In the face of Bush's lies, it's left to Assad to tell the truth
By Robert Fisk
08/16/06 "The
Independent" -- -- In the sparse Baathist drawing
rooms of Damascus, reality often seems a long way away. But it was a
sign of the times that President Bashar al-Assad was able to bring
the great and the good of Damascus to their feet by the simple token
of telling the truth - which no other Arab leader has chosen to do
these past five weeks: that the Lebanese Hizbollah guerrilla army
has, in effect, won this round of their war with Israel.
There was plenty of hyperbole in the Assad speech. A conflict that
has cost 1,000 Lebanese civilian lives can hardly be called a
"glorious battle" but he did at least reflect more reality than his
opposite number in Washington who, driven by self-delusion or his
love of Israel, claimed that Hizbollah had been defeated in Lebanon.
Israel's "victory" in Lebanon presumably has to be added to our own
famous "victories" in Iraq and Afghanistan. Syria and Iran,
according to Mr Bush, were responsible for the "suffering" of
Lebanon - which contains the seeds of truth since Hizbollah provoked
this war by capturing two Israeli soldiers and killing three others
on 12 July - although it wasn't the Syrian or Iranian air force that
was slaughtering the convoys of innocent refugee civilians in
Lebanon. So it was that President Assad must have enjoyed his little
peroration in Damascus yesterday.
"This is a [American] administration that adopts the principle of
pre-emptive war that is absolutely contradictory to the principle of
peace," he said. "Consequently, we don't accept peace soon or in the
foreseeable future."
Mr Assad can say that again. Indeed, there is no more sign that
Hizbollah intends to "disarm" under the terms of UN Security Council
resolutions 1559 and 1701 than Israel is prepared to abide by UN
Security Council Resolution 242 and withdraw from Arab territories
it occupied in 1967.
However, it is clear that President Assad now sees himself back at
the centre of Arab power after his army's humiliating retreat from
Lebanon last year. There was no more need for defeatism among Arabs,
he said - a sentiment widely held in the real Arab world but quite
absent from President Bush's fantasy Middle East.
That it should be Syria, of all nations, which can state this to so
much applause probably says more about Washington than it does about
Damascus. And it is, of course, the return of the Israeli-occupied
Syrian Golan Heights - see UN Resolution 242 - that lies behind this
whole disastrous war.
The truth is Israel opened its attack on Lebanon by claiming the
Lebanese government was responsible for Hizbollah's attack - which
it clearly was not - and that its military actions would achieve the
liberation of the captured soldiers.
This, the Israelis have signally failed to do. The loss of 40
soldiers in just 36 hours and the successful Hizbollah attacks
against Israeli armour in Lebanon were a disaster for the Israeli
army.
The fact that Syria could bellow about the "achievements" of
Hizbollah while avoiding the destruction of a blade of grass inside
Syria suggests a cynicism that has yet to be grasped inside the Arab
world. But for now, Syria has won.
Iran, as Hizbollah's principal supporter, clearly thinks so too.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who usually talks far more than he
thinks, condemned the US for supplying Israel with the weapons it
used on Lebanese civilians - perfectly true. But he did not say
Hizbollah's missiles come from a new-generation Iranian arsenal that
did not even exist during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. While the US
will be keen to assess the effectiveness of its weapons - albeit
largely used on civilians - no one should doubt that Iran will also
be assessing the success of its new Fajr missiles - and their effect
on the Israeli army.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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