Please translate so that everybody understands what the news is. Thank you.
Tolong diterjemahkan dalam bahasa Indonesia agar semua mengerti berita 
tersebut, terima kasih.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Winaldi Mustajab
Sent: Friday, July 21, 2006 11:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [exbe2de] Analisa: Israel - Hezbollah



WASHINGTON - As        Israel continues to strike
inside Lebanon in a bid to rout Hizbullah, the radical
Islamist group is using two weapons to wage war:
rockets and, more effective, TV images of civilian
destruction inflicted by Israeli bombs. 
 
The latter "weapon," broadcast over the Hizbullah-run
TV station Al Manar to pump up Arab sympathies, may in
the end be more powerful than Israel's military punch
- a counterpunch to Israel's assertion it can crush
Hizbullah through use of force.

Though Israel has eroded the militant group's ability
to inflict harm, Hizbullah may in fact be pleased with
the results of the violent crisis it touched off over
a week ago. Its position in the area - as a
service-provider in a longtime stateless zone and as a
vent for Arab anger and disappointment over dashed
economic and political hopes - remains secure, many
experts say.

Under this scenario, analysts add, Hizbullah is here
to stay - at least for the indefinite future.

Military force, no matter how overwhelming, simply
can't be counted on to crush the militants, they say.
It might even be what they want.

"Since many terrorist groups are caught up in notions
of cosmic war - grand struggles of religious
dimensions - they in fact welcome overt warfare since
it vindicates their views of the war, a war whose
timelines are very long," says Mark Juergensmeyer, a
specialist in "new terrorism" at the University of
California at Santa Barbara, who visited Lebanon just
before bombs began to fall. "A siege is exactly what
they want - it keeps them motivated."

Military force has successfully eradicated radical
groups in the past, but under very different
circumstances. The Maoist Shining Path organization
that dominated and terrorized parts of Peru in the
1980s was finally obliterated by relentless
search-and-destroy missions and long-term imprisonment
of leaders.

But perhaps the key factor was not the military
campaign but the evolution of South America. Shining
Path was doomed by the waning of radical thinking in a
decreasingly ideological region.

That is not the case in the Middle East, where radical
Islam, religious nationalism, and "jihadism" are on
the rise - witness the electoral victory of Hamas in
the Palestinian territories, Hizbullah's rise through
elections to a minority role in the Lebanese
government, and the tenacious popularity of the Muslim
Brotherhood in Egypt.

"Hizbullah is particularly deep-rooted, and the Hamas
government [in the Palestinian territories] is a
fixture for some time to come, so they have to be seen
as factors that are here to stay, at least for the
medium to long term," says Mahan Abedin, an expert in
radical Islamic groups at the Center for the Study of
Terrorism and Political Violence in London.

What Israel can accomplish through its military
campaign, others say, is a weakening of Hizbullah's
ability to strike Israeli territory with missiles and
rockets. But even that effort, they add, comes with
collateral risks.

"Can Israel considerably reduce the threat posed by
Hizbullah as a paramilitary group? That it can
probably do," says Brian Michael Jenkins, a terrorism
expert at the Rand Corp. in Arlington, Va. "But will
Israel be able to destroy Hizbullah in terms of its
identity, the determination of its leadership, the
devotion of its followers, and their dedication to
continuing the struggle? No, that's not realistic."

The US has some experience with that reality in its
pursuit of Al Qaeda, he says. While cautioning against
"lumping together" radical Islamic groups, Jenkins
says the US has made progress in undermining Al
Qaeda's operational capabilities. On the other hand,
he cautions, the US has been less successful at
reducing the appeal of Al Qaeda's message, which
"continues to radicalize and deepen the zeal of large
numbers of young Islamic men."

Turning to the US experience in        Iraq, Jenkins
sees a trajectory that mirrors Israel's. "There is no
military challenge in Iraq that can defeat us," he
says. "But has our presence reduced a radicalization
of parts of the population or pacified the country? No
it hasn't."

Even if Israel destroys 80 percent of Hizbullah's
arsenal - estimated at more than 12,000 rockets - the
supply could be replenished within four months, says
Mr. Abedin.        Iran, Hizbullah's chief supplier,
is capable of manufacturing 10,000 rockets a month of
the types Hizbullah is using, he says. "The best
Israel may be able to achieve is to make it more
difficult for Hizbullah to receive the armament and
use it in the future."

Beyond that, Israel's aim is to "impose on the region
its military hegemony, and to impress its enemies,"
Abedin says. "It's showing Iran it is capable of this
kind of sustained military campaign."

That will not reduce the long-term threat from the
Islamist movement opposing Israel, he says. "Whenever
the Israelis use disproportionate force they
strengthen their enemies and rally popular support
[for them]. The fact Israel hasn't learned this
lesson," he adds, "is quite extraordinary."

Jenkins, who has a military background, sees the same
dilemma posed by short-term necessities and long-term
interests. "Right now, Israel's primary obligation is
to end the barrage of rockets and mortars coming into
its territory," he says. "But they should also
understand that accomplishing that will not do much to
advance - and can even complicate - what is, after
all, a long-term political fight." 

For countries facing this challenge, a priority is "to
broaden strategies to be far more effective at
political warfare," says Jenkins. In some cases
"negotiations are in order," he says, noting that the
British negotiated with the IRA and the Spanish with
the radical Basque group ETA. The Iraqi government is
signalling its willingness to talk with part of the
insurgency (the more traditionally political
opposition, not the Al Qaeda-inspired forces). 

In the long run, military campaigns won't be the
answer, most analysts agree. "There may be military
battles that have to be fought," says Jenkins, "but
the real answer is to focus more on how to diminish
the appeal of the radical message."






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