From Mania to
DepressionBy Uri
Avnery
08/17/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- --
Tel Aviv.
--- Thirty
three days of war. The longest of our wars since 1949.
On the Israeli side: 154
dead--117 of them soldiers. 3970 rockets launched against us, 37
civilians dead, more than 422 civilians wounded.
On the Lebanese side: about a
thousand dead civilians, thousands wounded. An unknown number of
Hizbullah fighters dead and wounded.
More than a million refugees on
both sides.
So what has been achieved for
this terrible price?
"GLOOMY, HUMBLE, despondent,"
was how the journalist Yossef Werter described Ehud Olmert, a
few hours after the cease-fire had come into effect.
Olmert? Humble? Is this the same
Olmert we know? The same Olmert who thumped the table and
shouted: "No more!" Who said: "After the war, the situation will
be completely different than before!" Who promised a "New Middle
East" as a result of the war?
THE RESULTS of the war are
obvious:
* The prisoners, who served
as casus belli (or pretext) for the war, have not been
released. They will come back only as a result of an
exchange of prisoners, exactly as Hassan Nasrallah proposed
before the war.
* Hizbullah has remained as
it was. It has not been destroyed, nor disarmed, nor even
removed from where it was. Its fighters have proved
themselves in battle and have even garnered compliments from
Israeli soldiers. Its command and communication stucture has
continued to function to the end. Its TV station is still
broadcasting.
* Hassan Nasrallah is alive
and kicking. Persistent attempts to kill him failed. His
prestige is sky-high. Everywhere in the Arab world, from
Morocco to Iraq, songs are being composed in his honor and
his picture adorns the walls.
* The Lebanese army will be
deployed along the border, side by side with a large
international force. That is the only material change that
has been achieved.
This will not replace Hizbullah.
Hizbullah will remain in the area, in every village and town.
The Israeli army has not succeeded in removing it from one
single village. That was simply impossible without permanently
removing the population to which it belongs.
The Lebanese army and the
international force cannot and will not confront Hizbullah.
Their very presence there depends on Hizbullah's consent. In
practice, a kind of co-existence of the three forces will come
into being, each one knowing that it has to come to terms with
the other two.
Perhaps the international force
will be able to prevent incursions by Hizbullah, such as the one
that preceded this war. But it will also have to prevent Israeli
actions, such as the reconnaissance flights of our Air Force
over Lebanon. That's why the Israeli army objected, at the
beginning, so strenuously to the introduction of this force.
IN ISRAEL, there is now a
general atmosphere of disappointment and despondency. From mania
to depression. It's not only that the politicians and the
generals are firing accusations at each other, as we foresaw,
but the general public is also voicing criticism from every
possible angle. The soldiers criticize the conduct of the war,
the reserve soldiers gripe about the chaos and the failure of
supplies.
In all parties, there are new
opposition groupings and threats of splits. In Kadima. In Labor.
It seems that in Meretz, too, there is a lot of ferment, because
most of its leaders supported the war dragon almost until the
last moment, when they caught its tail and pierced it with their
little lance.
At the head of the critics are
marching--surprise, surprise--the media. The entire horde of
interviewers and commentators, correspondents and presstitutes,
who (with very few exceptions) enthused about the war, who
deceived, misled, falsified, ignored, duped and lied for the
fatherland, who stifled all criticism and branded as traitors
all who opposed the war--they are now running ahead of the lynch
mob. How predictable, how ugly. Suddenly they remember what we
have been saying right from the beginning of the war.
This phase is symbolized by Dan
Halutz, the Chief-of-Staff. Only yesterday he was the hero of
the masses, it was forbidden to utter a word against him. Now he
is being described as a war profiteer. A moment before sending
his soldiers into battle, he found the time to sell his shares,
in expectation of a decline of the stock market. (Let us hope
that a moment before the end he found the time to buy them back
again.)
Victory, as is well known, has
many fathers, and failure in war is an orphan.
FROM THE deluge of accusations
and gripes, one slogan stands out , a slogan that must send a
cold shiver down the spine of anyone with a good memory: "the
politicians did not let the army win."
Exactly as I wrote two weeks
ago, we see before our very eyes the resurrection of the old cry
"they stabbed the army in the back!"
This is how it goes: At long
last, two days before the end, the land offensive started to
roll. Thanks to our heroic soldiers, the men of the reserves, it
was a dazzling success. And then, when we were on the verge of a
great victory, the cease-fire came into effect.
There is not a single word of
truth in this. This operation, which was planned and which the
army spent years training for, was not carried out earlier,
because it was clear that it would not bring any meaningful
gains but would be costly in lives. The army would, indeed, have
occupied wide areas, but without being able to dislodge the
Hizbullah fighters from them.
The town of Bint Jbeil, for
example, right next to the border, was taken by the army three
times, and the Hizbullah fighters remained there to the end. If
we had occupied 20 towns and villages like this one, the
soldiers and the tanks would have been exposed in twenty places
to the mortal attacks of the guerillas with their highly
effective anti-tank weapons.
If so, why was it decided, at
the last moment, to carry out this operation after all--well
after the UN had already called for an end to hostilities? The
horrific answer: it was a cynical--not to say vile--exercise of
the failed trio. Olmert, Peretz and Halutz wanted to create "a
picture of victory", as was openly stated in the media. On this
altar the lives of 33 soldiers (including a young woman) were
sacrificed.
The aim was to photograph the
victorious soldiers on the bank of the Litani. The operation
could only last 48 hours, when the cease-fire would come into
force. In spite of the fact that the army used helicopters to
land the troops, the aim was not attained. At no point did the
army reach the Litani.
For comparison: in the first
Lebanon war, that of Sharon in 1982, the army crossed the Litani
in the first few hours. (The Litani, by the way, is not a real
river anymore, but just a shallow creek. Most of its waters are
drawn off far from there, in the north. Its last stretch is
about 25 km distant from the border, near Metulla the distance
is only 4 km.)
This time, when the cease-fire
took effect, all the units taking part had reached villages on
the way to the river. There they became sitting ducks,
surrounded by Hizbullah fighters, without secure supply lines.
From that moment on, the army had only one aim: to get them out
of there as quickly as possible, regardless of who might take
their place.
If a commission of inquiry is
set up--as it must be--and investigates all the moves of this
war, starting from the way the decision to start it was made, it
will also have to investigate the decision to start this last
operation. The death of 33 soldiers (including the son of the
writer David Grossman, who had supported the war) and the pain
this caused their families demand that!
BUT THESE facts are not yet
clear to the general public. The brain-washing by the military
commentators and the ex-generals, who dominated the media at the
time, has turned the foolish--I would almost say
"criminal"--operation into a rousing victory parade. The
decision of the political leadership to stop it is now being
seen by many as an act of defeatist, spineless, corrupt and even
treasonous politicians.
And that is exactly the new
slogan of the fascist Right that is now raising its ugly head.
After World War I, in similar
circumstances, the legend of the "knife in the back of the
victorious army" grew up. Adolf Hitler used it to carry him to
power--and on to World War II.
Now, even before the last fallen
soldier has been buried, the incompetent generals are starting
to talk shamelessly about "another round", the next war that
will surely come "in a month or in a year", God willing. After
all, we cannot end the matter like this, in failure. Where is
our pride?
THE ISRAELI public is now in a
state of shock and disorientation. Accusations--justified and
unjustified--are flung around in all directions, and it cannot
be foreseen how things will develop.
Perhaps, in the end, it is logic
that will win. Logic says: what has thoroughly been demonstrated
is that there is no military solution. That is true in the
North. That is also true in the South, where we are confronting
a whole people that has nothing to lose anymore. The success of
the Lebanese guerilla will encourage the Palestinian guerilla.
For logic to win, we must be
honest with ourselves: pinpoint the failures, investigate their
deeper causes, draw the proper conclusions.
Some people want to prevent that
at any price. President Bush declares vociferously that we have
won the war. A glorious victory over the Evil Ones. Like his own
victory in Iraq.
When a football team is able to
choose the referee, it is no surprise if it is declared the
winner.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli
writer and peace activist with Gush Shalom.
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