2006-07-20-Escalating warfare |
||||
|
||||
|
jewishsightseeing.com, July 20, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM —Historians will quarrel
whether this is a separate, stand-alone war in the
record of Israeli-Arab conflicts, or part of the
intafada that has raged since 2000. On the one
hand, it deserves a name of its own. It represents
the greatest incidence of civilian property damage
in Israel since the 1948 War of Independence. On the
other hand, Hezbollah's justification for its
initial attack was to relieve Israeli pressure on
the Palestinians, and to produce the release of
Palestinian prisoners. In recent days we have heard
of Hezbollah instructions to its Palestinian allies
to send suicide bombers into Israeli cities.
Optimists say that this is a sign of Hezbollah's
suffering from Israeli pressure. Israeli security
forces have nipped several bombers on their way to
targets, and have increased their own pressure on
several locations in the West Bank.
From this perspective, operations in
Lebanon and Gaza are part of the same old war that
the Palestinians call Intafada al-Aqsa.
On the third hand is the
interpretation that the whole purpose of the attack
on Israeli territory by Hezbollah was engineered by
the principle source of its theology, weaponry, and
money in Iran, in order to distract the attention of
the United States and others from their campaign
against Iran's development of nuclear weapons. It is
possible to add to this view that the Hamas attack
on Israeli forces that began the operation in Gaza
(and was a link in the explanation of the Hezbollah
attack from Lebanon) came in response to prompting
from Syria, which was concerned to distract American
attention on it for aiding the fighting in
Iraq.
Iran is not a prominent ally of Hamas,
but Syria is; and Syria is an important way station
in the flow of aid from Iran to Hezbollah. In recent
days Israeli forces have destroyed overland
shipments of munitions from Syria to Lebanon. It is
getting difficult to perceive the end of the
operation in Lebanon without an attack on the
sources of the aid in Syria.
The missile attacks on Israel from
Lebanon are not a surprise. We have known for years
about the thousands of rockets aimed at us. We are
arguing if we should have taken those out earlier;
if it was wise to rely on mutual threat to keep them
from being fired; and if Israel could have ever
taken them out without a serious provocation or
without the kind of damage we are currently
suffering.
We also know that Syria has lots of
missiles pointed at Israel, with longer range and
larger warheads than those in Lebanon. Currently I
am operating in my airy study with its great view
over the desert with the Mountains of Moab and Amman
in the distance. If the Syrian front heats up I may
be working in the windowless bomb shelter four
levels down.
There are some who say that it is
meaningless to fix the boundaries of one or another
conflict. None of us is likely to live long enough
to see it end, but one day historians will be
writing about the 100+ year war between Israelis and
Arabs, which those who lived it divided into
chapters according to prominent adversaries and
locations.
Newt Gingrich has been talking about
World War III emerging from the current chapter.
That sounds like a war of civilizations that will
ratchet up from somebody's attack on Iran's nuclear
facilities (and/or North Korea's), and a wave of
suicide attacks in Europe and North America beyond
the defensive capacity of those who are concerned
about keeping fingernail clippers out of airliners.
By then we will all be in the basement, hoping for safety.
If all the details and prospects are
too complicated, remember that it is the good guys
against the bad guys, and we are the good guys.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
— |