First Published 2006-07-16, Last Updated 2006-07-16 10:59:31

Changing the rules of the game


This time Israel is confronted primarily by popular resistance movements, 
and the international community appears incapable of interceding. The 
situation calls for new policies from the international community, and from 
Israel, says Patrick Seale.


For the moment at least, the divided international community seems unable to 
call a halt to the latest bloody trial of strength between Israel and its 
Arab enemies.

The contestants seem determined to slog it out, impervious to calls for 
restraint from the G8 meeting in St. Petersburg at the weekend, or the UN 
Security Council, paralysed by a U.S. veto, or the threat of a veto, in 
favour of Israel.

The UN mission, which Secretary-General Kofi Annan is sending to the region, 
is almost certain to be ineffective -- if indeed it ever manages to reach 
Lebanon, now cut off from the outside world by an Israeli land, sea and air 
blockade.

Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert appears to have given his army carte 
blanche to bomb Lebanon and Gaza into submission, to which Hizballah's 
leader, Hussein Nasrallah, has responded with characteristic defiance: "If 
you want an open war, you will have it!"

Hizballah rockets have rained down on Israeli towns close to the border, 
such as Nahariya and Safed, and have even reached Haifa. An Israeli naval 
vessel has been disabled by a Hizballah bomb, apparently dropped from a 
drone, and four sailors are missing, presumed dead.

Unlike earlier Arab-Israeli wars, which Israel was able to win with relative 
ease, this time it is not confronted by Arab states -- at least not yet -- 
but by popular resistance movements, enjoying wide support among the Muslim 
masses of the Arab world. This is one reason international security 
mechanisms seem powerless to bring the crisis under control.

Non-state actors such as Hamas and Hizballah -- and indeed the still more 
extreme al-Qaida -- have arisen precisely because of the inability of Arab 
states to deter Israel from its brutal treatment of its captive Palestinian 
population or America from its aggression in Iraq.

Hamas and Hizballah are attempting to "change the rules of the game" by 
establishing a measure of deterrence, in effect some sort of a primitive 
balance of power. The message delivered to Israel by the two cross-border 
raids, which triggered the current crisis, is simply this: If you hit us, we 
will hit you.

The raids -- one by Hamas from Gaza, the other by Hizballah from southern 
Lebanon -- resulted in the capture of three Israeli soldiers and the death 
of a dozen others. Hamas offered to trade the captured soldier it is holding 
for some of the 10,000 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, 
especially the Palestinian women and children. Hizballah also offered to 
trade its two Israeli soldiers for long-term Lebanese prisoners in Israel.

Olmert immediately rejected any such exchanges, not because he feared they 
would establish a precedent -- such exchanges have taken place in the past 
-- but because he and his army chiefs are resolved to retain intact Israel's 
own deterrent capability, based on overwhelming force.

Israel is as eager as Hamas and Hizballah to "change the rules of the game" 
-- but to its own advantage, by making such attacks even more devastatingly 
costly for their perpetrators, and for the societies from which they spring.

Hence Israel's "wholly disproportionate" response (in the words of French 
President Jacques Chirac), to the cross-border raids, its collective 
punishment of Gaza and Lebanon bordering on war crimes, its destruction of 
power plants (depriving some 800,000 Palestinians of electricity in the 
scorching summer heat), of roads, bridges and fuel dumps, its bombing of 
Beirut's international airport, of the Damascus-Beirut highway, and of 
Beirut's southern suburbs largely inhabited by Shi'is, its blockade of 
Lebanon's ports, and the killing at the time of writing of at least 150 
Palestinians and Lebanese civilians and the wounding of scores of others.

The inevitable question is whether such wholesale killing and terrorizing of 
its neighbours can produce the desired results, or whether the time has come 
to consider a change in Israel's security doctrine. Resolving conflicts on 
an equitable basis, and a scrupulous policy of good neighbourliness, are 
better recipes for Israel's long-term integration in the region than the use 
of brute force.

The cross-border raids of Hamas and Hizballah -- as well as the latter's 
extensive rocket arsenal -- should perhaps serve as a wake-up call to Israel 
because they point to a change in the nature of warfare.

The challenge posed by the two resistance organisations is not entirely new. 
It was prefigured in the suicide bombings with which Hamas countered Israeli 
repression during the second intifada, and the guerrilla harassment with 
which Hizballah ended Israel's 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon in 
2000.

There has now, however, been a qualitative shift: Resistance to occupation 
has given way to offensive operations against Israeli territory, although 
still on a very small scale. Unless Israel grasps that it may not always be 
able to dictate terms to the Arabs and that the time may have come to 
negotiate a global settlement involving Syria as well as Lebanon and the 
Palestinians, down the road may lie mass-casualty terrorism, longer-range 
missiles, potential Islamic revolts in neighbouring countries such as Egypt, 
and even -- in a catastrophic scenario -- "dirty bombs" against Israeli 
cities.

Changes are taking place in Arab society -- greater wealth, more education, 
an angry impatience with Israeli violence and the passivity of Arab regimes 
-- which must inevitably erode the unchallenged supremacy Israel has long 
enjoyed.

The cross-border raid by Hamas, and its launch of Qassam rockets against 
Negev towns like Sderot, did not come out of the blue. They were a response 
to Israel's ferocious attempts, aided and abetted by the United States, to 
destroy the democratically-elected Hamas government by all possible means -- 
the severe financial boycott of Gaza, the targeted assassination of 
Palestinian leaders (like the Hamas security chief Abu Samhadana on 8 June), 
the intensive shelling of civilian targets, and the reducing of a whole 
population to abject poverty. Long before the raid which captured an Israeli 
soldier, Gaza had been turned into an open prison and a defenceless killing 
field.

We are witnessing the result of bankrupt policies -- Israel's unilateral 
land-grab and its cruel siege of Palestinian society, and now of Lebanon; 
and America's abdication of its role as 'honest broker' in the Arab-Israeli 
conflict, as well as its blood-stained adventure in Iraq, which is only the 
most spectacular casualty of its grossly ill-advised "war on terror."


Patrick Seale

http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=16981




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