On the US-Israeli Invasion of Lebanon
By Noam Chomsky
08/24/06 "ZNet" -- -- Al-Adab --
Though there are many interacting
factors, the immediate issue that lies behind the latest US-Israeli
invasion of Lebanon remains, I believe, what it was in the four
preceding invasions: the Israel-Palestine conflict. In the most
important case, the devastating US-backed 1982 Israeli invasion was
openly described in Israel as a war for the West Bank, undertaken to
put an end to annoying PLO calls for a diplomatic settlement (with
the secondary goal of imposing a client regime in Lebanon). There
are numerous other illustrations. Despite the many differences in
circumstances, the July 2006 invasion falls generally into the same
pattern. Among mainstream American critics of Bush administration
policies, the favored version is that “We had always approached
[conflict between Israel and its neighbors] in a balanced way,
assuming that we could be the catalyst for an agreement,” but Bush
II regrettably abandoned that neutral stance, causing great problems
for the United States (Middle East specialist and former diplomat
Edward Walker, a leading moderate). The actual record is quite
different: For over 30 years, Washington has unilaterally barred a
peaceful political settlement, with only slight and brief
deviations.
The consistent rejectionism can be traced back to the February 1971
Egyptian offer of a full peace treaty with Israel, in the terms of
official US policy, offering nothing for the Palestinians. Israel
understood that this peace offer would put an end to any security
threat, but the government decided to reject security in favor of
expansion, then mostly into northeastern Sinai. Washington supported
Israel’s stand, adhering to Kissinger’s principle of “stalemate”:
force, not diplomacy. It was only 8 years later, after a terrible
war and great suffering, that Washington agreed to Egypt’s demand
for withdrawal from its territory.
Meanwhile the Palestinian issue had entered the international
agenda, and a broad international consensus had crystallized in
favor of a two-state settlement on the pre-June 1967 border, perhaps
with minor and mutual adjustments. In December 1975, the UN Security
Council agreed to consider a resolution proposed by the Arab
“confrontation states” with these provisions, also incorporating the
basic wording of UN 242. The US vetoed the resolution. Israel’s
reaction was to bomb Lebanon, killing over 50 people in Nabatiye,
calling the attack “preventive” – presumably to “prevent” the UN
session, which Israel boycotted.
The only significant exception to consistent US-Israeli rejectionism
was in January 2001, when Israeli and Palestinian negotiators came
close to agreement in Taba. But the negotiations were called off by
Israeli Prime Minister Barak four days early, ending that promising
effort. Unofficial but high-level negotiations continued, leading to
the Geneva Accord of December 2002, with similar proposals. It was
welcomed by most of the world, but rejected by Israel and dismissed
by Washington (and, reflexively, the US media and intellectual
classes).
Meanwhile US-backed Israeli settlement and infrastructure programs
have been “creating facts on the ground” in order to undermine
potential realization of Palestinian national rights. Throughout the
Oslo years, these programs continued steadily, with a sharp peak in
2000: Clinton’s final year, and Barak’s. The current euphemism for
these programs is “disengagement” from Gaza and “convergence” in the
West Bank – in Western rhetoric, Ehud Olmert’s courageous program of
withdrawal from the occupied territories. The reality, as usual, is
quite different.
The Gaza “disengagement” was openly announced as a West Bank
expansion plan. Having turned Gaza into a disaster area, sane
Israeli hawks realized that there was no point leaving a few
thousand settlers taking the best land and scarce resources,
protected by a large part of the IDF. It made more sense to send
them to the West Bank and Golan Heights, where new settlement
programs were announced, while turning Gaza into “the world’s
largest prison,” as Israeli human rights groups accurately call it.
West Bank “Convergence” formalizes these programs of annexation,
cantonization, and imprisonment. With decisive US support, Israel is
annexing valuable lands and the most important resources of the West
Bank (primarily water), while carrying out settlement and
infrastructure projects that divide the shrinking Palestinian
territories into unviable cantons, virtually separated from one
another and from whatever pitiful corner of Jerusalem will be left
to Palestinians. All are to be imprisoned as Israel takes over the
Jordan Valley, and of course any other access to the outside world.
All of these programs are recognized to be illegal, in violation of
numerous Security Council resolutions and the unanimous decision of
the World Court any part of the "separation wall" that is built to
“defend” the settlements is “ipso facto” illegal (U.S. Justice
Buergenthal, in a separate declaration). Hence about 80-85% of the
wall is illegal, as is the entire “convergence” program. But for a
self-designated outlaw state and its clients, such facts are minor
irrelevancies.
Currently, the US and Israel demand that Hamas accept the 2002 Arab
League Beirut proposal for full normalization of relations with
Israel after withdrawal in accord with the international consensus.
The proposal has long been accepted by the PLO, and it has also been
formally accepted by the “supreme leader” of Iran, Ayatollah
Khamenei. Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has made it clear that Hezbollah
would not disrupt such an agreement if it is accepted by
Palestinians. Hamas has repeatedly indicated its willingness to
negotiate in these terms.
The facts are doctrinally unacceptable, hence mostly suppressed.
What we see, instead, is the stern warning to Hamas by the editors
of the New York Times that their formal agreement to the Beirut
peace plan is “an admission ticket to the real world, a necessary
rite of passage in the progression from a lawless opposition to a
lawful government.” Like others, the NYT editors fail to mention
that the US and Israel forcefully reject this proposal, and are
alone in doing so among relevant actors. Furthermore, they reject it
not merely in rhetoric, but far more importantly, in deeds. We see
at once who constitutes the “lawless opposition” and who speaks for
them. But that conclusion cannot be expressed, even entertained, in
respectable circles.
The only meaningful support for Palestinians facing national
destruction is from Hezbollah. For this reason alone it follows that
Hezbollah must be severely weakened or destroyed, just as the PLO
had to be evicted from Lebanon in 1982. But Hezbollah is too deeply
embedded within Lebanese society to be eradicated, so Lebanon too
must be largely destroyed. An expected benefit for the US and Israel
was to enhance the credibility of threats against Iran by
eliminating a Lebanese-based deterrent to a possible attack. But
none of this turned out as planned. Much as in Iraq, and elsewhere,
Bush administration planners have created catastrophes, even for the
interests they represent. That is the primary reason for the
unprecedented criticism of the administration among the foreign
policy elite, even before the invasion of Iraq.
In the background lie more far-reaching and lasting concerns: to
ensure what is called “stability” in the reigning ideology.
“Stability,” in simple words, means obedience. “Stability” is
undermined by states that do not strictly follow orders, secular
nationalists, Islamists who are not under control (in contrast, the
Saudi monarchy, the oldest and most valuable US ally, is fine), etc.
Such “destabilizing” forces are particularly dangerous when their
programs are attractive to others, in which case they are called
“viruses” that must be destroyed. “Stability” is enhanced by loyal
client states. Since 1967, it has been assumed that Israel can play
this role, along with other “peripheral” states. Israel has become
virtually an off-shore US military base and high-tech center, the
natural consequence of its rejection of security in favor of
expansion in 1971, and repeatedly since. These policies are subject
to little internal debate, whoever holds state power. The policies
extend world-wide, and in the Middle East, their significance is
enhanced by one of the leading principles of foreign policy since
World War II (and for Britain before that): to ensure control over
Middle East energy resources, recognized for 60 years to be “a
stupendous source of strategic power” and “one of the greatest
material prizes in world history.”
The standard Western version is that the July 2006 invasion was
justified by legitimate outrage over capture of two Israeli soldiers
at the border. The posture is cynical fraud. The US and Israel, and
the West generally, have little objection to capture of soldiers, or
even to the far more severe crime of kidnapping civilians (or of
course to killing civilians). That had been Israeli practice in
Lebanon for many years, and no one ever suggested that Israel should
therefore be invaded and largely destroyed. Western cynicism was
revealed with even more dramatic clarity as the current upsurge of
violence erupted after Palestinian militants captured an Israeli
soldier, Gilad Shalit, on June 25. That too elicited huge outrage,
and support for Israel's sharp escalation of its murderous assault
on Gaza. The scale is reflected in casualties: in June, 36
Palestinian civilians were killed in Gaza; in July, the numbers more
than quadrupled to over 170, dozens of them children. The posture of
outrage was, again, cynical fraud, as demonstrated dramatically, and
conclusively, by the reaction to Israel's kidnapping of two Gaza
civilians, the Muamar brothers, one day before, on June 24. They
disappeared into Israel's prison system, joining the hundreds of
others imprisoned without charge -- hence kidnapped, as are many of
those sentenced on dubious charges. There was some brief and
dismissive mention of the kidnapping of the Muamar brothers, but no
reaction, because such crimes are considered legitimate when carried
out by “our side.” The idea that this crime would justify a
murderous assault on Israel would have been regarded as a reversion
to Nazism.
The distinction is clear, and familiar throughout history: to
paraphrase Thucydides, the powerful are entitled to do as they wish,
while the weak suffer as they must.
We should not overlook the progress that has been made in
undermining the imperial mentality that is so deeply rooted in
Western moral and intellectual culture as to be beyond awareness.
Nor should we forget the scale of what remains to be achieved, tasks
that must be undertaken in solidarity and cooperation by people in
North and South who hope to see a more decent and civilized world.
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