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July 14,
2006
Israel Crosses the Line
http://www.antiwar.com/justin
by Justin Raimondo
The Israeli offensive against Iran – until now,
purely polemical – morphed into military action the moment the
IDF crossed the border into Lebanon and took on Hezbollah. As our regular
readers know, this turn of events was predicted in this space three
months ago:
"War with Iran will probably not begin with a frontal assault by
the U.S. and/or Israel on Iran's alleged nuclear weapons facilities,
or even a skirmish along the Iraq-Iran border. Look to Lebanon and Syria
for the first battlegrounds of this developing regional war. The Israelis
know perfectly well that Iran's nuclear ambitions, if they ever materialize,
are not an immediate threat: their real concern is their volatile northern
border, where their deadly enemies – Hezbollah – are an
effective obstacle to Israeli influence. The Israelis are also looking
to exploit growing opportunities to make trouble in Syria, where the
restive Kurds are their reliable allies, and the brittleness of the
Ba'athist dictatorship is an invitation to regime change."
The suggestion, by Professors John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt,
in their now famous "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy,"
that the Iraq war was fought for Israel's sake, and against our own
interests in the region, was received in many quarters with outright
horror, and not only from the Amen Corner. Noam Chomsky and Stephen
Zunes both objected to this thesis of an Israel-centric foreign policy:
Israel, they insist, is the "junior partner" of the American
hegemon, and is only acting at the behest and under the de facto control
of its masters in Washington.
The war's aftermath, however, tells a different story. Examined in light
of Israel's postwar actions – the unilateral "withdrawal"
from Gaza, the absorption of more territory and the building of more
settlements on the West Bank, the war against Hamas, and now the re-invasion
of Lebanon – the chief (and only) beneficiary of the new regional
balance of power is clear enough. The American invasion and occupation
of the Mesopotamian heartland has empowered the Israelis as never before
– and now they are on the offensive, carving out a greatly expanded
sphere of influence extending into Kurdistan as well as Lebanon, bringing
closer to fulfillment the old Zionist vision of an empire stretching
"from the Nile to the Euphrates."
The U.S., on the other hand, has considerably reduced leverage in the
region. Our troops in Iraq are exposed, vulnerable to the Iranians –
and stalemated by the Iraqi insurgency, which shows troubling signs
of extending into Shi'ite areas. As the Israelis advance, with American
support, Sunni and Shi'ite factions in Iraq – including those
in the governing Shi'ite coalition – are radicalized, and turn
their fire on the Americans.
Yet the U.S. is still shilling for the Israelis, blaming Syria and Iran
for acts that occurred well outside the purview of the mullahs and the
increasingly isolated regime of Bashar al-Assad. Meanwhile, in the UN,
we are bringing the issue of Iran's nuclear power program to the Security
Council, pressing for a confrontation that can only end in $200-per-barrel
oil.
In 1996, a group of pro-Israeli Americans – including Richard
Perle, James Colbert, Charles Fairbanks Jr., Douglas Feith, Robert Loewenberg,
David Wurmser, and Meyrav Wurmser – prepared a policy statement
for then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that proposed a strategy
of regime change as the only solution for Israel's growing encirclement
and isolation. The main problem, they averred in "A Clean Break:
A New Strategy for Securing the Realm," was Syria, and the troublesome
border with Lebanon:
"Syria challenges Israel on Lebanese soil. An effective approach,
and one with which American can sympathize, would be if Israel seized
the strategic initiative along its northern borders by engaging Hizballah,
Syria, and Iran, as the principal agents of aggression in Lebanon."
But this could occur only if Iraq was taken out first:
"Israel can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation with
Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing, and even rolling back Syria.
This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq
— an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right —
as a means of foiling Syria's regional ambitions."
With Saddam out of the way, the second phase of the "Clean Break"
scenario is unfolding before our eyes. And the propaganda war is going
just as well as the military aspect of the campaign: the Israelis are
no fools. They realize they can't proceed without the tacit complicity
of the U.S. and the Europeans, who must be made to look the other way
as the IDF commits war crimes on the ground. Under the pretext of avenging
the "kidnapping" of one of their soldiers – and, more
recently, two more – they have unleashed a military assault planned
well in advance of the allegedly precipitating incidents.
This is surely one of the most threadbare excuses for a war ever uttered.
One wonders how Israel's spokesmen can say it with a straight face.
Soldiers in wartime are captured, not "kidnapped." If Hezbollah
has "kidnapped" those two Israeli soldiers, then how do we
describe the jailing of thousands of Palestinians, including hundreds
of women and children, on the basis of their alleged sympathy for Hamas
– now the democratically elected government of Palestine? In any
case, it appears, according to this report, that Hezbollah has some
Israeli competition when it comes to the business of kidnapping.
The Bush administration is formally committed to the "road map,"
which entails the creation of a Palestinian state. Yet the Israelis
have done everything possible to undermine Bush's plan, including obstructing
elections. The American response has been appeasement: as Israeli gunboats
make short work of Gaza beach-goers, Washington's response is to demand
the unconditional release of captured Israeli soldiers. There is an
undertone of disapproval, as Condoleezza Rice urges "restraint"
by all parties and the president worries that the Lebanese government
will be destabilized, yet none of this is allowed to deflect U.S. policymakers
from their craven course of kowtowing to the Israelis while they spend
our money and earn us plenty more enemies among the world's billion-plus
Muslims.
Israel's fifth column in America has been enormously successful in "spinning"
the latest news from the Middle East. Instead of reporting that Israel
is invading Lebanon, the "mainstream" media avers that Israel
has "entered" Lebanon – as casually as one would enter
a room in one's own house. The first few paragraphs of many news stories
describe the latest attacks on Israeli targets and accounts of the damage
done, while, five paragraphs down, we finally get word that 55 civilians
have been killed by the latest Israeli aerial bombardment of Lebanon.
The Mearsheimer-Walt thesis – that U.S. foreign policy has been
hijacked (kidnapped, if you will) by what they refer to as "the
Lobby" – has so far been confirmed by the events of the past
few days. The United States is giving what appears to be unconditional
support to phase two of the "Clean Break" plan, targeting
Syria and Iran, albeit while cautioning the Israelis on Lebanon.
The Israelis, outraged by what they regard as foot-dragging in Washington,
are forcing Uncle Sam's hand. If we won't fire the first shots of World
War IV, then they are perfectly willing to do so – confident that
we'll follow them blindly into the maelstrom.
Whether the Bush administration will go all the way with the Israelis
on this one, is, however, in some doubt. The alleged triumph of the
Republican "realists" over the neoconservatives, supposedly
symbolized by the ascension of Condi Rice, is counteracted by the Democrats'
complete subservience to the Lobby. Already Hillary Clinton is denouncing
the administration for "appeasing" Iran, and the sudden reappearance
of the neocons in Democratic Party circles is indicative of what is
going on here. Foreign policy is merely a reflection of domestic political
pressures – which, in this case, surely do not represent either
the views or the interests of the American people.
Mearsheimer and Walt explain how we got into this mess, but they don't
give us any answers about how to get out. How do we avoid getting dragged
by our Israeli "allies" into World War IV?
The short answer: stop appeasing Israel – and start looking out
for American interests. The Amen Corner makes no such distinction, but
clearly there is one, the most obvious being that we (unlike the Israelis)
have no interest fomenting a wider war – especially while our
troops are stuck in the middle of it all, lined up like sitting ducks
and increasingly on the defensive.
The U.S. must unequivocally condemn the invasion of Lebanon and call
for the unconditional withdrawal of all Israeli forces from Lebanese
soil. Furthermore, the naval and aerial blockade of Lebanon must end:
thousands of tourists and others are pouring into Syria, where they
may not be safe for very much longer. This is an intolerable act of
war against the whole civilized community, and for the United States
government to not only stand by but implicitly condone it is unforgivable.
The "war on terrorism" apparently requires enabling Israeli
state terrorism.
The regional conflict widely predicted as one of the more horrific consequences
of the Iraq invasion is now breaking out. The only rational response
is to get out of the way before we are drawn in. Like a summer fire
in the American West, if it isn't contained, the flames of the rapidly
spreading conflict will soon be licking at our door. And we are bound
to be choking, sooner rather than later, on the economic fallout –
another factor that could embolden the Democrats to keep up their effort
to outflank the GOP on the war question from the right.
As both parties fall into lockstep behind the Lobby, and American power
and prestige are once again harnessed to Israeli interests, there is
little hope that Congress will step into the breach and stop our headlong
plunge into World War IV. Nor do any of the likely presidential candidates
seem willing to take on the War Party when the question of war and peace
is put in terms of Israel's interests – or, as the Lobby would
have it, the Jewish state's continued survival. Here is a war they can
sell by confronting critics with a simple question: What are you, some
kind of anti-Semite?
Years of relentless propaganda, countless smear campaigns, and a prodigious
expenditure of money and human resources led us to this moment: the
War Party is launching what amounts to its final offensive, an all-out
attack on whatever bastions of human decency and common sense remain
in this hideously war-crazed post-9/11 world. Come what may, we at Antiwar.com
will stand at our posts, pouring hot molten editorials down on the enemy
– and giving you the best, most accurate reporting on events in
the Middle East anywhere on the Internet, or anywhere else, for that
matter.
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