No wonder Dan Halutz was let go and Gaby Ashkenazy, an infantry
commander and veteran of Israel's first Lebanon War, was appointed. --
Yoshie

<http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/816807.html>
Last update - 15:30 23/01/2007
Halutz nixed ground war despite Military Intelligence and IAF backing
By Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondent

Outgoing Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Dan Halutz strongly
opposed a broad ground operation until the very final stage of the
war, even though the two members of the General Staff - Military
Intelligence Chief Amos Yadlin and Major General Idan Nehushtan - who
also came from the air force supported such action.

Halutz resigned last week following months of criticism over the
handling of the war. Prior to his appointment as chief of staff,
Halutz headed the air force.

What is surprising is that the two major generals who supported a
broad ground offensive at an early stage - Deputy Chief of Staff Moshe
Kaplinsky and Chief of Operations Gadi Eisenkot - changed their views
as the war continued and then hesitated to carry out such an
offensive.

A Haaretz probe in recent weeks has enabled, for the first time, a
reconstruction of critical parts of the exchanges during a series of
meetings headed by the chief of staff. This is of course only a
partial picture, but it reflects the conduct of the General Staff and
the development of a military response to the continued barrages of
Hezbollah Katyushas against Israel. The General Staff emerges from the
exchanges as seemingly confused and hesitant.

The IDF Spokesman's Office said in response to the Haaretz findings
that the report did not reflect the reality of the discussions. A
military spokesman said that the quotes attributed to IDF commanders
were taken out of context, thus creating an imprecise picture.

In the afternoon of Wednesday, July 12, 2006, several hours after the
Hezbollah attack and the abduction of two Israel Defense Forces
soldiers, a meeting of senior officers heard from the two leading
experts at the General Staff on ground operations, Kaplinsky and
Eisenkot, who called for a major ground offensive.

Kaplinsky (addressing the chief of staff): "When we say [the name of
an operational plan - which includes extensive artillery and air
attacks throughout Lebanon] we need to understand that immediately
following this effort comes 'High Water' [a plan for the deployment of
divisions of ground forces on a broad scale in Lebanon]." Eisenkot
discusses preparedness for 'High Water' that would begin on July 16,
2006. "What I am saying is that the operation needs to be prepared.
Not to embark on this through skirmishes [small-scale operations].
This will sour the matter and it will be a mistake."

Halutz does not reject a ground operation but says he does not see it
happening by the end of this week. "I do not intend, at this stage, to
do this, only to focus on an effort to lay down fire in all
directions. We must create the menace and the readiness to undertake a
ground offensive, but in my view this is not going to happen at the
end of this week."

On July 15, there was another meeting to assess the situation. The
General Staff is elated following the brilliant operation in which the
air force destroyed most of the medium-range Fajr missiles in
Hezbollah's arsenal. In view of the success of a plan whose origins
are to be found in his days as chief of the air force, Halutz sticks
to what he knows and trusts: the capabilities of the air force. "What
is now left," the chief of staff tells his senior officers, "are the
ruins of Beirut. And now, we will all focus, the entire Israel Defense
Forces, on the hunt for the Katyushas. If the weather will be good
tomorrow, the entire force is pouncing on southern Lebanon. There will
be a shadow [because of the number of aircraft] over Lebanon."

Eisenkot recommends that the first, limited ground operations begin:
"Raids limited in time and area. Enter and pull out."

The first signs of Bint Jbail

The next day, on July 16, Bint Jbail is raised for the first time as a
target for a possible IDF operation. Major General Benny Gantz, head
of the ground forces, makes the recommendation to the chief of staff.
"Hassan Nasrallah's victory speech [in May 2000 after the IDF's
withdrawal from southern Lebanon] was made in Bint Jbail. We must
dismantle that place, it is a Shi'ite place - and they must be driven
to the North. I would even consider a limited ground operation in this
area, which can be held."

The focus on Bint Jbail was expected to take a substantial amount of
time from the IDF, and some of this effort would come at the expense
of dealing with the more pressing issue of the Katyushas. The
operation was carried out against the views of many in the General
Staff, including Northern Command GOC Udi Adam and his deputy, Major
General Eyal Ben-Reuven.

The former chief of staff, Moshe Ya'alon, emphasized the need to
"stamp the psyche" of the enemy. He was talking about the importance
of symbolism. It turns out that in the second Lebanon war the
"stamping" happened to us. The focus on the damage to symbols emerges
over and over throughout the war. The fact that Bint Jbail, a Shi'ite
town, became a bloody trap and the Golani Brigade suffered eight dead
on the morning of July 26, only intensified the IDF's obsession with
the place.

On July 18, Halutz convenes a "forum of senior officers for an interim
briefing of the war." The head of the operations department, Brigadier
Sammy Turjeman, offers a variety of options including "High Water".

"The maximum is 'High Water' - which you have turned down," Turjeman
tells Halutz. "We are not considering this option.

Halutz: "I adopt the approach offered by the chief of operations
[Eisenkot] for smaller operations. If it will not be done by the GOC,
I will take it and pass on the responsibility to the General Staff."

The General Staff's concluding assessment that day: "The chief of
staff does not see, at this time, a broad-scale ground operation."

At the same time, during the first two weeks of the war, and in a
gradual fashion, Kaplinsky and Eisenkot begin to change their minds.
If on July 1 they were pushing for a pre-planned, multi-level
operation that would peak with a broad ground offensive, they then
moved toward Halutz's position, wishing to move step-by-step,
evaluating each and every stage of the way.

On July 26, the war entered its third week. That morning the bitter
news of the fighting in Bint Jbail was received.

'A draw is a loss'

Halutz holds deliberations on the aims of the operation. The two
strongest supporters of a major ground offensive are the two air force
officers. Major General Nehushtan tells Halutz: "You must bring this
before the government. You need to tell them straight that without a
major ground operation, we cannot remove the Katyusha threat. If the
government does not approve it, we should tell them that they must
stop the campaign now. The fact is that the war between the IDF and
Hezbollah we can describe as a draw ... We should say this: From our
point of view, a draw is a loss - and we must not lose. We should tell
the political echelon that we cannot limit [the Katyusha attacks] any
more than we are now doing, except if we take over [the ground] up to
the Litani [River]. I do not understand what we are now doing on a
tactical level. What have we achieved? What do we want?"

GOC Northern Command, Udi Adam, who took part in the meeting through
video-conferencing, tries to push for his idea, which calls for taking
over a special security zone ("parameter") and turns it into the old
security zone (before May 2000), using it as a staging area for taking
over the territory up to the Litani, which is what "High Water" calls
for.

Adam, speaking to the chief of staff: "'Parameter' is much more
serious than going for Bint Jbail or any of those places. Look, we
have concluded that we are not occupying Bint Jbail. To take it means
to go through 5,000 homes, one at a time."

The head of the research department, Brigadier Yossi Beiditch: "If we
enter Al-Hayam during the night and kill thirty guerrillas and none of
our soldiers suffer a single scratch, that would effect no change. I
only say that this approach of one step, and then another step - this
will not result in a significant blow to Hezbollah."

Halutz: "What constitutes change?"

Beiditch: "A major ground operation."

Halutz: "You look at Hezbollah. I look at the Gaza-Palestinian model
and I think that a step, and another step, and another step, will
bring us to a different place, not completely, but it will take us
somewhere else."

While most of his officers, including those from the air force, were
pushing for a ground operation, Halutz was still holding back. He was
supported by the chief of operations, Eisenkot.

Eisenkot: "There is a need for ground forces and a week of raids,
while improving the mode of operations and learning from the
experiences we have had so far."

Eisenkot continues to oppose the ground occupation. "The difference
between the two options: [In the second,] we do not hold Lebanese
soil. From my point of view, that is a burden. Therefore, the mode of
operations: raids, in and out, what we said for Bint Jbail. We do not
need to turn Bint Jbail into the Western Wall. We will have gains ...
we will be in a different place."

Yadlin: "I am finding it hard to believe that the State of Israel with
... its divisions and with ... its aircraft is unable to carry out a
ground operation that will deal with the total of 200 guerrillas. We
have no choice, because if in another week we are unable to stop the
Katyushas ... in the end the Syrians are watching, everyone is
watching. We will need to do this. I am not saying to do it tomorrow,
but we must do this in a week."

Yadlin, head of Military Intelligence, is aware of the costs of such a
move, "but in the end, it appears that we are paying [the same price]
in small doses, instead of paying it in one installment. [Turning to
Halutz] Look, a long war is not in our interest. We want to have a
strong finish - and this is not going to happen."

Kaplinsky: "I recommend that you order, tonight, the mobilization of
as many units as necessary, to complete the plan that is supposed to
be presented here tomorrow, and approve it, set the timetable and
begin the preparations that will serve during the ground operation,
whatever its size may be."

Halutz concludes: "The options were raised here. What we need to do is
to combine all the alternatives together. There is no winning option
here ... on the level of preparedness, we must be prepared to do it
all."

'We need no heroic battles'

The chief of staff reiterates the possibility of intensifying the air
operation, including the targetting of civilian infrastructure in
Beirut.

"I intend to put this once more on the [government's] table. I say
that before we start moving divisions, [to the rivers] Awali, Zahrani,
Litani, it does not matter. We must bring Lebanon to a different
place."

On July 27, the chief of staff gave new instructions to attack Bint Jbail.

Kaplinsky: "Regarding Bint Jbail, I agree with Udi [Adam] on one
thing. There is no tactical military significance to conquering Bint
Jbail [but] there is another sort of significance ... that of
symbolism and what we are doing, we are doing for those who are going
to tell the story tomorrow."

Adam does not agree: "We do not need a heroic battle in order to
conquer that crap-hole [Bint Jbail]."

Halutz decides on a renewed operation against Bint Jbail and tells
Adam: "On point of principle, I tell you this: You say there is no
story. Well, I think there is one - and it is not on their side, it's
on our side."

The debate on whether to turn to a major ground offensive continued
for another week. In the end, when the IDF had already made up its
mind that a ground offensive was its preferred option, the government
hesitated, and then authorized, on August 11 - a critical delay -
Operation "Change of Direction 11," that same last-minute attempt to
reach the Litani River. By the time the General Staff and the
government had reached the understanding that "the story" of this war
was putting an end to the Katyushas and not to Bint Jbail and other
symbols, it was already too late.

In retrospect, the words of Amos Yadlin, head of Military
Intelligence, from the July 28 meeting, reverberate: "We are at a low
point in the cycle between us and Hezbollah and the situation is not
good. Hezbollah feels victorious and we are perceived, rightly or
wrongly, as the ones who are not delivering the goods. I think that it
is our duty to change this. We have five to 10 days. We must make a
plan and stick to it. Not change it all the time. To let the forces go
to work. To cut down a bit on the number of reassessments and do more
work ... On the matter of the Katyushas, we must show that it is
possible to defeat this thing, otherwise it will follow us for years.
Apparently this can only be done on the ground ... Come on, our
fathers beat all the Arab states in six days and we are not able to go
in with two divisions and finish off [the area] south of the Litani?"
--
Yoshie
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