Today: July 22, 2006 at 14:30:42 PDT

Analysis: Israel Faces Numerous Risks
By SALLY BUZBEE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Israel may appear to be solidly in the driver's seat in its fight with 
Hezbollah - pushing relentlessly to weaken the Islamic guerrilla group as 
much as it can while there is little international pressure for a quick 
cease-fire.

But in the long run, wars in the Middle East are not won only on the 
battlefield, especially when they are waged against tough and savvy militant 
groups like the one in south Lebanon.

In many ways, the biggest risk is that this sudden, violent little war will 
tip the balance toward extremists and away from moderates across the Middle 
East, including in Lebanon, where the government has been dramatically 
weakened by the fighting.

Not only can Israel lose soldiers, as it did Thursday in an ambush in the 
south. It also faces the risk that whenever the fighting ends, Hezbollah - 
and its key backer, Iran - might be in a stronger, more influential 
political position than before.

That would be a bad outcome not just for Israel but also for the United 
States, hurting everything from U.S.-led Palestinian peace efforts and the 
standoff over Iran's nuclear program to the still-rocky struggle to 
stabilize Iraq.

Damage to the fledgling democratically elected government would be a loss 
for the United States as it struggles to realize its secular vision for the 
region.

Hezbollah already has held its own sufficiently that it can present a 
cease-fire as a great victory, said Patrick Clawson, deputy director for 
research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Its leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, "can emerge victorious if he can 
plausibly claim that he conceded nothing ... He can write off the damage to 
Lebanon as the price of war."

Of course, Israel does have a powerful short-term interest in destroying as 
many of Hezbollah's weapons as it can and pushing the Shiite militants away 
from the Lebanese border.

A cease-fire that resulted in moving Hezbollah farther from the border with 
a depleted weapons supply, or a strike that killed the charismatic and 
popular Nasrallah, could give Israel valuable breathing space.

But the reality is that as long as it has political support in Lebanon, 
Hezbollah can always resupply through Iran and Syria. It has a group of 
committed fighters and supporters.

And the greater the destruction to Lebanon, the more likely that Lebanon's 
fledgling, Western-backed government will remain weak and unable to disarm 
Hezbollah.

All of that means Hezbollah's overall position in Lebanon - and its ability 
to use the country as a base against Israel in future - could actually 
improve as anger at Israel and backing for the guerrillas grow.

Hezbollah at first seemed to have miscalculated when it snatched two Israeli 
soldiers. It may have believed Israel would negotiate a prisoner swap as it 
had in the past. The Saudis and Egyptians initially criticized Hezbollah but 
now are turning the harsh words on Israel.

But instead, Israel hit back hard, and as it did, Hezbollah appeared to be 
losing political ground. Many in the Mideast were deeply dismayed at the 
group's provocation and blamed it for the destruction wreaked on Lebanon.

Yet as the fighting goes on, the mood is shifting perceptibly, at least 
among average Arabs, from anger at Hezbollah to more-familiar feelings of 
hostility toward Israel. That is what Hezbollah counts on, and Nasrallah is 
highly skilled at using the region's media to beef up his political 
position.

Unless Western-leaning and pro-democracy supporters in Lebanon can somehow 
rejuvenate the street strength they showed last year in their push for 
democracy, their side - the moderate side - seems certain to lose influence.

In one troubling sign, airports all across the Mideast were packed this week 
with the cream of Lebanese society - middle-class families, businessmen with 
laptops, young affluent students - all headed to Canada, the United States, 
South America, Europe. If they leave for the duration, as they did during 
the country's civil war years, that could again leave their country mostly 
helpless against Hezbollah.

All of that is bad for both the United States and moderate Arab allies, such 
as Saudi Arabia and Egypt, who America depends on to carry its agenda in the 
Mideast. Those countries, on the defensive as Hezbollah fights Israel, lose 
their ability to push for peace talks or mediate for moderation behind the 
scenes with other militant groups like Hamas.

None of that means Hezbollah or Iran wins, either - their ability to cause 
trouble does not necessarily leave either of them, long-term, any nearer to 
their goals, said Anthony Cordesman, a Mideast expert at the Center for 
Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"Unless the current fighting somehow really does lead to the disarming of 
Hezbollah, a flood of aid to Lebanon, and a new approach to the 
Israeli-Palestinian war ... the mid- to long-term outcome will be as bad for 
any apparent victor as the defeated," he said.

"The Israelis will lose, Hezbollah will lose and so will everyone else."

---

Sally Buzbee is the AP's Chief of Middle East News in Cairo, Egypt.

http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/w-me/2006/jul/22/072205789.html




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