After Lebanon, Israel is Looking for More Wars
by Jonathan Cook
www.dissidentvoice.org
August 21, 2006

Late last month, a fortnight into Israel's war 
against Lebanon, the Hebrew media published a 
story that passed observers by. Scientists in 
Haifa, according to the report, have developed a 
"missile-trapping" steel net that can shield 
buildings from rocket attacks. The Israeli 
government, it noted, would be able to use the net 
to protect vital infrastructure -- oil refineries, 
hospitals, military installations, and public 
offices -- while private citizens could buy a net 
to protect their own homes.
The fact that the government and scientists are 
seriously investing their hopes in such schemes 
tells us more about Israel's vision of the "new 
Middle East" than acres of analysis.

Israel regards the "home front" -- its civilian 
population -- as its Achilles' heel in the army's 
oppression of the Palestinians in the occupied 
territories, its intermittent invasions of south 
Lebanon, and its planned attacks further afield. 
The military needs the unconditional support of 
the country's citizenry and media to sanction its 
unremitting aggression against Israel's "enemies," 
but fears that the resolve of the home front is 
vulnerable to the threat posed by rockets landing 
in Israel, whether the home-made Qassams fired by 
Palestinians over the walls of their prison in 
Gaza or the Katyushas launched by Hizbullah from 
Lebanon.

Certainly Israel's leaders are not ready to 
examine the reasons for the rocket menace -- or to 
search for solutions other than of the 
missile-catching variety.
The bloody nose Israel received in south Lebanon 
has not shaken its leaders' confidence in their 
restless militarism. If anything, their 
humiliation has given them cause to pursue their 
adventures more vigorously in an attempt to 
reassert the myth of Israeli invincibility, to 
distract domestic attention from Israel's defeat 
at the hands of Hizbullah, and to prove the 
Israeli army's continuing usefulness to its 
generous American benefactor.

If Israel's soldiers ever leave south Lebanon, 
expect a rapid return to the situation before the 
war of almost daily violations of Lebanese 
airspace by its warplanes and spy drones, plus air 
strikes to "rein in" Hizbullah and regular 
attempts on its leader Hassan Nasrallah's life. 
Expect more buzzing by the same warplanes of 
President Bashar al-Assad's palace in Damascus, 
assassination attempts against Hamas 
leader-in-exile Khaled Meshal and attacks on 
Hizbullah "supply lines" in Syria. Expect more 
apocalyptic warnings, and worse, to Iran over its 
assumed attempt to join Israel in the exclusive 
club of nuclear armed states. And, of course, 
expect many more attacks by ground and air of Gaza 
and the West Bank, with the inevitable devastating 
toll on Palestinian lives.

Despite its comeuppance in Lebanon, Israel is not 
planning to reconfigure its relationship with its 
neighbors. It is not seeking a new Middle East in 
which it will have to endure the same birth pangs 
as the "Arabs." It does not want to engage in a 
peace process that might force it to restore, in 
more than appearance, the occupied territories to 
the Palestinians. Instead it is preparing for more 
asymmetrical warfare -- aerial bombardments of the 
kind so beloved by American arms manufacturers.

The weekend's swift-moving events should be 
interpreted in this light. Israel, as might have 
been expected, was the first to break the United 
Nations ceasefire on Saturday when its commandoes 
attacked Hizbullah positions near Baalbek in 
northeast Lebanon, including air strikes on roads 
and bridges. It was not surprising that this gross 
violation of the ceasefire passed with little more 
than a murmur of condemnation. The UN's Terje 
Roed-Larsen referred to it as an "unwelcome 
development" and "unhelpful." The UN peacekeeping 
force in Lebanon, UNIFIL, whose current job it is 
to monitor the ceasefire, refused to comment, 
saying the attack occurred outside the area of its 
jurisdiction -- an implicit admission of how grave 
a violation it really was.

Meanwhile in the media, the Associated Press 
called the military assault "a bold operation," 
and BBC World described it as a "raid" and the 
ensuing firefight between Israeli troops and 
Hizbullah as "clashes." Much later in its reports, 
the BBC noted that it was also a "serious breach" 
of the ceasefire, neglecting to mention who was 
responsible for the violation. That may have been 
because the BBC's report was immediately followed 
by Israeli spokesman Mark Regev accusing 
Hizbullah, not Israel, of violating the ceasefire. 
Predictably he accused Hizbullah of receiving 
transfers of weapons that the Israeli army 
operation was supposedly designed to foil.
In fact, this was no simple "clash" during an 
intelligence-gathering mission, as early reports 
in the Israeli media made clear before the 
official story was established. Israeli special 
forces launched the covert operation to capture a 
Hizbullah leader, Sheikh Mohammed Yazbak, way 
beyond the Litani River, the northern extent of 
Israel's supposed "buffer zone." The hit squad 
were disguised not only as Arabs -- a regular ploy 
by units called "mistarvim" -- but as Lebanese 
soldiers driving in Lebanese army vehicles. When 
their cover was blown, Hizbullah opened fire, 
killing one Israeli and wounding two more in a 
fierce gun battle.

(It is worth noting that, according to the later 
official version, Israel's elite forces were 
exposed only as they completed their intelligence 
work and were returning home. Why would Israel be 
using special forces, apparently in a 
non-belligerent fashion, in a dangerous ground 
operation when shipments of weapons crossing from 
Syria can easily be spotted by Israel's spy drones 
and its warplanes?)

It is difficult to see how this operation could be 
characterized as "defensive" except in the 
Orwellian language employed by Israel's army -- 
which, after all, is misleadingly known as the 
Israel Defense Forces. UN Resolution 1701, the 
legal basis of the ceasefire, calls on Israel to 
halt "all offensive military operations". How much 
more offensive could the operation be?

But, more significantly, what is Israel's 
intention towards the United Nation's ceasefire 
when it chooses to violate it not only by 
assaulting Hizbullah positions in an area outside 
the "buffer zone" it has invaded but also then 
implicates the Lebanese army in the attack? Is 
there not a danger that Hizbullah fighters may now 
fire on Lebanese troops fearing that they are 
undercover Israeli soldiers? Does Israel's deceit 
not further weaken the standing of the Lebanese 
army, which under Resolution 1701 is supposed to 
be policing south Lebanon on Israel's behalf? 
Could reluctance on the part of Lebanon's army to 
engage Hizbullah as a result not potentially 
provide an excuse for Israel to renew hostilities? 
And what would have been said had Israel launched 
the same operation disguised as UN peacekeepers, 
the international force arriving to augment the 
Lebanese soldiers already in the area? These 
questions need urgent answers but, as usual, they 
were not raised by diplomats or the media.

On the same day, the Israeli army also launched 
another "raid," this time in Ramallah in the West 
Bank. There they "arrested," in the media's 
continuing complicity in the corrupted language of 
occupation, the Palestinians' deputy prime 
minister. His "offence" is belonging to the 
political wing of Hamas, the party democratically 
elected by the Palestinian people earlier this 
year to run their government in defiance of 
Israeli wishes. Even the Israeli daily Haaretz 
newspaper characterized Nasser Shaer as a 
"relative moderate" -- the "relative" presumably a 
reference, in Israeli eyes, to the fact that he 
belongs to Hamas. Shaer had only avoided the fate 
of other captured Hamas cabinet ministers and 
legislators by hiding for the past six weeks from 
the army -- a fitting metaphor for the fate of a 
fledgling Palestinian democracy under the jackboot 
of Israeli oppression.

A leading legislator from the rival Fatah party, 
Saeb Erekat, pointed out the obvious: that the 
seizure of half the cabinet was making it 
impossible for Fatah, led by President Mahmoud 
Abbas, to negotiate with Hamas over joining a 
government of national unity. Such a coalition 
might offer the Palestinians a desperately needed 
route out of their international isolation and 
prepare the path for negotiations with Israel on 
future withdrawals from occupied Palestinian 
territory. Israel's interest in stifling such a 
government, therefore, speaks for itself. And 
ordinary Israelis still wonder why the 
Palestinians fire their makeshift rockets into 
Israel. Duh!

On the diplomatic front, Israel's ambassador to 
the UN, Dan Gillerman, rejected out of hand a 
peace initiative from the Arab League that it 
hopes to bring before the Security Council next 
month. The Arab League proposal follows a similar 
attempt at a comprehensive peace plan by the Arab 
states, led by Saudi Arabia in 2002 that was also 
instantly brushed aside by Israel. On this 
occasion, Gillerman claimed there was no point in 
a new peace process; Israel, he said, wanted to 
concentrate on disarming Hizbullah under UN 
Resolution 1701. Presumably that means more 
provocative "raids," like the one on Saturday, in 
violation of the ceasefire.

Where does all this "defensive" Israeli activity 
leave us? Answer: on the verge of more war and 
carnage, whether inflicted on the Palestinians, on 
Lebanon, on Syria, on Iran, or on all of them. 
Iran's head of the army warned on Saturday that he 
was preparing for an attack by Israel. Probably a 
wise assumption on his part, especially as US 
officials were suggesting at the weekend that the 
UN Security Council is about to adopt sanctions 
that will include military force to stop Iran's 
assumed nuclear ambitions.

In fact, Israel looks ready to pick a fight with 
just about anyone in its neighborhood whose 
complicity in the White House's new Middle East 
has not already been assured, either like Jordan 
and Egypt by the monthly paychecks direct from 
Washington, or like Saudi Arabia and the Gulf 
states by the cash-guzzling pipelines bringing oil 
to the West. The official enemies -- those who 
refuse to prostrate themselves before Western oil 
interests and Israeli regional hegemony -- must be 
brought to their knees just as Iraq already has 
been.

What will these wars achieve? That is the hardest 
question to answer, because every possible outcome 
appears to spell catastrophe for the region, 
including for Israel, and ultimately for the West. 
If Israel received a bloody nose from a month of 
taking on a few thousand Hizbullah fighters on 
their home turf, what can the combined might of 
Israel and the US hope to achieve in a 
battleground that drags in the whole Middle East? 
How will Israel survive in a region torn apart by 
war, by a new Shiite ascendancy that makes the old 
colonially devised mosaic of Arab states redundant 
and by the consequent tectonic shifts in identity 
and borders?

President Bush observed at the weekend that, 
although it may look like Hizbullah won the war 
with Israel, it will take time to see who is the 
true victor. He may be right, but it is hard to 
believe that either Israel or the United States 
can build a missile-catching net big enough to 
withstand the fall-out from the looming war.

Jonathan Cook, a British journalist living in 
Nazareth, is the author of Blood and Religion: The 
Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State, to 
be published next month by Pluto Press. His 
website is: http://www.jkcook.net/.