|
This week Israel's Military Intelligence
Chief, Major General Amos Yadlin complained to the Israeli
daily Haaretz that "Hezbollah proved that it was the
strongest power in Lebanon... stronger than the Lebanese and
it had wanted to take the government it could have done it,"
He said Hezbollah, continued to pose a "significant" threat
to Israel as its rockets could reach a large part of Israeli
territory."
Yadlin was putting it mildly.
But what Intelligence Chief Yadlin did
not reveal to the Israeli public was just how "significant"
but also "immediate" the Hezbollah threat was on May 11. Nor
was he willing to divulge the fact that he received
information via US and French channels that if the planned
attack on Lebanon's capitol went forward that Tel Aviv was
subject, in the view of the US intelligence community to
"approximately 600 Hezbollah rockets in the first 24 hours
in retaliation and at least that number on the following
day".
The Israeli Intel Chief also declined to
reveal that despite Israel's recent psyche-war camping about
various claimed missile shields "the State of Israel is
perfecting", that this claim is being ridiculed at the
Pentagon. "Israel will not achieve an effective shield
against the current generation of rockets, even assuming no
technological improvements in the current rockets aimed at
it, for another 20 years. And that assumes the US will
continue to fund their research and development for the
hoped for shields" according to Pentagon, US Senate
Intelligence Committee, and very well informed Lebanese
sources.
The planned attack on Beirut
According to US Senate Intelligence Committee sources, the
Bush administration initially green lighted the intended May
11 Israel 'demonstration of solidarity with the pro-Bush
administration militias, some with which Israel has
maintained ties since the days of Bashir Gemayal and Ariel
Sharon.
In the end, "the Bush administration got cold feet", a
Congressional source revealed. So did Israel.
Israel was not willing to proceed with
the original Bush Administration idea which was to have Bush
attend the May 15 Israel anniversary celebrations following
the Israeli attack meant to hit Hezbollah hard, and give
Bush the credit for coming to the dangerous region. The
message was to be that Bush comes to the rescue 'on
horseback and leads the US Calvary charge straight out of a
B western movie where the bugle would sound and flag would
be unfurled and the white hat good guys would show their
stuff before riding into the sunset and back to Texas,
leaving the results to the likely Obama administration to
sort out.
The plan involved Israeli air strikes on
South and West Beirut in support of forces it was assured
would be able to surprise and resist Hezbollah and sustain a
powerful offensive for 48 hours.
Also presumably disturbing to Israel was
the report it received that Hezbollah "had once again in all
probability hacked its "secure" military intelligence
communications and the fear that the information would be
shared with others.
The Hezbollah rout of the militias in
West Beirut plus the fear of retaliation on Tel Aviv,
ruining 60th anniversary celebrations, forced cancellation
of the supportive attack.
Israel limited its actions to sending two
F-15's and two F-16's into as far North as Tyre, one more of
literally hundreds of violations of Lebanese airspace,
sovereignty and SCR 1701.
Clearly frustrated, Cabinet Minister Meir
Sheetrit said Israel should not yet take any action now, but
warned" those things could change if Hezbollah takes over
Lebanon." a few minutes earlier he had declared that
Hezbollah had done just that and had treated the Lebanese
army as a doormat.
Later in the Sunday cabinet meeting,
Minister Ami Ayalon called for an emergency meeting of the
political-security cabinet to discuss "the ongoing crisis in
Lebanon and why Israel was not assisting friendly forces."
Minister Yitzhak Cohen (Shas) said that
"Israel must immediately ask the [United Nations] Security
Council to hold renewed discussions over resolution 1701."
The minister was referring to the resolution that stopped
the Israeli actions against Lebanon during the 34-day
between in 2006, maintaining a fragile cease-fire.
Finally Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert informed Israeli supporters in Lebanon, through the
media, and presumbly other means that" Israel was following
the violence in Lebanon closely, but would refrain from
intervening. Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai told Army
Radio Sunday that Israel was prepared for the possibility
that the situation in Lebanon will deteriorate into another
civil war (meaning future opportunities for Israeli
influence and interventon in Lebanon) and that the current
fighting could end with a Hezbollah takeover of the
government. "We need to keep our eyes peeled and be
especially sensitive regarding all that is happening there,"
Vilnai told Army Radio.
The Bush administration, also disappointed, switched tactics
and is opting for domination of the narrative of the fairly
complicated events of the past week and using their media
and confessional allies to launch a media blitz (minus
Future TV for a few days} to flood the airways with:
Hezbollah staged a coup d'état. Even
Israel, if not the Bush administration, concedes Hezbollah
has no interest in taking over the Government. (One
observer, paraphrasing Winston Churchill's comment,
deadpanned, "Some Hezbollah Coup! Some Hezbollah Etat!")
Hezbollah brought it forces from the
South and occupied West Beirut: Hezbollah not only did not
bring their forces from the South to Beirut (rather they
remained on alert for an Israel attack down South)
Hezbollah broke its pledge not to use Resistance arms
against Lebanese militias and shot up West Beirut.
The facts are very different when viewed close up on the
streets here.
When the Lebanese Resistance took the decision during the
early hours of Friday morning to engage in civil
disobedience, it delayed its actions so as not to preempt
the Labor movement strike for higher wages which it
supported. When the marching Strikers were prevented from
moving into West Beirut the Opposition extended its civil
disobedience manifestation.
Various militias, including the smartly
outfitted Hariri "Secure Plus" with its distinctive maroon
tee-shirts and beige trousers, (now know locally by some as
"Secure Minus") a hoped for future Blackwater operation in
Lebanon disintegrated surprisingly quickly because many of
its green recruits brought down from Tripoli felt misled and
betrayed regarding their job description as they were handed
weapons an instructed to fight Hezbollah. Snipers from
anti-Opposition factions killed civilians from rooftops in
Beirut trying to ignite a civil war.
Hezbollah, acting in self defense,
according to various officials, quickly clamped down on the
trouble makers, took control of the streets, within hours
handed them over to the army, and virtually evacuated West
Beirut, retaining one position near Bay Rocks manned by
unarmed representatives.
Meanwhile the Hariri influence has been greatly weekend in
Akkar near the Palestinian Refugee camp of Nahr al Bared and
in the Tripoli area. According to some political analysts,
including, Fida'a Ittani, a regular columnist for the
independent pro-opposition newspaper Al-Akhbar, wrote on May
14, the Future Movement, defeated in Beirut, no longer has
any serious influence in the north.
Several Salafi al Qaeda admiring movements are present in
Lebanon and like Fatah Islam's declaration this week that
they will fight for the Sunnis, they vary in their attitudes
from silent opposition to Future leader Saad Al-Hariri to
fully supporting him as the leader of the Sunnis. These
groups are valued by certain 'leaders' in Lebanon because
are the only ones with coherent structures at the
ideological, political, technical, and field levels.
Judging from Saad Hariri's confused statements at his
subsequent news conference and statements by other parties,
the bitterness of promised but unforthcoming assistance was
evident.
For two days following the debacle of his
forces imploding the head of the Future Movement said
nothing. Finally on the 14th he broke his silence. The Halba
massacre, committed by Hariri's Mustakbal militiamen which
brutally and barbarically murdered 11 people from the
opposition did not seem worthy of discussion as he spoke. In
a press conference on Tuesday, Hariri simply ignored what
all the Lebanese had seen on TV from weapons, ammunition and
alcohol found in Future movement offices, and instead listed
a series of delusions. "We awaited an open war on Israel,
and yet here is an open war on Beirut and its people" he
stated. Some interpreted this rather odd statement either as
a subconscious slip of the tongue on Hariri's part
expressing his frustration that the Israelis help did not
arrive or that his reported earlier incoherent state
persisted.
Hariri's original speech was so confused
that the Saudi channel al-Arabiyya stopped broadcasting it
and only read excerpts from what he said, without showing
his recorded speech.
When American criticism resumed, and
Hezbollah fighters withdrew from the alleys surrounding his
house, Hariri was urged to stand up and speak again, this
time with a stronger tone, saying "This has been decided by
the Iranian and Syrian regimes that wanted to play a
political game in Lebanon's streets. For us nothing has
changed. We will not negotiate with someone having a pistol
pointed to our heads."
Anger at the Bush administration and Israel by certain
warlords in Lebanon must feel much like the frustration of
Secure Minus personal who rushed from Tripoli and felt
misled, abandoned and cheated. |