'If our Prime Minister is crying, what are we to do?'
By Robert Fisk in Beirut:
07/17/06 "The
Independent" -- -- You could see the Israeli missiles
coming through the clouds of smoke, hurtling like thunderbolts into
the apartment blocks of Ghobeiri, the crack of the explosions so
loud that my ears are still singing hours later as I write this
report.
Yes, I suppose you could call this a "terrorist" target, for here in
these mean, fearful streets is - or rather was - the Hizbollah
headquarters. Even the movement's propaganda television station, Al-Manar,
lay a pancaked ruin in the street, its broadcasts still being
transmitted from the station's bunker beneath the rubble. But what
of the tens of thousands of people who live here?
The few who were not lying in their basements ran shrieking through
the streets - not gunmen, but women with screaming children,
families holding suitcases, desperate to leave the heaps of broken
buildings, entire apartment blocks smashed to bits, the roadways
covered in smashed balconies and torn electrical wires. "You don't
have to help the resistance," Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, the Hizbollah
leader, told the Lebanese on television last night. "The resistance
is on the front line and the Lebanese are behind them."
Untrue, of course. It is the Lebanese - and their 140 dead, almost
all civilians - who are also on the front line. In Israel, 24 have
been killed, 15 of them civilians. So the exchange rate for death in
this filthy war is now approximately one Israeli to five Lebanese.
So many Lebanese have now fled Beirut for Tripoli in the north of
Lebanon, or for the Bekaa Valley in the east - or to Syria - that
Beirut, where one and a half million people live, is a ghost city,
its remaining residents sitting in their homes amid the hopelessness
of all those who believed that this country was at last emerging
from the shadows of its 15-year civil war. It was Nasrallah who said
that there are "more surprises to come", and the Lebanese fear that
the Israelis, too, have some more surprises for them.
I watched one of these from my sea-front balcony at dusk on
Saturday, an American-made Apache helicopter turning three times
over the Mediterranean before firing a single missile - perfectly
visible, with smoke pouring from the tail - that smacked into
Beirut's brand new lighthouse on the Corniche in a cloud of brown
muck. So what was this for? Another "terrorist" target, I suppose.
Like the gas stations bombed in the Bekaa Valley. Like the convoy of
20 civilians incinerated in an Israeli air-raid on Saturday after
being ordered - by the Israelis themselves - to leave their home
village on the border.
Last night, Hizbollah's missiles - after killing 10 Israelis in
Haifa - were falling on the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, setting
the forests alight, and on the Israeli city of Acre. The Syrians
warned of an "unlimited" response if Israel attacked them - the
Israelis have been saying, untruthfully, that Syrian troops and
Iranians are present in Lebanon, helping Hizbollah in their battle -
and the preposterous response of the G8 summit was greeted with
despair. Tony Blair, who is now also, it seems, the Minister of Root
Causes, believes Syria and Iran are behind the original Hizbollah
attack. He is right. But it is to Damascus that the West will have
to go to switch this dirty war off.
Certainly, the powerless Lebanese Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora,
cannot do so. With his government accused by Israel of
responsibility for Wednesday's capture of two Israeli soldiers - a
claim as preposterous as it is wrong - he went on television in
tears to appeal to the United Nations to arrange a ceasefire for his
"disaster-stricken nation". The Lebanese appreciated the tears, but
those tears are unlikely to have had President Bush shaking in his
boots. Churchill in 1940, Siniora - a sincere and good man,
uncorrupted by Lebanese politics - is not. "If our Prime Minister is
crying," one Lebanese woman astutely pointed out to me yesterday, "
what is the civilian population of our country supposed to do?"
But where are the other supposed political titans of Lebanon? What
is Saad Hariri, son of the assassinated ex-prime minister Rafiq
Hariri - who rebuilt the Lebanon which Israel is now destroying -
doing in Kuwait, chatting to the Kuwaitis about his country's
predicament? The Kuwaiti army is scarcely going to come to defend
Lebanon. Why isn't Hariri the son on his private jet to the G8
summit in St Petersburg to demand of President Bush that he protect
the democratically-elected government and the nation he praised for
its "cedar revolution" last year? Or doesn't democracy matter when
Israel is smashing Lebanon? Answer: no, it doesn't.
UN Security Council Resolution 1559 demanded a Syrian retreat from
Lebanon - which was accomplished - but it also demanded the
disarming of Hizbollah, which was definitely not accomplished. Many
here suspected that 1559, designed by the French and the Americans,
was intended to weaken Lebanon and prepare it for a peace treaty
with Israel. Well, not any more. It was the Lebanese President,
Emile Lahoud, who still cravenly follows Syria's line - he is, after
all, Syria's man - who said yesterday that Lebanon "will never
surrender". Lahoud as Churchill. There is something obscene here.
Nasrallah, meanwhile, told the Israelis that: "If you do not want to
play by rules, we can do the same." It was a grim little threat that
was obviously meant to counter Ehud Olmert's equally grim little
threat that there would be "far-reaching consequences" for the
missile attack on Haifa. Nasrallah's televised argument - that
Hizbollah originally wished to confine all casualties to the
military - will not wash with Israel, but may encourage those many
Lebanese who were originally outraged by Hizbollah's attack across
the border on Wednesday, only to be silenced by the cruelty of
Israel's response.
"This is the last struggle of the 'umma'," Nasrallah said, the "
umma" being the Arab "homeland". Alas, that is what the Arab leaders
said when they joined Lawrence of Arabia's battle against the
Ottoman empire in the First World War. It is always the "last
struggle" .
The weapons of war
Fajr-3 missile
An Iranian-built rocket with range of 45km which can carry a 45kg
warhead. Israel accused Hizbollah of firing 240mm Fajr-3 missiles
against Haifa. Iran denies supplying the missiles to Hizbollah
Fajr-5 rocket
Longer-range version of Fajr-3 that can strike targets up to 72km
away
Raad missile
Iranian-built missile with range of 120km. Could reach central
Israel. Israelis accused Hizbollah of firing Raad ("Thunder")
missiles yesterday. Hizbollah said last week it had fired Raad for
the first time
Katyusha
Previously the Hizbollah missile of choice, the Russian-designed
Katyushas have a range of 22km and variable accuracy. Israel accused
Syria of supplying Hizbollah with a longer-range model
Kassem
Rockets with range of up to 10km, used by Hamas guerrillas in
Palestinian-ruled Gaza. Israeli town of Sderot has been a frequent
target of the notoriously inaccurate missiles
F-16 fighter
The US-made "fighting Falcon" is a multi-role fighter which has been
dropping quarter-ton bombs on targets in Lebanon
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited