Israel kills another 42 Lebanese civilians
By
Juan Cole
07/18/06 "ICH" -- --
Israel's government killed another 42 Lebanese civilians in
aggressive airstrikes on targets mostly unrelated to Hizbullah
on Monday.
Thousands of innocent Lebanese have been forced from their homes
by the bombings, especially in the South, and have headed up to
Beirut (which the Israelis are also indiscriminately bombing).
Some 100,000 Lebanese have fled to Syria, though Israeli bombing
of roads and bridges has not made it easy for them to get out.
Although, because of widespread Western racism, very few over
here care about these displaced persons,
they face a desperate situation. Roads have been bombed out,
and bridges are gone. Lebanese television reported on numerous
villages bombed. Rescue teams attempting to take an injured
woman to a better hospital with more supplies were blocked when
they found the bridge destroyed.
If the reports coming out of Lebanon can be believed, the
Israelis are only sometimes striking known Hizbullah safe houses
or facilities or missile emplacements. A lot of their
bombardment appears aimed at punishing civilian populations and
forcing them north to Beirut. Such an approach would help
explain the high number of civilian casualties. That is, there
may be an element of ethnic cleansing in Israeli tactics.
The Irish Times reports:
' The civilian toll continued to mount in Lebanon
yesterday as Israeli planes struck dozens of targets. Nine
civilians, including two children, were killed when they
were hit by a missile that struck a bridge in the southern
port city of Sidon . In the southern city of Tyre , rescue
workers pulled nine more bodies from the civil defence
building that was hit on Sunday in an Israeli strike. Close
to 200 civilians have been killed in Lebanon since the
Israeli offensive began last week, when Hizbullah attacked
an Israeli border patrol, killing three soldiers and
capturing two. Five more soldiers were killed when they gave
chase into Lebanon .'
Hizbullah sent rockets on Israel again Monday, with four
hitting Haifa, including a strike that collapsed a building and
injured 11 persons. Since the outbreak of the fighting last
Wednesday, 24 Israelis have been killed, 12 soldiers and 12
civilians.
The Guardian complains that the world leaders again did nothing
on Monday to stop the massive Israeli assault on Lebanon.
I should explain to The Guardian about spheres of influence.
Great Powers have them, and other Great Powers respect them if
they do not want a war. That is why the US did nothing about the
Soviets in Hungary 1956 or in Czechoslovakia in 1968. Soviet
sphere of influence.
The Levant is now a joint US-Israeli sphere of Influence. Egypt
and Jordan both have peace treaties with Israel and are non-NATO
allies of the US. So they won't do more than politely disagree
that Israel's wholesale destruction of Lebanon's infrastructure
is useful. Turkey is part of the joint US-Israeli sphere of
influence, with close military ties to both countries. Iraq is
now working the American training wheels, in Bush's parlance,
and although it has not formally joined the full US-Israeli
sphere of influence, it has no military to speak of and
basically its legs are broken. The Gulf monarchies have more or
less acquiesced in the situation as well.
Syria and Iran are the only two significant dissenters. Syria is
weak and isolated, having been expelled from Lebanon and having
lost its Soviet patron a decade and a half ago. Iran is distant
from the scene and although it might give some rockets and
training to a group like Hizbullah, it does not have a history
of direct military intervention in other countries anyway. The
Lebanese should not hold their breath expecting succor from
either quarter.
The European Powers all ceded the Levant to the US-Israeli
sphere of influence a long time ago. They will not get out ahead
of the US. They mostly deeply dislike the Apartheid policies of
Israel in the Occupied Territories, but they also deeply dislike
and fear Hamas and Hizbullah, having their own large Muslim
populations that they don't want radicalized.
So, basically, the Palestinians and the Lebanese are screwed.
The Lebanese might not have been in such a vulnerable situation
if they had not kicked out the Syrians, though the Syrians were
there in 1982 the last time Israel invaded.
That is why there is terrorism in the Middle East. The Israeli
occupation of the Occupied Territories has been barbaric and
intolerable. It produced Hamas. The Israeli occupation of South
Lebanon was barbaric and intolerable. It produced Hizbullah. A
wise Great Power can walk back such bad situations, as the US
did in Europe and Japan after World War II. Unwise Powers get
stuck with the Tar Baby.
But terrorism is a weapon of the weak and should not be
over-estimated as a deterrent for Great Powers. Mostly they see
it as a cost of doing business, and even where the Powers suffer
from it, it has the advantage of rallying home populations
behind militaristic policies.
At some point the Europeans may find a way to step in. The
elements of an eventual resolution of the current Israeli war on
Lebanon are becoming clear in international diplomacy.
Italian PM Romano Prodi of Italy is already thinking about how
to round up 10,000 UN peacekeepers to insert in the Lebanese
south as a buffer between the Israeli army and Hizbullah.
Russia agrees and is willing to participate.
Chirac and Blair are also on board with this plan, which
will go to the UNSC from the G8 summit.
My advice: don't send the blue helmets unless you authorize them
to shoot back when attacked.
On the other hand, the Irish Times report above says that
Israeli officials reject a UN deployment and insist instead that
the Lebanese army must be stationed along the border.
It is probably the Olmert government's hope that this posting
will set the Lebanese army against Hizbullah, producing
intra-Lebanese fighting that serves Israeli interests.
Israel, however, does not always get its way. We'll see.
Peacekeeping is a ways off. The Israelis will fight their war
first.