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article14259.htm
Snuffysmith
Rice Renews Talks in Mideast

By Robin Wright and Jonathan Finer

JERUSALEM, July 29 -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice returned to the Middle East late Saturday for more talks on how to end fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, saying she was encouraged by Hezbollah's agreement on Thursday at a Lebanese cabinet meeting to accept a cease-fire and an...

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Returning to Old Approach, U.S. Faces Risky Path Ahead

By Robin Wright

JERUSALEM, July 29 -- The Bush administration is now entangled in a risky new diplomatic venture in the Middle East -- and one with huge potential pitfalls even if Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice succeeds in negotiating a cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah in the days ahead, according to...

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Many Arabs Applaud Hezbollah

By Faiza Saleh Ambah

JIDDAH, Saudi Arabia, July 29 -- Ever since the seizure of two Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah sparked an Israeli offensive in Lebanon, Huda Fatani has set her alarm for 3:15 each morning, gotten up to perform her ablutions, then spent more than an hour on her knees praying for the Lebanese militia.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Beyond Lebanon

By Brent Scowcroft

The current Middle East war is between Israel and Hezbollah. But only the U.S. can broker a comprehensive settlement in the region.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Don't Blame Democracy Promotion

By Steven A. Cook

Democracy and democracy promotion have become dirty words when it comes to the Middle East. As Iraq continues to slide toward civil war and Israel fights Hamas and Hezbollah on two fronts, a growing chorus of analysts and observers places the blame squarely on Washington's efforts to forge a more...

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Iran Is Bush's Target in Lebanon

WASHINGTON - America and Tehran are battling for influence in the
Mideast, with Israel and Hezbollah doing the fighting. It's a
"proxy war," a U.S. official says. By Doyle McManus.
http://email.latimes.com/cgi-bin1/DM/y/e6B...Io30G2B0HkCK0EL
Snuffysmith
Tony Karon covers global affairs for Time magazine, but also has a website where he has very interesting analyses. http://tonykaron.com/ The following items are (I think) very interesting. Leon Hadar

July 29th, 2006
Is Israel Fighting a Proxy War for Washington?
Hizballah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah said a curious thing Saturday: Israel has recognized reality and is ready for a cease-fire in Lebanon, Nasrallah claimed, but it is the U.S. that insists that it fight on. And if you read the analysis of Ze’ev Schiff, the dean of Israeli military correspondents and an enthusiastic advocate of the military campaign against Hizballah, there’s a remarkable confirmation of Nasrullah’s analysis. Schiff writes:

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is the figure leading the strategy of changing the situation in Lebanon, not Prime Minister Ehud Olmert or Defense Minister Amir Peretz. She has so far managed to withstand international pressure in favor of a cease-fire, even though this will allow Hezbollah to retain its status as a militia armed by Iran and Syria.

As such, she needs military cards, and unfortunately Israel has not succeeded to date in providing her with any. Besides bringing Hezbollah and Lebanon under fire, all of Israel’s military cards at this stage are in the form of two Lebanese villages near the border that have been captured by the IDF.

If the military cards Israel is holding do not improve with the continuation of the fighting, it will result in a diplomatic solution that will leave the Hezbollah rocket arsenal in southern Lebanon in its place. The diplomatic solution will necessarily be a reflection of the military realities on the ground.

Listening the millenarian rubbish pouring out of the mouths of Bush and Blair last Friday about this being a fight led by the U.S. and its allies for a “new Middle East” of freedom from tyranny blah blah — oblivious to the reality that every time Arab electorates have been given the option to vote in a democratic election, they have returned governments profoundly at odds with U.S. and Israeli policy, and the U.S. has ended up ignoring them, or trying to overthrow them… But repudiating Bush’s increasingly brittle and shrill rationalizations is not my purpose here (and Blair, quite frankly, knows better, which is why the court of history will judge him even more harshly).

I’ve always maintained that the “pro-Israel” position of the Bush administration, formulated and influenced by hardline American Likudniks (whom, it must be said, are hardly representative of mainstream Israeli thinking) is actually fundamentally bad for Israel. Its infantile, aggressive maximalism precludes Israel from doing what it will take to live at peace with its surroundings, instead demanding a confrontational approach in keeping with Jabotinsky’s “Iron Wall” in which Israel’s survival depends on crush and humiliating the Arabs. Bush may talk the language of “Arab liberation,” but his contempt for Arab democracy is plain — just look at his response to the Hamas election victory. His administration appears to be dedicated to a remaking of the Middle East on America’s terms through violent social engineering. The depth of their failure in Iraq appears not to have deterred them from another adventure in Lebanon, this time using Israel as their agent of “change.”

Plainly, the region has no interest in being remade in the manner in which Bush envisages. I strongly recommend the coverage of Rami Khouri, the excellent Jordanian analyst of Arab affairs at Beirut’s Daily Star, who makes clear that the region’s politics have indeed been remade, with the pro-U.S. autocracies having discredited themselves beyond repair, and the new motive force of Arab politics is the Islamist movement representing resistance to Israel and the U.S. and responsive, clean government in comparison to the autocracies.

Mark Perry and Alistair Crooke have argued thoughtfully that the most credible and viable policy for the U.S. to follow in these circumstances is to promote democracy and acknowledge that it will bring Islamists to power, and seeking to engage with that reality rather than continuing the vain path of seeking to violently suppress an increasingly popular movement.

Yet the Administration appears to have clung to its old instincts in the case of Lebanon. Indeed, they appear to have framed their response to the crisis as an opportunity to wage proxy war against Iran by seeking to militarily eliminate what they see as nothing more than an Iranian proxy. So when Israel launched its retaliation, probably expecting the Bush administration to set the limits and demand restraint, instead it found Washington saying “Don’t hold back on our account, in fact, make sure you finish them off…”

And seeking Hizballah’s defeat on the battlefield remains their objective. But with the zealous delusion that has characterized so much of what this Administration has done in the Middle East, it simply failed to reckon with reality and consequence. It’s premises were faulty, as we’ve discussed in a previous post (LINK) — Hizballah can’t be beaten on the battlefield, it seems, and Israel very quickly began looking to a NATO force to pull its chestnuts out of hte fire (As I noted in my TIME.com piece after the Rome meeting, this gives the Europeanns far more leverage than washington would like over the shape of a cease-fire — they’re not about to go and fight Hizballah on behalf of Israel or the U.S. so they’re demanding a cease-fire as a precondition for going in. A cease-fire that would have to be agreed by Hizballah, in other words, that fact alone giving Hizballah a remarkable victory over the U.S. and Israel.)

After its air campaign failed to even slow the rate of Hizballah rocket fire into Israel, it sent in ground troops. They managed to capture Maroun al-Ras, but after days of fierce fighting in which they took heavy casualties, the Israelis actually pulled out of the battle for Bint Jbail. And Israeli officers had freely admitted there are at least 170 such towns controlled by Hizballah in southern Lebanon. And Israel has no appetite for reestablishing roots in the quagmire of southern Lebanon. That’s why it suddenly finds itself needing the international force more than anyone.

So, not only is Hizballah going to emerge stronger, having survived the onslaught and therefore have a substantial hand in shaping the cease-fire that will follow — and politically, while the Administration may have been hoping the Israeli campaign would turn Lebanese against Hizballah, the opposite has occurred: A poll last week found that a solid 70 percent of Lebanese, across the board, supported Hizballah’s capture of the two Israeli soldiers that started the current confrontation: That breaks down as around 95 percent of Shiites, 70 percent of Sunnis, around 40 percent of Druze and 54 percent of Christians, far from turning on Hizballah as a result of its provocation, instead backed it to the hilt after two weeks of bombing. (Bombing will do that, I suspect — two dramatic terror hijack-bombings on 9/11, and the U.S. population was ready to follow Bush into an entirely unrelated military adventure in Iraq, remember?)

Not surprising, also, 86 percent of Lebanese in the same survey don’t believe the U.S. is an honest broker. And frankly, the Lebanon debacle will have sealed America’s fate in Arab eyes for a generation: When the next al-Qaeda attacks come on U.S. soil, I don’t expect there’ll be much hand-wringing or denial in the Arab world, blaming the Mossad for something they didn’t want to believe Arabs were capable of and so forth. And media outlets wanting to run “Why do they Hate Us?” specials can probably start writing them already.

I also noted in a different Time.com piece how the Lebanon crisis has further weakened the U.S. position in Iraq, particularly its ability to influence the Shiite-led government (whose leaders, after all, are ideological fellow travelers of Hizballah).

There will be other regional implications, such as gains for Syria. And I want to return to the issue of the cease-fire and prospects for Hizballah — it wouldn’t surprise me to see new proposals from the Lebanese government under which Hizballah’s armed forces would be incorporated into those of the Lebanese army. Probably not exactly what Condi had in mind.

But it also seems clear that Israel’s own position is weakened. It has once again aroused the hatred of the Arab world, and the disdain of much of the international community for its plainly excessive response, all in pursuit of reestablishing its “deterrent” capacity — but if Hizballah is left standing, and indications are that it will be, that deterrent capacity itself will have been undermined. And Israel will have to pay a diplomatic price too, being forced back into internationally supervised peace discussions with a view to settling the conflict on the basis of the 1967 borders, as Brent Scowcroft, of the grownup Bush administration so forcefully argues.

I can’t help thinking that for all of the enthusiasm of the neocon Likudniks, the Bush administration’s “New Middle East” policy is not only bad for the Arabs; it’s bad for Israel, too.

July 23rd, 2006

Six Fallacies of the U.S. Hizballah Campaign


Is Iran Driving the Conflict?

People outraged by the hundreds of Lebanese killed in Israeli bombing raids over the past week may be tempted to see in the U.S. rush to ship Israel extra supplies of bombs and missiles to rain down on Lebanon, and in its diplomatic effort to prolong rather than end the conflict in the hope that Israel can achieve its battlefield objectives, evidence that the offensive is part of another club-footed U.S. effort to remake the region. But it’s not that simple. In fact, it may be no more true than the idea that because Iran funds, trains and arms Hizballah, it was Tehran that took the decision to escalate the conflict on Israel’s northern border. Client states and proxy forces tend to act autonomously of their backers, even if they share many of the same objectives — if they didn’t have their own separate interests they wouldn’t be proxies or clients, they would simply be satellites.

It’s well established that Israel acts independently of the U.S., and what distinguishes the current U.S. administration from its predecessors is the extent to which it simply follows Israel’s lead. Smart and well-informed Iran-watchers such as Trita Parsi challenge the the conventional wisdom in much of the media that Iran took the decision to seize the two Israeli soldiers, and suggest the focus on Iran comes from those who would like to see the U.S. take on Iran. I spoke to Parsi last week, and he suggested that the escalation in Lebanon actually undermined Iran’s interests, and that Hizballah acts autonomously from its backer, particularly on a tactical level. “On grander strategic actions, Hizballah would probably seek consent or approval from Tehran, but not necessarily on tactical operations. And its not clear that they saw the capture of those soldiers as having strategic consequences, or whether they just saw it as a tactical opportunity to press for the release of prisoners.”

This argument is echoed by Mark Perry, a U.S. analyst involved in ongoing talks with Hizballah.

Hezbollah and Israel stand along this border every day observing each other through binoculars and waiting for an opportunity to kill each other. They are at war. They have been for 25 years, no one ever declared a cease-fire between them. … They stand on the border every day and just wait for an opportunity. And on Tuesday morning there were two Humvees full of Israeli soldiers, not under observation from the Israeli side, not under covering fire, sitting out there all alone. The Hezbollah militia commander just couldn’t believe it — so he went and got them.

The Israeli captain in charge of that unit knew he had really screwed up, so he sent an armored personnel carrier to go get them in hot pursuit, and Hezbollah led them right through a minefield.

Now if you’re sitting in Tehran or Damascus or Beirut, and you are part of the terrorist Politburo so to speak, you have a choice. With your head sunk in your hands, thinking “Oh my God,” you can either give [the kidnapped soldiers] back and say “Oops, sorry, wrong time” or you can say, “Hey, this is war.”

It is absolutely ridiculous to believe that the Hezbollah commander on the ground said Tuesday morning, “Go get two Israeli soldiers, would you please?”

Parsi picks up the argument: “If Iran had encouraged Hizballah to do this, it’s not clear why Iran not doing more to help Hizballah — specifically, the fact that some of the stronger missiles that they have in Lebanon, such as the Fajr and the Zelzal, are not being used. And there’s also the fact that Iran made a stern warning that if Syria is attacked, Iran would come to its defense. But why did it not issue the same warning for an attack on Lebanon? Part of the reason may be that Iran didn’t actually order this operation. Because if they had ordered Hizballah to do this, and then left it to face Israel’s wrath alone, it would send a devastating message to other allied groups in the Arab world that if you do Iran’s bidding, it will abandon you to face the consequences.”

Whatever the truth about how Hizballah made its decision, what remains clear is that the U.S. policy for dealing with the crisis, which largely involves trying to secure on the diplomatic front what Israel is trying to achieve on the battlefield, is based on a series of linked fallacies. The result will be that the crisis is prolonged, at a cost of hundreds or thousands more lives, and that its resolution will leave the U.S. position in the Middle East even weaker than it is today.

Flawed Assumption #1: Hizballah Can Be Militarily Eliminated

We’ve dealt with this one in a previous post, so don’t need to dwell. Already, it’s clear that Israel has failed to achieve that objective from the air, and must now send in ground troops — in the process turning more than half a million Lebanese into refugees. Of course, this is how Hizballah cut its teeth, fighting Israeli troops in southern Lebanon. Once in, Israel may struggle to get its troops out without it appearing to be another victory for Hizballah. Even if it pushes Hizballah back, the chances of it destroying the movement as a fighting force in this way are slim. And the prevailing sentiment among Lebanese will ensure it has a steady stream of recruits ready to fight the invader. The U.S. has learned in Iraq that the insurgency cannot be militarily defeated. Israel has learned the same thing in the West Bank and Gaza. Yet, it is still willing to risk inflaming the mass of the Lebanese population against it by trying to do the same in Lebanon. It’s unlikely to succeed militarily, meaning it will have to settle for some form of truce that will look like a defeat for Israel and the U.S. because Hizballah will have survived.

Flawed Assumption #2: If Lebanon is Made to Pay a Heavy Price, It Will Turn on Hizballah

When you hear the Lebanese Defense Minister warn that the Lebanese Army will fight on the side of Hizballah against any Israeli invasion, you get the sense that things may not be working according to Israel’s plan. And why would it? It’s Bin Laden logic, after all, echoing the idea that if al-Qaeda blows up enough stuff on the American mainland, it can force the U.S. to withdraw from the Middle East and stop backing Israel. Obviously, Americans are not going to allow people blowing up their cities to dictate to them how they should conduct their affairs; why does anyone think the Lebanese are any different? People don’t like being bombed, and they don’t like being told what to do by the bombers. The statements of the Lebanese government brought into being in part by U.S. backing reflect an acute sense of having been betrayed by Washington, which is doing its best to prolong the punishment of Lebanon by running diplomatic interference for Israel. I suspect the scale of what the Israelis have wrought in Lebanon may actually help ensure Hizballah’s survival. The message to moderate, pro-Western Arab politicians is simple: The U.S. will back you when you’re fighting Syria or the Islamists, but if you’re unfortunate enough to fall afoul of Israel, you’re on your own. The political consensus that this escalation will leave behind in the rubble of Lebanon will be far more antagonistic to Israel and wary of — even hostile to — the U.S. than the one that preceded it.

Flawed Assumption #3 (My personal favorite!): The Crisis Offers an Opportunity for the U.S. to Rally Arab Support Against Hizballah and Iran

Condi Rice, we are told, is heading to the Middle East to “build an umbrella of Arab allies against Hizballah”. Just listen to a White House official explaining her mission to the Telegraph: “She’s not going to come home with a ceasefire but stronger ties to the Arab world. It’s going to allow us to say that America isn’t going to put up with this and we have Arab friends that are against you terrorists. What we want is our Arab allies standing against Hezbollah and against Iran, since there is no one who doesn’t think Iran is behind this. We’re going to say to Hezbollah and the terrorist groups, ‘This will not stand.’ ”

Can someone please get me some of what these people are smoking? I, too, would love to escape, as they seem to do so frequently, from the squalor of reality… Israeli bombs are killing innocent Arabs by the hundred, while the U.S. supplies the bombs and demands that the Israelis be given more time, and the Arab leaders are going to stand by Israel against Hizballah. My, oh my… No lack of chutzpah in the Bush administration, I’ll grant you that. But the Arab regimes learned long ago to stop taking them seriously, as they did on Iraq, and then on Hamas. But this will be fun to watch, because the Arab citizenry is so outraged at what the Israelis are doing, and at the feeble posture of the pro-U.S. Arab regimes like Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt when it comes to doing anything to help fellow Arabs under attack by Israel, that I suspect they will feel compelled to publicly rebuke Condi over the U.S. failure to press for a ceasefire, if only as a symbolic gesture for the benefit of their own public. The U.S. is going in saying Hizballah is the problem, not Israel. The Arabs will tell her that Hizballah is a problem, but not the problem; and that the Hizballah problem can only really be fixed if the Israel problem is fixed. Until Israel is ready to accept the Arab League proposals to settle all differences with the Arab world on the basis of the 1967 borders, these crises will continue to erupt. Of course, Condi may be prevented from embarrassing herself if she heeds the Saudis, who initiated Sunday talks at the White House to discuss the crisis. Safe bet is that the Saudis are going insist that the fighting be stopped, and that a grand bargain be pursued.

Flawed Assumption # 4: Syrian Cooperation Can Be Acquired Cost-Free

A spinoff of flawed assumption #3 is the idea that Syria can be persuaded to break from Iran and Hizballah by a combination of threats from Washington and persuasion by other Arab leaders. Uh, guys, what’s in it for Syria? And that’s a really important question, since Syria has been largely unmoved through two or three years of threats and harangues from Washington over its behavior on the Iraqi border, and over its murder of Rafik Hariri in Lebanon. That may be because Syria know that the U.S. and Israel know that there’s a limit on how far the regime in Damascus can be pushed, for the simple reason that the U.S. and Israel don’t want the regime in Damascus to fall — and the Israelis are explicit about this — because if it did, it would be replaced by the Muslim Brotherhood.

So Bashar Assad will stiffen his jaw and wait.

And what he may wait for will be to hear a phrase that hasn’t been uttered in Washington for at least six years now — “Golan Heights.” Syria relationship with Hizballah was premised on the fact that it had no military capacity to put pressure on Israel directly, and it saw in the Lebanese militia a form of proxy leverage to press Israel for the return of Syrian territory captured in 1967. It was assumed in the talks that went on through the 90s between Israel and Syria on this question that Hizballah’s capacity to attack Israel would be spiked once there was a deal. And I suspect that until the Syrians see some of their concerns addressed, particularly the fate of the Golan Heights, they won’t see any incentive to help out.

Flawed Assumption #5: The Middle East’s Crises Can be Addressed in Piecemeal Fashion

By now, you’d think the Bush Administration would have learned that everything in the Middle East is connected. It could just as easily pay a price in the lives of its soldiers on the streets of East Baghdad as it could in its diplomatic standing in Beirut for the stance it has taken on the Israeli action. Indeed, the crises in Gaza and Lebanon are both products of the Bush administration eschewing the traditional Pax Americana policies of its predecessors, and instead imagining it could remake the region on its own (and Israel’s) terms. Intead, in Iraq it created a vacuum filled by Iran; in the Palestinian territories it created a vacuum filled by Hamas; its handling of the Syria- Lebanon issue left the field open to Hizballah; and its refusal to engage the “grand bargain” discussion initiated by Iran’s leadership in 2003 has limited its ability to manage the crises created by Iran’s growing regional assertiveness.

The idea that the region is going to fall in line behind a U.S.-Israeli campaign against Hizballah is ludicrous. Sure, the Arab regimes have plenty of problems with Hizballah, but they can’t get behind the U.S. until a peace process that will get Israel back to some version of its 67 borders is under way, and other vital interests are addressed and engaged.

Flawed Assumption #6: Israeli Interests are U.S. Interests

The U.S. has a principle alliance with Israel, but it also has an interest in stability in the Middle East, for reasons of oil and security, on the basis of a Pax Americana. That has long been the lodestar of U.S. policy, balancing Israeli interests with those of its Arab clients. But the Bush administration abandoned that policy, tilting wholesale behind Israel on most tactical questions and abadoning its peacemaking role.

But Israel doesn’t necessarily need stability, democracy and prosperity in the Arab world. The “iron wall” doctrine of state building of Vladimir Jabotinsky, ideological icon of Ariel Sharon, is that Israel’s survival depends on crushing and humiliating its Arab neighbors. The idea was implied in Ariel Sharon’s mission-statement interview with Haaretz in April, 2001:

Haaretz: If an agreement on ending the conflict with the Palestinians is not possible and if a peace agreement with the Syrians is dangerous, what alternative are you proposing? What hope?

“From the strategic point of view, I think that it’s possible that in another 10 or 15 years the Arab world will have less ability to strike at Israel than it has today. That is because Israel will be a country with a flourishing economy, whereas the Arab world may be on the decline. True, there is no guarantee of this, but it is definitely possible that because of technological and environmental developments, the price of oil will fall and the Arab states will find themselves in a crisis situation, while Israel will be strengthened. The conclusion is that time is not working against us and therefore it is important to achieve solutions that will take place across a lengthy period.

Israel’s leaders — at least those of the right, who took power in 2000 with the express objective of putting an end to the peace process — have long seen Arab decline as to their advantage. Misguided as it is, the strategic doctrine that has guided Israel’s current leaders is very comfortable if there’s a civil war in Lebanon or in Gaza, or if the Arab leadership remains in its present enfeebled state. Indeed, Israel takes an indulgently amused view of the U.S. obsession with promoting Arab democracy. The actions that Israel has taken in Lebanon will have consequences for that country, and perhaps the wider Arab world, that Israel is content to accept, but that spell disaster for a Pax Americana.
jeffmoskin
Remembering A Visit to A Vibrant, Diverse Lebanon
by Janet Baker


Fifty years ago I was a 20-year-old college student from a small town in Kansas packing my bags to go to Lebanon. I, along with five other Americans, was anticipating the two-week trip by freighter from New York that would take us to another land, another culture — almost another world.

Upon landing in Beirut, several of us started classes at the American University of Beirut. That school year, 1956-57, transformed us all. Our year in the “Paris of the Middle East” introduced us to other languages, other religions, other foods and, most important to all, to a rich diversity of people.

At the university, I was one of 27 American students out of 3,500. My French teacher was Russian, my Shakespeare teacher from England, and my philosophy teacher Canadian. Spring semester I started a class in formal Arabic, but deciding it was more fun to learn the language on the streets, in the shops and from my dear Lebanese roommate, I dropped the class.

The hostel I lived in had neither central heating nor running water. What it did have was three floors of women students from all over the world, a cook that made delicious hummus and now and then french fries, and a watchman outside our gated housing, a little man in his 80s who taught me Arabic and let me ride his bike.

The campus of the American University in Beirut is beautiful. The soccer field overlooks the blue, blue Mediterranean Sea. Flowing trees and bushes are everywhere, and an hour’s drive takes you to the mountains.

But the best part for me was not the locale but the warm, friendly Lebanese families — Christian and Muslim — insisting I visit in their homes and eat with them, for they have a saying, “If we share salt, we will never be enemies.”

I sometimes dream of those happy days and lovely people, and today I weep for the Lebanon that less than a month ago seemed again so vibrant with promise. After many years of civil war, Lebanon was rebuilding itself. The Syrian occupation was over, and a new democratic government was in place.

Now beautiful Lebanon is in ruins, her citizens scattered in terror from their bombed homes.

I wonder what has happened to my Lebanese roommate. I wonder why so many innocent children are dying. I wonder where the survivors will go when this devastation ends.

I wonder why my government doesn’t care.

Janet Baker serves on two peace committees, including Citizens for Justice in the Middle East. She lives in Leawood.

© 2006 The Kansas City Star

http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0729-30.htm
tazvil04
Crisis Could Undercut Bush's Long-Term Goals

By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, July 31, 2006; A01

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...3000578_pf.html

The Israeli bombs that slammed into the Lebanese village of Qana yesterday did more than kill three dozen children and a score of adults. They struck at the core of U.S. foreign policy in the region and illustrated in heart-breaking images the enormous risks for Washington in the current Middle East crisis.

With each new scene of carnage in southern Lebanon, outrage in the Arab world and Europe has intensified against Israel and its prime sponsor, raising the prospect of a backlash resulting in a new Middle East quagmire for the United States, according to regional specialists, diplomats and former U.S. officials.


Although the United States has urged Israel to use restraint, it has also strongly defended the military assaults as a reasonable response to Hezbollah rocket attacks, a position increasingly at odds with allies that see a deadly overreaction. Analysts think that if the war drags on, as appears likely, it could leave the United States more isolated than at any time since the Iraq invasion three years ago and hindered in its foreign policy goals such as shutting down Iran's nuclear program and spreading democracy around the world.

"The arrows are all pointing in the wrong direction," said Richard N. Haass, who was President Bush's first-term State Department policy planning director. "The biggest danger in the short run is it just increases frustration and alienation from the United States in the Arab world. Not just the Arab world, but in Europe and around the world. People will get a daily drumbeat of suffering in Lebanon and this will just drive up anti-Americanism to new heights."

The White House recognizes the danger but thinks the missiles flying both ways across the Israel-Lebanon border carry with them a chance to finally break out of the stalemate of Middle East geopolitics. Bush and his advisers hope the conflict can destroy or at least cripple Hezbollah and in the process strike a blow against the militia's sponsor, Iran, while forcing the region to move toward final settlement of the decades-old conflict with Israel.

"He wants a resolution that will solve the problem," White House spokesman Tony Snow told reporters yesterday. "Not only do we feel sorrow for what happened in Qana, but also a determination that it is really important to remove the conditions that led to that."

"This moment of conflict in the Middle East is painful and tragic," Bush said in his radio address Saturday. "Yet it is also a moment of opportunity for broader change in the region. Transforming countries that have suffered decades of tyranny and violence is difficult, and it will take time to achieve. But the consequences will be profound for our country and the world."

At the heart of the crisis for the United States is a broader struggle with Iran for influence in the Middle East, one that arguably has been going on since the Islamic revolution of 1979 and that has escalated during Bush's presidency. The United States not only backs Israel in the current war but also has accelerated weapons delivery to Israel. Hezbollah, on the other hand, has long acted as a surrogate for Iran, and in the past three weeks it has shown off Iranian weapons never before used by the radical group.

"It's really a proxy war between the United States and Iran," said David J. Rothkopf, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and author of "Running the World," a book on U.S. foreign policy. "When viewed in that context, it puts everything in a different light."

The Hezbollah attacks on Israel that touched off the latest conflict came just as international pressure on Iran to give up uranium enrichment had reached a crescendo. Bush aides suspect Iran orchestrated the attacks to distract attention from its nuclear program or to demonstrate the consequences of pushing too hard. "It's tempting to believe that," said a senior official involved in the crisis but not authorized to speak on the record. "Iran spends a very large amount of money on Hezbollah."

The president hopes the crisis will ultimately help him rally world leaders against Iran's nuclear program. Even as the U.N. Security Council today considers a peacekeeping force for Lebanon, it may vote on a U.S.-backed resolution to threaten sanctions if Iran does not suspend uranium enrichment in August.

"There's no question that this is going to stiffen up in the long run the resolve of the Europeans in dealing with Iran," said Henri J. Barkey, a former State Department official who teaches at Lehigh University. "Even if they don't like what Israel is doing," he said, they will recognize that Iran "is a menace."

Others are not so hopeful. Outside the White House, the mood among many foreign policy veterans in Washington is strikingly pessimistic, especially as leaders of Hezbollah and al-Qaeda, traditional rivals based in different Islamic sects, began calling for followers to take the fight to the enemy.

Analysts foresee a muddled outcome at best, in which Hezbollah survives Israel's airstrikes, foreign peacekeepers become bogged down, and U.S. relations with allies are severely strained. At worst, they said, Hezbollah and Iran feel emboldened, Islamic radicalism spreads, and a region smuggling fighters and weapons into Iraq fractures further along sectarian lines.

"What the conflict has exposed in a really clear way is how linked all these issues in the region are to each other," said Mara Rudman, a deputy national security adviser in the Clinton White House now at the liberal Center for American Progress. "The worst-case scenario . . . is a much more radicalized Islamic fundamentalist Middle East and much more isolated Israel and a much more isolated United States and fewer people to talk with."


Haass, the former Bush aide who leads the Council on Foreign Relations, laughed at the president's public optimism. "An opportunity?" Haass said with an incredulous tone. "Lord, spare me. I don't laugh a lot. That's the funniest thing I've heard in a long time. If this is an opportunity, what's Iraq? A once-in-a-lifetime chance?"

In the long run, he and others warn, the situation could cement the perception that the United States is so pro-Israel that a new generation of Arab youth will grow up perceiving Americans as enemies. The internal pressure on friendly governments in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere could force them to distance themselves from Washington or crack down on domestic dissidents to keep power. In either case, Bush may have little leverage to press for democratic reforms.

Jon B. Alterman, a Middle East specialist at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, outlined "not even the worst-case scenario, but a bad-case scenario: South Lebanon is in shambles, Hezbollah gets credit for rebuilding it with Iranian money, Hezbollah grows stronger in Lebanon and it's not brought to heel. The reaction of surrounding states weakens them, radicalism rises, and they respond with more repression. None of this is especially far-fetched. And in all of this, the U.S. is seen as a fundamentally hostile party."

All of this is far too gloomy for administration officials, who see such dire forecasts as the predictable reactions of a foreign policy establishment that has produced decades of meaningless talks, paper peace agreements and unenforced U.N. resolutions that have not solved underlying issues in the Middle East.


"Some of the overheated rhetoric about how the United States can't work with anybody, we've lost our leadership in the world, is just completely ridiculous, and this crisis proves it," said the senior administration official involved in the crisis. "We are really indispensable to solving this crisis, and you're not going to solve this problem merely by passing another resolution."

While the diplomats work, the Pentagon is studying the possible impact on an already-stretched U.S. military. Commanders have diverted the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit and the Iwo Jima Expeditionary Strike Group from a training mission in Jordan where they were available as reserves for Iraq. Now they are on ships in the Mediterranean Sea to help with humanitarian efforts, and another unit has been put on alert as backup for Iraq.

The Pentagon has done contingency planning for U.S. troops participating in a multinational peacekeeping mission, but Bush aides have all but ruled out such a scenario. A more likely option, officials said, would have the United States provide command-and-control and logistics assistance.

Peter W. Rodman, assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, said that officials are studying the possibility of putting troops in Lebanon but that it is too early to comment on what such a force would look like. "The concept is still under development, and discussion of any potential U.S. participation would be premature."

Some analysts acknowledge the varied challenges the United States faces but consider the possible gain worth the risk. "It's a Rubik's Cube. It's very, very difficult to resolve," said Peter Brookes, a former deputy assistant defense secretary under Bush who is now at the conservative Heritage Foundation. "But if we were able to dismantle Hezbollah, that would be very positive for the war on terror."

The White House is acutely aware of the dangers of stirring up anti-American sentiment in the region. "There may be times when people say that they're unhappy with whatever methods we pursue," the White House's Snow said last week. "We are confident that in the long run, people are going to be much happier living in freedom and democracy than, for instance, in nations that are occupied by terrorist organizations that try to hijack a democracy in its formative stages."

Staff writer Josh White contributed to this report
jeffmoskin
2001: "We are all Americans"

2006: "We hate all Americans"
tazvil04
That's a where we are going...

Or maybe where we are...

And that is why we have a security interest in the Middle East which is separate and distinct from that of Israel's...

3,000 Israeli's were not killed on September 11th...

3,000 Americans were...

We have common goals with Israel --- but not identical.

The sooner we communicate that --- the sooner the Arab world understands that --- the better off we will be...
jeffmoskin
'How can we stand by and allow this to go on?'

By Robert Fisk

07/31/06 "The Independent" -- -- They wrote the names of the dead children on their plastic shrouds. "Mehdi Hashem, aged seven - Qana," was written in felt pen on the bag in which the little boy's body lay. "Hussein al-Mohamed, aged 12 - Qana',' "Abbas al-Shalhoub, aged one - Qana.'' And when the Lebanese soldier went to pick up Abbas's little body, it bounced on his shoulder as the boy might have done on his father's shoulder on Saturday. In all, there were 56 corpses brought to the Tyre government hospital and other surgeries, and 34 of them were children. When they ran out of plastic bags, they wrapped the small corpses in carpets. Their hair was matted with dust, most had blood running from their noses.

You must have a heart of stone not to feel the outrage that those of us watching this experienced yesterday. This slaughter was an obscenity, an atrocity - yes, if the Israeli air force truly bombs with the "pinpoint accuracy'' it claims, this was also a war crime. Israel claimed that missiles had been fired by Hizbollah gunmen from the south Lebanese town of Qana - as if that justified this massacre. Israel's Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, talked about "Muslim terror" threatening "western civilisation" - as if the Hizbollah had killed all these poor people.

And in Qana, of all places. For only 10 years ago, this was the scene of another Israeli massacre, the slaughter of 106 Lebanese refugees by an Israeli artillery battery as they sheltered in a UN base in the town. More than half of those 106 were children. Israel later said it had no live-time pilotless photo-reconnaissance aircraft over the scene of that killing - a statement that turned out to be untrue when The Independent discovered videotape showing just such an aircraft over the burning camp. It is as if Qana - whose inhabitants claim that this was the village in which Jesus turned water into wine - has been damned by the world, doomed forever to receive tragedy.

And there was no doubt of the missile which killed all those children yesterday. It came from the United States, and upon a fragment of it was written: "For use on MK-84 Guided Bomb BSU-37-B". No doubt the manufacturers can call it "combat-proven" because it destroyed the entire three-storey house in which the Shalhoub and Hashim families lived. They had taken refuge in the basement from an enormous Israeli bombardment, and that is where most of them died.

I found Nejwah Shalhoub lying in the government hospital in Tyre, her jaw and face bandaged like Robespierre's before his execution. She did not weep, nor did she scream, although the pain was written on her face. Her brother Taisir, who was 46, had been killed. So had her sister Najla. So had her little niece Zeinab, who was just six. "We were in the basement hiding when the bomb exploded at one o'clock in the morning,'' she said. "What in the name of God have we done to deserve this? So many of the dead are children, the old, women. Some of the children were still awake and playing. Why does the world do this to us?"

Yesterday's deaths brought to more than 500 the total civilian dead in Lebanon since Israel's air, sea and land bombardment of the country begun on 12 July after Hizbollah members crossed the frontier wire, killed three Israeli soldiers and captured two others. But yesterday's slaughter ended more than a year of mutual antagonism within the Lebanese government as pro-American and pro-Syrian politicians denounced what they described as "an ugly crime".

Thousands of protesters attacked the largest United Nations building in Beirut, screaming: "Destroy Tel Aviv, destroy Tel Aviv," and Lebanon's Prime Minister, the normally unflappable Fouad Siniora, called US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and ordered her to cancel her imminent peace-making trip to Beirut.

No one in this country can forget how President George Bush, Ms Rice, and Tony Blair have repeatedly refused to call for an immediate ceasefire - a truce that would have saved all those lives yesterday. Ms Rice would say only: "We want a ceasefire as soon as possible,'' a remark followed by an Israeli announcement that it intended to maintain its bombardment of Lebanon for at least another two weeks.

Throughout the day, Qana villagers and civil defence workers dug through the ruins of the building with spades and with their hands, tearing at the muck until they found one body after another still dressed in colourful clothes. In one section of the rubble, they found what was left of a single room with 18 bodies inside. Twelve of the dead were women. All across southern Lebanon now, you find scenes like this, not so grotesque in scale, perhaps, but just as terrible, for the people of these villages are terrified to leave and terrified to stay. The Israelis had dropped leaflets over Qana, ordering its people to leave their homes. Yet twice now since Israel's onslaught began, the Israelis have ordered villagers to leave their houses and then attacked them with aircraft as they obeyed the Israeli instructions and fled. There are at least 3,000 Shia Muslims trapped in villages between Qlaya and Aiteroun - close to the scene of Israel's last military incursion at Bint Jbeil - and yet none of them can leave without fear of dying on the roads.

And Mr Olmert's reaction? After expressing his "great sorrow", he announced that: "We will not stop this battle, despite the difficult incidents [sic] this morning. We will continue the activity, and if necessary it will be broadened without hesitation." But how much further can it be broadened? Lebanon's infrastructure is being steadily torn to pieces, its villages razed, its people more and more terrorised - and terror is the word they used - by Israel's American-made fighter bombers. Hizbollah's missiles are Iranian-made, and it was Hizbollah that started this war with its illegal and provocative raid across the border. But Israel's savagery against the civilian population has deeply shocked not only the Western diplomats who have remained in Beirut, but hundreds of humanitarian workers from the Red Cross and major aid agencies.

Incredibly, Israel yesterday denied safe passage to a UN World Food Programme aid convoy en route to the south, a six-truck mission that should have taken relief supplies to the south-eastern town of Marjayoun. More than three quarters of a million Lebanese have now fled their homes, but there is still no accurate figure for the total number still trapped in the south. Khalil Shalhoub, who survived amid the wreckage in Qana yesterday, said that his family and the Hashims were just too "terrified" to take the road out of the village, which has been attacked by aircraft for more than two weeks. The seven-mile highway between Qana and Tyre is littered with civilian homes in ruins and burnt-out family cars. On Thursday, the Israeli Army's Al-Mashriq radio, which broadcasts into southern Lebanon, told residents that their villages would be "totally destroyed" if missiles were fired from them. But anyone who has watched Israel's bombing these past two weeks knows that, in many cases, the Israelis do not know the location in which the Hizbollah are firing missiles, and - when they do - they frequently miss their targets. How can a villager prevent the Hizbollah from firing rockets from his street? The Hizbollah do take cover beside civilian houses - just as Israeli troops entering Bint Jbeil last week also used civilian homes for cover. But can this be the excuse for slaughter on such a scale?

Mr Siniora addressed foreign diplomats in Beirut yesterday, telling them that the government in Beirut was now only demanding an immediate ceasefire and was not interested any longer in a political package to go with it. Needless to say, Mr Jeffrey Feltman, whose country made the bomb which killed the innocents of Qana yesterday, chose not to attend.

© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article14287.htm
jeffmoskin
I wonder...

What if all the MOTHERS whose children have been killed by this crazy war as well as Arafat's suicide bombers - - Mothers from Israel, Lebanon, Gaza, West Bank - - all met at a two-week conference to hammer out a regional solution to this mes