The Five Wars of Hezbollah and Israel 
http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=17226
Rami Khouri describes the five-wars-in-one that are unfolding in the warfare
between Israel and Hezbollah. As negotiations move to the forefront, the
other four wars will become more evident. 

After four weeks of violent but inconclusive warfare, there were almost as
many diplomats as missiles flying overhead in Beirut in the last few days,
signaling a shift from fighting to negotiating, as the war's true dimensions
and stakes suddenly become more evident. This is not one war, but five, and
in the political arena they will all be fought simultaneously. 
On the surface, the situation seems clear. Israel and Hezbollah have
effectively fought each other to a draw, despite Israel's huge advantage in
military power and its savage will to pummel all of Lebanon. Destroying
Lebanon and slowly eroding Hezbollah's capacity to fire missiles would
entail a very high political cost for all concerned, and so diplomacy must
take over now. 
The first draft of the UN resolution to end the war agreed by the French and
Americans is significant but flawed. It is significant because it mentions
all the key issues that are important for both sides and that have not been
resolved through war: occupied lands, cross-border attacks, return of
prisoners, mutual respect of sovereignty and the 1949 armistice line. 
The resolution is flawed because it favors Israel on all the key issues: It
says Hezbollah started the conflict; it demands unconditional return of only
Israeli prisoners; it allows Israel to keep attacking and does not demand
immediate Israel withdraw from south Lebanon, or subsequent Israeli
withdrawal from the Shabaa Farms area that Lebanon says is Lebanese land;
and, it demands an international force in south Lebanon and disarmament of
Hezbollah before all of Lebanon's legitimate demands are met. 
The Lebanese government decision Monday to send 15,000 troops to the south -
once Israel withdraws - will spur movement towards a more balanced
resolution. This is an important signal that Lebanon and Hezbollah are
prepared to respond to reasonable and legitimate demands by the
international community, but only if Lebanese demands are met
simultaneously. 
Still, the problem is that a cease-fire and political resolutions on this
front solve only one of our five wars around here. The other four wars are: 
* the coming internal battles inside Lebanon to define the country's future
character and orientation; 
* the continuing antagonism between Israel and regional players like the
Palestinians, Syria, Iran and probably a majority of Arab public opinion; 
* the struggle for legitimacy and leadership between established Arab
regimes and powerful non-state actors like Hezbollah and Hamas; and, 
* the global tug-of-war over the soul and identity of the Middle East,
symbolized by the tensions between the United States-Israel-United
Kingdom-led camp and the Iran-Syria-Hezbollah-Hamas-led camp. 
Most of the key actors in this conflict see themselves fighting these five
wars simultaneously, even though Lebanon-Israel is the only active
battleground. Lebanon and Israel should be able to resolve their bilateral
disputes as easily as Jordan and Egypt resolved theirs with Israel. But a
weak Lebanese government in recent decades has precluded such a step because
of Syrian dominance of Lebanon, repeated Israeli attacks and occupations in
Lebanon, the rise of Hezbollah, and the Lebanese sect-based consensual
governance system that inherently breeds a weak central government. 
Israel has repeatedly used its military power in the past 40 years to stop
attacks against it from south Lebanon, always to no avail. Hezbollah's
impressive performance to keep fighting and attacking during the past month
suggests that a historic turning point has been reached: In a narrow but
ferocious engagement, an Arab force has militarily fought Israel to a draw,
and thus perhaps neutralized Israel's historical reliance on its military
deterrence to impose its will on its neighbors. This may be why Israel is
attacking civilian installations throughout Lebanon, making a wasteland of
the country: a lesson to anyone else who might consider challenging it
militarily. This strategy probably will not work either, because savagery,
like occupation, only begets resistance and defiance. 
Hezbollah will emerge stronger politically from the cease-fire diplomacy if
Israel is forced to comply with the key Lebanese demands of exchanging
prisoners, leaving Sheba Farms, and stopping cross-border flights and
attacks, in return for no more attacks against Israel from Lebanon. If and
when Israel is no longer a threat to Lebanon, Hezbollah will no longer need
to remain an armed resistance movement beyond the control of the government.

Israel and the United States now focus their energy on preventing Hezbollah
from emerging from this war strengthened politically - because a stronger
Hezbollah with widespread support in the Arab world and Iran would make the
Israeli-American position in the other four wars immeasurably more
difficult. Hezbollah in Lebanon is the embodiment of all five wars, which is
why it must be defeated forever in Israel-American eyes, as well as those of
many Lebanese and other Arabs who mistrust Hezbollah and fear its local and
regional aims. 
The last month suggests that destroying Hezbollah is not easy, which is why
the political battles now shaping up will be so important. They will see the
five wars in this region being fought simultaneously, unlike this one-front
Lebanese-Israeli clash. 
Rami G. Khouriis editor-at-large of the Beirut-based Daily Star, published
throughout the Middle East with the International Herald Tribune. 
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