Results in Lebanon Damage U.S., Israel's Olmert
War's Inconclusive Outcome Makes Goals in Middle East Harder to
Achieve, Many Say
By MARC CHAMPION and GUY CHAZAN
WALL STREET JOURNAL August 14, 2006; Page A6

Israel's failure to quickly defeat Hezbollah forced the U.S. to make
significant compromises at the United Nations and looks likely to
leave U.S. policies in the region as well as Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert damaged, according to diplomats and analysts.

Even as Israel threw thousands of extra ground troops into a major
assault to clear Hezbollah from Lebanese territory ahead of a
cease-fire that took effect at 8 a.m. Israel time today, analysts and
diplomats said the effort may be a sign of Mr. Olmert's political
desperation rather than of strength. The career politician has come
under criticism that he has mishandled the month-long war by limiting
the military to an air offensive, with relatively few troops on the
ground.

At the same time, Israel's inconclusive struggle with Hezbollah has
forced the U.S. to accept a compromise resolution at the U.N. Security
Council that may not secure its long-term goal of neutralizing
Hezbollah as a military force and doesn't give the U.S. much of the
credit for negotiating a cease-fire. While welcoming Friday's
resolution, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, European Union
foreign-policy representative Javier Solana and leaders in the region
expressed anger that it had taken so long to secure a cease-fire deal
-- a veiled reference to U.S. opposition to an "immediate" cease-fire
that helped delay a resolution.

In the end, the U.S. did agree to an immediate cease-fire, although
that was termed in the resolution a "cessation of hostilities." The
U.S. had insisted that any cease-fire should come simultaneously with
the introduction of a robust international force. Now it is likely to
come several weeks before such a force hits the ground. Israeli troops
are to withdraw after the cease-fire, in parallel with the
introduction of Lebanese government troops, backed by the small and
weak existing force of U.N. monitors.

"The way the U.S. has handled this so far, in failing to seize a
moment a few weeks ago when a cease-fire might have been managed, has
actually united Shia and Sunni sentiment in the streets against the
U.S.," said Steven Simon, a former U.S. National Security Council
official and now senior analyst at the Rand Corp. in Washington. By
uniting Muslim opinion against it as never before, the U.S. has become
less effective in the region, he said.

U.S. and Israeli officials alike stressed that any compromises were
minor and that in the long term, if the resolution is implemented, it
will secure the goals of both: an end to Hezbollah rocket attacks on
Israel; the return of the two Israeli soldiers whose capture triggered
the conflict; Hezbollah eliminated as a military force from the
region; and Lebanon's government in sovereign control of its entire
territory and borders.

Indeed, many analysts say the dust will have to settle before it is
clear how well Hezbollah survives Israel's attack and continuing
international focus on its disarmament. Speaking at a cabinet meeting
yesterday at which Friday's Security Council resolution was approved,
Mr. Olmert said the agreement would ensure that "Hezbollah won't
continue to exist as a state within a state."

Yossi Kuperwasser, a brigadier general in the Israeli army, wrote in
an article for the Jerusalem Post, "We created the necessary
conditions to compel the international community to... ultimately turn
Lebanon into an accountable, sovereign nation. If this happens, Syria
and Iran would be the main losers of this war."

For now, the conflict has hardened the U.S. image in the region as
Israel's protector and weakened its ability to act as a broker in
disputes, analysts say. It also has dented the reputation of the
Israeli military for invincibility, undercut the policy of the Israeli
and U.S. governments for resolving the Palestinian conflict and cast
further doubt over the ability of Western powers to change the Middle
East in their favor through war.

The biggest casualty of the conflict may be Mr. Olmert's so-called
convergence plan to withdraw from large parts of the West Bank. Mr.
Olmert took office in May with a pledge to fix Israel's permanent
borders, building on last year's withdrawal from the Gaza strip with a
similar, but much larger, pullout from the West Bank, the uprooting of
70,000 settlers and their removal behind the separation fence.

The war in Lebanon has bolstered those who argue that unilateral
withdrawals -- from Lebanon and Gaza -- have undermined Israel's
security by creating a vacuum that was quickly filled by militant
groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas. The idea of handing over control
of the West Bank to a Hamas-led government whose armed wing already is
firing homemade Qassam rockets at southern Israel from Gaza is now all
but dead.

Abandoning the convergence plan would have severe implications for
Israel's relations with the Palestinians and would badly set back the
U.S. policy of fostering a two-state solution for Israel. It also
could throw into question the future of Mr. Olmert's government and
his Kadima party, which came to power on the promise of getting Israel
out of the West Bank.

"If Olmert can't deliver on that, then what's the point of this
government, or his party?" said Dan Schueftan, deputy director of the
National Security Studies Center at the University of Haifa.

A key beneficiary will be the opposition Likud party. Binyamin
Netanyahu, the Likud leader is expected to savage the U.N. deal in a
speech to the Knesset today after a month of holding back on any
criticism of the government and its handling of the war.

Mr. Olmert now is fighting for his political survival, fending off
accusations that even after four weeks of fighting, Israel failed to
secure the release of the captured soldiers or to stop Hezbollah's
shelling of Northern Israel, which left scores of Israeli civilians
dead and forced hundreds of thousands to seek shelter in bunkers or
flee their homes.

Writing in the newspaper Haaretz, former defense minister Moshe Arens
said the war had shown that Israel "has none of the stamina needed for
a long-term struggle against terror. The war that according to its
leaders was supposed to restore Israel's deterrent force succeeded in
destroying it in a month," he wrote.

Write to Marc Champion at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and Guy Chazan at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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