August 11, 2006
Weapons

Israel Asks U.S. to Ship Rockets With Wide Blast
By DAVID S. CLOUD

WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 — Israel has asked the Bush
administration to
speed delivery of short-range antipersonnel rockets
armed with cluster
munitions, which it could use to strike Hezbollah
missile sites in
Lebanon, two American officials said Thursday.

The request for M-26 artillery rockets, which are
fired in barrages
and carry hundreds of grenade-like bomblets that
scatter and explode
over a broad area, is likely to be approved shortly,
along with other
arms, a senior official said.

But some State Department officials have sought to
delay the approval
because of concerns over the likelihood of civilian
casualties, and
the diplomatic repercussions. The rockets, while they
would be very
effective against hidden missile launchers, officials
say, are fired
by the dozen and could be expected to cause civilian
casualties if
used against targets in populated areas.

Israel is asking for the rockets now because it has
been unable to
suppress Hezbollah's Katyusha rocket attacks in the
month-old conflict
by using bombs dropped from aircraft and other types
of artillery, the
officials said. The Katyusha rockets have killed
dozens of civilians
in Israel.

The United States had approved the sale of M-26's to
Israel some time
ago, but the weapons had not yet been delivered when
the crisis in
Lebanon erupted. If the shipment is approved, Israel
may be told that
it must be especially careful about firing the rockets
into populated
areas, the senior official said.

Israel has long told American officials that it wanted
M-26 rockets
for use against conventional armies in case Israel was
invaded, one of
the American officials said. But after being pressed
in recent days on
what they intended to use the weapons for, Israeli
officials disclosed
that they planned to use them against rocket sites in
Lebanon. It was
this prospect that raised the intense concerns over
civilian casualties.

During much of the 1980's, the United States
maintained a moratorium
on selling cluster munitions to Israel, following
disclosures that
civilians in Lebanon had been killed with the weapons
during the 1982
Israeli invasion. But the moratorium was lifted late
in the Reagan
administration, and since then, the United States has
sold Israel some
types of cluster munitions, the senior official said.

Officials would discuss the issue only on the
condition of anonymity,
as the debate over what to do is not resolved and is
freighted with
implications for the difficult diplomacy that is under
way.

State Department officials "are discussing whether or
not there needs
to be a block on this sale because of the past history
and because of
the current circumstances," said the senior official,
adding that it
was likely that Israel will get the rockets, but will
be told to be
"be careful."

David Siegel, a spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in
Washington,
declined to comment on Israel's request. He said,
though, that "as a
rule, we obviously don't fire into populated areas,
with the exception
of the use of precision-guided munitions against
terrorist targets."
In such cases, Israel has dropped leaflets warning of
impending
attacks to avoid civilian casualties, he said.

In the case of cluster munitions, including the
Multiple Launch Rocket
System, which fires the M-26, the Israeli military
only fires into
open terrain where rocket launchers or other military
targets are
found, to avoid killing civilians, an Israeli official
said.

The debate over whether to ship Israel the missiles,
which include the
cluster munitions and use launchers that Israel has
already received,
comes as the Bush administration has been trying to
win support for a
draft United Nations resolution that calls for
immediate cessation of
"all attacks" by Hezbollah and of "offensive military
operations" by
Israel.

Arab governments, under pressure to halt the rising
number of civilian
casualties in Lebanon, have criticized the measure for
not calling for
a withdrawal of Israeli troops from southern Lebanon.

While Bush administration officials have criticized
Israeli strikes
that have caused civilian casualties, they have also
backed the
offensive against Hezbollah by rushing arms shipments
to the region.
Last month the administration approved a shipment of
precision-guided
munitions, which one senior official said this week
included at least
25 of the 5,000-pound "bunker-buster" bombs.

Israel has recently asked for another shipment of
precision-guided
munitions, which is likely to be approved, the senior
official said.

Last month, the advocacy group Human Rights Watch said
its researchers
had uncovered evidence that Israel had fired cluster
munitions on July
19 at the Lebanese village of Bilda, which the group
said had killed
one civilian and wounded at least 12 others, including
7 children. The
group said it had interviewed survivors of the attack,
who described
incoming artillery shells dispensing hundreds of
cluster submunitions
on the village.

Human Rights Watch also released photographs, taken
recently by its
researchers in northern Israel, of what it said were
American-supplied
artillery shells that had markings showing they
carried cluster munitions.

Mr. Siegel, the Israeli Embassy spokesman, denied that
cluster
munitions had been used on the village.

The United States Army also employs the M-26 rocket
and the Multiple
Launch Rocket System in combat, and the Pentagon has
sold the weapon
to numerous other allies, in addition to Israel. The
system is
especially effective at attacking enemy artillery
sites, military
experts say, because the rockets can be quickly
targeted against a
defined geographic area. Each rocket contains 644
submunitions that
kill enemy soldiers operating artillery in the area.

But Human Rights Watch and other groups have
campaigned for the
elimination of cluster munitions, noting that even if
civilians are
not present when the weapons is used, some
submunitions that do not
detonate on impact can later injure or kill civilians.

The M-26 "is a particularly deadly weapon," Bonnie
Docherty, a
researcher with Human Rights Watch, who helped write a
study of the
United States' use of the weapons in the 2003 Iraq
invasion. "They
were used widely by U.S. forces in Iraq and caused
hundreds of
civilian casualties."

After the Reagan administration determined in 1982
that the cluster
munitions had been used by Israel against civilian
areas, the delivery
of the artillery shells containing the munitions to
Israel was suspended.

Israel was found to have violated a 1976 agreement
with the United
States in which it had agreed only to use cluster
munitions against
Arab armies and against clearly defined military
targets. The
moratorium on selling Israel cluster weapons was later
lifted by the
Reagan administration.

This week, State Department officials were studying
records of what
happened in 1982 as part of their internal
deliberations into whether
to grant approval for the sale to go forward.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/11/world/middleeast/11military.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&ref=middleeast&pagewanted=print


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