Jewish World Review July
18, 2006 / 22 Tamuz, 5766
The writer, for more than a year, warned about the inevitability
of the scenario now playing itself out. But she never thought that she'd
get caught in the middle of it
Northern Israel is a vacationer's paradise. From hiking trails to walk
on, to rivers to swim in, to luxury hotels to bask in, to mystical sites
to seek inspiration from, it has something for everyone. This is why, when
last week I took my first vacation in four years, I made my way to the
North.
As Hizbullah attacked an IDF patrol on the Lebanese border Wednesday
morning and so opened its newest round of war, I was standing at the fortress
of Megiddo looking at the ruins of civilizations and their wars for this
land stretching back 5,000 years. Thursday found me in Nahariya walking
on a battlefield of the current war: the street where two hours earlier
Monica Seidman was killed by a Katyusha while sitting on her balcony drinking
her morning coffee.
After I left Nahariya with its residents huddled in bomb shelters and
stairwells of apartment buildings, I headed west along the border highway
to Kiryat Shemona. As I drove along the empty, beautiful, mountain road
and gazed at the rocket smoke buffeting upwards from Mt. Meron, Safed,
and Rosh Pinna below me, commentators on the radio kept asking, "Why is
Hizbullah attacking Israel now?" Former generals spoke of the need for
Israel to restore our deterrence against Hizbullah.
FOR SIX years, since Ehud Barak surrendered to the demands of the radical,
EU-funded Israeli Left and withdrew IDF forces from southern Lebanon in
May 2000, Israel stood by and did nothing as Hizbullah built up its massive
arsenal of rockets and missiles. The IDF did nothing as Iran effectively
set up shop along the border.
All day Thursday Lebanese radio stations played military marches. Announcers
made repeated statements invoking Allah, Lebanon, mujahadin and jihad.
Clearly, they were thrilled that the long anticipated war had begun.
For six years Israel was deterred by Hizbullah. The knowledge that the
Iranian proxy has missiles capable of hitting Haifa and Hadera sufficed
to convince three successive governments to ignore or appease repeated
Hizbullah provocations while praying that Hizbullah would wait for the
next government to start its war.
Now that Hizbullah has started the war, can it be deterred from continuing
to attack Israel? What can Israel do now, as more than one million Israelis
live in areas that have already come under attack?
Hizbullah struck last week because Iran ordered it to attack. Immediately
after the Iranian delegation rejected the European-American offer of all
manner of goodies in exchange for a suspension of its uranium enrichment
activities, they flew to Damascus and gave Hizbullah its marching orders.
Hizbullah is always ready to attack Israel. That is what it exists to
do. As its leader Hassan Nasrallah makes clear every day, Hizbullah sees
the destruction of Israel as a central battle in the global jihad. And
jihad is all that matters to Hizbullah.
In this, Hizbullah is no different from Hamas. Hamas (and Fatah for
that matter), defines itself by its goal of destroying Israel and conquering
Jerusalem in the name of jihad. Both Hamas and Fatah have used all their
resources to build up their political, social and military capabilities
to fight Israel.
Because these groups exist only to destroy Israel and advance the cause
of global jihad, they cannot be deterred. They have no interest other than
war and there is nothing they are not willing to sacrifice in order to
win. Since they cannot be deterred, the only thing that Israel can do is
destroy their ability to fight by demolishing their military capabilities.
ALTHOUGH IT is impossible to deter Hizbullah, there are parties in
the current conflict that can be deterred. Specifically, Israeli officials
have rightly pointed their fingers at the Lebanese and Syrian governments
as central enablers of Hizbullah. Although both governments are also Iranian
proxies, unlike Hizbullah and Hamas, they have interests beyond the destruction
of Israel and therefore, they can be deterred. To date, because Lebanon
is weaker than Hizbullah, Iran and Syria, successive Lebanese governments
have cooperated with Hizbullah rather than fight it.
The Lebanese army cannot disarm Hizbullah. It can however be deterred
from assisting Hizbullah. If Israel is able to credibly assert to the Lebanese
that IDF forces will not end their operations in Lebanon until Hizbullah
is completely destroyed as a fighting force, then it can persuade the Lebanese
government to stay out of the conflict and deploy its military along the
border with Israel after the fighting is ended.
Syria too has interests unrelated to Israel. Bashar Assad wants to maintain
his grip on power. Israel can weaken Syria's bond with Iran by threatening
his regime. In the first instance, this should involve targeting Hamas
headquarters and Hamas chief Khaled Mashal's home in Damascus.
By targeting Hamas in Syria, Israel would be making clear that national
borders are not sacred for states that sponsor terrorism. If attacking
Hamas in Damascus is not enough to make Assad recalibrate his national
interests, then Israel should attack the headquarters of the regime's secret
police as well as Syria's Scud missile bases and its chemical and biological
weapons arsenals.
By destroying Hizbullah and peeling away its client states, Israel would
be striking a serious blow at Iran which is directing all the violence
in Lebanon and Gaza as well as in Judea and Samaria and Iraq. Iran has
made destroying Israel a central plank on its agenda because by attacking
the hated Jews, Iran is successfully raising its stature as the leader
of the Muslim world. By leading the war against Israel, Iran has rendered
itself immune to attacks from Arab states like Saudi Arabia and Egypt that,
while objecting to Iran's power grab, cannot condemn aggression against
the same Israel they have indoctrinated their people to despise.
Iran's proxy war against Israel follows the same strategy as its proxy
war against the US in Iraq. In both cases its goal is to defeat its enemies
through a prolonged war of attrition that will defeat the will of the Israeli
and American people to fight to victory.
GIVEN THE diverse interests of all the parties involved in the current
war against Israel, the Olmert government rightly defined Israel's objectives
as destroying Hizbullah as a fighting force and compelling the Lebanese
army to deploy along the border with Israel after Hizbullah is routed.
But is the Olmert government capable of achieving its stated objectives?
Disturbingly, several indicators lead to the conclusion that to the
contrary, the government does not have the will to accomplish its declared
goals. First, by Sunday evening, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was signaling
that he was ready to start negotiating a cease-fire through UN or EU intermediaries.
Since both the UN and the EU are organizations dedicated to ensuring
the survival of organizations like Hizbullah and Hamas, Olmert's willingness
to use these groups as intermediaries exposes his willingness to stop far
short of destroying Hizbullah.
Second, Olmert's strategy in the south against Hamas and Fatah in Gaza
shows that he does not understand that Israel's terrorist adversaries are
by their nature undeterrable. When Saturday Palestinian forces blew a hole
in the wall separating Gaza from Egypt and so enabled hundreds of terrorist
to pour across the border, they made quite clear that they have not been
impressed by Israel's military actions in Gaza. Indeed, Israel's continued
support for Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas in spite of his group's intense
collaboration with Hamas both in the guerrilla raid that led to Cpl. Gilad
Shalit's capture, and in the rocket offensive against the Western Negev
is a clear indication that Israel is not serious about destroying its terrorist
enemies.
Third, the Olmert government's continued insistence on going forward
with its plan to retreat from Judea and Samaria and partition Jerusalem
indicates that the premier has not accepted the now obvious fact that Israeli
withdrawals strengthen our enemies. Since the central policy of the government
contradicts its stated objective of denying operating bases to terrorists,
it is difficult to see how the government will muster the necessary enthusiasm
to see its campaign in Lebanon to a successful conclusion.
FINALLY, THE fact that the government has limited the IDF campaign
in Lebanon to aerial bombardment indicates that it is not willing to take
the necessary actions to secure the country from Iranian-Hizbullah attacks.
The IDF campaign recalls the NATO bombing campaign against Kosovo and Serbia
in 1999. Yet the situation on the ground in Lebanon is more analogous to
the situation in Afghanistan in 2001. It was possible to limit the campaign
in Kosovo to aerial bombardment because the Serbian government was deterrable.
Yet, like the Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan, Hizbullah is not open
to persuasion and so must be destroyed utterly. This can only be accomplished
with ground forces.
As my interrupted vacation proved, by retreating from Lebanon and Gaza,
Israel effectively surrendered the initiative for waging war to its enemies.
Israelis no longer control when war comes to us. It is therefore imperative
that the Olmert government understand that retreat is not an option. Otherwise,
whether at work or at play, at home or on the town, we will all be sitting
ducks.
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