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The Question that will not be asked
By: Gershon Baskin
Jerusalem Post & Newsbull
August 29, 2006
http://www.newsbull.com/forum/more.asp?TOPIC_ID=36053
The Israeli government will soon decide to appoint a national
investigation commission to investigate Israel’s military and
political failings during the second Lebanese war. The one and
perhaps most important question that the commission will not
even ask is: wasn’t there a way to entirely prevent the eruption
of the war and to still achieve the strategic goals put forth by
the Government?
The Commission will not even ask this question
because it is so beyond the realm of conditioned response in
Israel to military threats and attacks. There is no question that
Israel had a real causus belli in facing Hizbollah after it had
violated Israel’s sovereign border, killed eight soldiers, kidnapped
two others and shot katyusha rockets at the civilian population.
The question is: could Israel have employed political and
diplomatic tools to achieve the same strategic political
objectives that were achieved after more than a month of war?
Israel’s strategic goals were to remove the missile threat of
Hizbollah armaments in the south of Lebanon, to push the Hizbollah combatants north of the Litani river, to stop the rearming of Hizbollah from Syria and Iran, to have the Lebanese army deploy along the Israeli border and to have the international community deploy a more robust and forceful
international presence between Israel and the Hizbollah. All of
these elements were incorporated in UN Security Council
Resolution 1701. All of these are the positive political results of
the war.
The decision to go to war was overwhelmingly supported by the
Israeli public. Almost no one in Israel asked if there was a non-
military way to face the unprovoked attack of Hizbollah and the
real strategic threat that Israel faced since its withdrawal from
Lebanon six years ago.
Israel has confronted real existential threats since its birth in 1948. The legacy of the Holocaust has taught us to maintain a firm defensive offence towards our neighbors in this very volatile and dangerous part of the world.
We have been brought up on the understanding that the Arabs
only understand the language of force and in doing so, we too,
have taught ourselves that force is our own mother tongue as
well. Diplomacy is a tool that remains almost unused in Israel’s
strategic “tool box” when facing threats in the “neighborhood”. If
Israel’s Prime Minister had called the Lebanese Prime Minister
Fouad Siniora after the Hizbollah attack and arranged for a
secret meeting to confront the crisis together, it is likely that
the Sunni leader Saad Hariri, the son of the late Rafik Hariri,
would have joined in and supported steps against Hizbollah. It is
also likely that the Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, who has led a
courageous anti-Syria position in Lebanon, would have supported
moves that would have reined in Hizbollah. There is even a
chance that the Shiite leader of the moderate Amal party, the
Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament Nabi Beri, would have also
supported those moves.
Instead, after going to war in what was interpreted in Lebanon
as a war against the people of Lebanon, Israeli alienated all of
those Lebanese leaders, created an almost united front amongst
Lebanese citizens against Israel and behind Hassan Nasrallah and
the Hizbollah and increased support for Hizbollah throughout the
Muslim and Arab world. Lebanese Prime Minister Siniora and the
Lebanese State are so far turning out the most victorious party
in the aftermath of this war. There is a direct interest for Israel,
the region and the world, that the Government of Lebanon be
strengthened and empowered. This positive development is
mainly because of the courage and leadership of Mr. Sinoira,
despite Israel’s derogatory and insulting comments about him.
The same results could have been achieved without launching a
war and without all of the unnecessary loss of life, the human
suffering and tragedies, and such tremendous physical damage.
Now the war that Mr. Olmert and Mr. Peretz believed would build
the careers and reputations as the first real non-military Israeli
Prime Minister and the non-military Minister of Defense may bring
down their careers to an early end. How unfortunate that the
new non-military leadership of Israel did not adopt non-military
tools and lead Israel and Lebanon to a strategic victory without
employing force.
In Israel, the conclusions of the national investigation
commission will deal with re-arming, military tactics and
strategies and the personal failures of officers and leaders during
the war – all in preparation for the next war. Instead, the
Commission would be wise to ask additional questions concerning
how diplomacy could be used to capitalize on the peaceful
relations already established with Egypt and Jordan in reaching
out to others in the “neighborhood” in order to reduce and
remove strategic threats by converting them into strategic allies.
* Dr. Gershon Baskin is the Co-CEO of IPCRI – the
Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information.
www.ipcri.org
(A.K.)
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