Commentary: Nasrallah's mea culpa
Claude Salhani

August 30, 2006

*WASHINGTON* -- * It's a rare event when a leader in the Arab world openly
admits to having been wrong. And it's even rarer when that leader goes on
international television to confess his mistakes. Blunders in this part of
the world have a tendency to be blamed on others, and usually with dire
consequences for the ones being blamed. But strange things sometimes happen
in the Middle East. This one counts among them. *

Hezbollah secretary-general Sayed Hassan Nasrallah surprised many people
when he apologized during a television interview Sunday, taking full blame
for inciting Israel to unleash its fury on Lebanon during 34 days of war. It
was Nasrallah's community, the Shiites, who were the hardest hit.

Speaking to the Lebanese news station NTV, Nasrallah said that he would not
have ordered the capture of two Israeli soldiers - Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad
Regev - and the killing of three others had he anticipated the ferocity of
Israel's response.

"We did not think, even 1 percent, that the capture [of the two soldiers]
would lead to a war at this time and of this magnitude," said Nasrallah.
"You ask me, if I had known on July 11 ... that the operation would lead to
such a war, would I do it? I say no, absolutely not."

However, Nasrallah went on to say that had the war not started when it did
July 12, "in any case Israel would have attacked in October." He did not
elaborate, nor did he explain how or why he believed that an Israeli raid
was imminent in the fall. But intelligence sources have told United Press
International (UPI) that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had sought the
blessing of the White House to go after Hezbollah - and obtained it - during
a visit to Washington in the spring.

The leader of the Lebanese Shiite group, which figures on the US State
Department's terrorist list, told his interviewer that he did not believe
that Israel would try for another round of fighting.

"The current Israeli situation tells us that we are not heading to another
round," he said. Nasrallah was referring to the political storm in which the
Israeli government finds itself today after being accused of mismanaging the
war against Hezbollah, a war in which 150 Israelis were killed, most of them
soldiers.

Nasrallah - and his Syrian and Iranian backers - was quick to declare
victory at the end of the 34-day war in which much of the Lebanese
infrastructure was devastated, the multimillion-dollar tourist industry
frightened away, and more than 1,000 people killed, 3,500 injured and, and,
and ...

Nasrallah's mea culpa, and in public no less, is raising questions from
Washington to Paris to capitals across the Middle East. Why? Why would he
appear so humble? Especially given that he must have known that Israel would
jump at the chance to slam Hezbollah and to turn Nasrallah's "victory" into
a defeat.

"He's beginning to feel the pinch and knew he was going to be held
accountable," Hisham Melhem, Washington correspondent for Lebanon's *An
Nahar *newspaper, told UPI.

Israeli officials in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv said that Nasrallah's admission
shows that he realizes that he did not win the war. Another official said
that this was proof that Israel had regained its deterrence. "Had he known
what the consequences would have been, he wouldn't have kidnapped the
soldiers," Israeli officials are saying. This "indicates Israel has
dissuaded him from doing it again."

Nasrallah's comments may be attributed to an internal political debate
currently taking place in Lebanon involving all Lebanese political parties
and most likely the forum of much of Hezbollah's recent critics. Melhem told
UPI that Nasrallah must have come under very heavy pressure from his own
constituents as well as from other Lebanese political parties.

Another analyst who requested anonymity said "the interview serves nothing
and changes nothing." As for Israel saying that this proves that Hezbollah
did not win the war, the same analyst points out that "it is in Israel's
interest to say such things.

"Israel's action was like the man who wants to swat a mosquito on a young
boy's face but ends up slamming the boy with a baseball bat on the head. He
kills the boy but misses the mosquito," said the analyst.

But Nasrallah is not in the habit of speaking for the sake of speaking. The
fact that he gave the interview to a television station other than his own,
Hezbollah's Al Manar, indicates that first and foremost he wanted to address
the Lebanese community at large, rather than just his fellow Shiites.

With the fighting phase over, many Lebanese feel that they can now speak out
against the mayhem caused by Nasrallah's misadventure.

Says Melhem, who sees in Nasrallah someone who was looking out for Iran's
interests: "He was trying to turn Beirut into Tehran on the Mediterranean."

The 34-day war - along with the death and destruction that it brought - has
changed the perception that many Lebanese had of Hezbollah, including some
in Nasrallah's own community. This might offer one explanation for
Nasrallah's act of contrition.

*Claude Salhani is Middle East Times' Editor and International Editor at
UPI. He wrote this article for United Press International. Comments may be
sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] *

**

http://metimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20060830-070214-6184r



On 8/30/06, Robert Munn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> leave it to one of the guys on this list to find a picture of a scantily
> clad woman in a war zone.
>
> on the subject of lebanon, i have started to hear rumblings that many
> lebanese people are pissed off at hezbollah for getting them into the
> current mess, and their anger is making it into the press inside lebanon.
>
> On 8/30/06, Gruss wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=1756&e=1&u=/060829/481/e3ee8e74af024af0aed2d03d914a1c93
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> ---------------
> Robert Munn
> www.funkymojo.com
>
>
> 

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