|
Editorial Note:
Israel's foray into Lebanon
last year resulted a resounding military defeat for the
Zionist state. According to a confidential French Foreign
Office report, seen by Brian Harring, far from losing from
116 to 120 men, as it claims, IDF losses totaled 2300
-
Ranimar
Author's Note:
On a business trip to Moscow for a conference with my
publishers, I stopped in Paris for four days for business,
research and sightseeing. During that time, one of my French
friends in their Foreign Office gave me a copy of an
official report and summary of the causes, actions and
losses of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 2006. This
document runs to over three hundred pages and is complete
with charts, graphs and many photographs. Here is a
translation and condensation of that report for your
interest.
- Brian
Harring
Subject: Causes of the attack
Both the State of Israel and
the United States viewed Syria as a potentially dangerous
enemy. Joint intelligence indicated that Syria was a strong
supporter of the Hezbollah Shiite paramilitary group. Israel
had planned a punitive military operation into Lebanon both
to clip Hezbollah’s wings and send a strong message to Syria
to cease and desist supplying arms and money to the
anti-Israel group. Because of its involvement in Iraq, the
United States indicated it would be unable to supply any
ground troops but would certainly supply any kind of weapon,
to include bombs, cluster bombs and ammunition for this
projected operation.
A casus belli was created by
the Israeli Mossad’s assassination of Rafik Haarri, a
popular Lebanese politician and subsequent disinformation
promulgated and instigated by both Israel and the United
States blamed Syria for the killing.
The IDF was being supplied
faulty and misleading intelligence information, apparently
originating from Russian sources, that gave misinformation
about Hezbollah positions and strengths and therefore the
initial planning was badly flawed.
In full concert with the
American president, the IDF launched its brutal and
murderous attack on July 12, 2006 and continued unabated
until the Hezbollah inflicted so many serious casualties on
the Israeli forces and also on the civilian population of
Israel, that their government frantically demanded that the
White House force a cease fire through the United Nations.
This was done for Israel on August 14, 2007 and the last act
of this murderous and unprovoked assault was when Israel
removed their naval blockade of Lebanese ports.
The contrived incident that
launched the Israeli attack was an alleged attack by
Hezbollah into Israeli territory where they were alleged to
have ‘kidnapped” two Israeli soldiers and subsequently
launched a rocket attack to cover their retreat.
The conflict killed over six
thousand people, most of whom were Lebanese, severely
damaged Lebanese infrastructure, displaced
700,000-915,000
Lebanese, and
300,000-500,000 Israelis, and disrupted
normal life across all of Lebanon and northern Israel. Even
after the ceasefire, much of Southern Lebanon remained
uninhabitable due to unexploded cluster bombs. As of 1
December 2006, an estimated
200,000
Lebanese remained internally displaced or refugees
During the campaign Israel's
Air Force flew more than
12,000
combat missions, its Navy fired
2,500
shells, and its Army fired over
100,000
shells. Large parts of the Lebanese civilian infrastructure
were destroyed, including
400 miles
of roads, 73 bridges,
and 31
other targets such as Beirut International Airport, ports,
water and sewage treatment plants, electrical facilities,
25
fuel stations, 900
commercial structures, up to 350 schools and two hospitals,
and 15,000
homes. Some 130,000
more homes were damaged.
Israeli Defense Minister Amir
Peretz ordered commanders to prepare civil defense plans.
One million Israelis had to stay near or in bomb shelters or
security rooms, with some
250,000
civilians evacuating the north and relocating to other areas
of the country.
On 26 July 2006 Israeli
forces attacked and destroyed an UN observer post. Described
as a nondeliberate attack by Israel, the post was shelled
for hours before being bombed. UN forces made repeated calls
to alert Israeli forces of the danger to the UN observers,
all four of whom were killed. Rescuers were shelled as they
attempted to reach the post. According to an e-mail sent
earlier by one of the UN observers killed in the attack,
there had been numerous occasions on a daily basis where the
post had come under fire from both Israeli artillery and
bombing. The UN observer reportedly wrote that previous
Israeli bombing near the post had not been deliberate
targeting, but rather due to "tactical necessity," military
jargon which retired Canadian Major General Lewis MacKenzie
later interpreted as indicating that Israeli strikes were
aimed at Hezbollah targets extremely close to the post.
On 27 July 2006 Hezbollah
ambushed the Israeli forces in Bint Jbeil and killed
eighteen
soldiers. Israel claimed, after this event, that it also
inflicted heavy losses on Hezbollah.
On 28 July 2006 Israeli
paratroopers killed
5 of Hezbollah's commando elite in Bint
Jbeil. In total, the IDF claimed that
80 fighters
were killed in the battles at Bint Jbeil. Hezbollah sources,
coupled with International Red Cross figures place the
Hexbollah total at 7
dead and 129
non-combatant Lebanese civilian deaths.
On 30 July 2006 Israeli air
strikes hit an apartment building in Qana, killing at least
65
civilians, of which
28 were children, with
25 more
missing. The airstrike was widely condemned.
On 31 July 2006 the Israeli
military and Hezbollah forces engaged Hezbollah in the
Battle of Ayta ash-Shab.
On 1 August 2006 Israeli
commandos launched Operation Sharp and Smooth and landed in
Baalbek and captured five civilians including one bearing
the same name as Hezbollah's leader, "Hassan Nasrallah". All
of the civilians were released after the ceasefire. Troops
landed near Dar al-Himkeh hospital west of Baalbeck as part
of a widescale operation in the area.
On 4 August 2006 the IAF
attacked a building in the area of al-Qaa around 10
kilometers (six miles) from Hermel in the Bekaa Valley,
Lebanon. Sixty two farm workers, mostly Syrian and Lebanese
Kurds, were killed during the airstrike.
On 5 August 2006 Israeli
commandos carried out a nighttime raid in Tyre, blowing up a
water treatment plant, a small clinic and killing 187
civilians before withdrawing.
On 7 August 2006 the IAF
attacked the Shiyyah suburb in the Lebanese capital of
Beirut, destroying three apartment buildings in the suburb,
killing at least 120
people.
On 11 August 2006 the IAF
attacked a convoy of approximately
750
vehicles containing Lebanese police, army, civilians, and
one Associated Press journalist, killing at least
40
people and wounding at least
39.
On 12 August 2006 the IDF
established its hold in South Lebanon. Over the weekend
Israeli forces in southern Lebanon nearly tripled in size.
and were ordered to advance towards the Litani River.
On 14 August 2006 the Israeli
Air Force reported that they had killed the head of
Hezbollah’s Special Forces, whom they identified as Sajed
Dewayer,but this claim was never proven.. 80 minutes before
the cessation of hostilities, the IDF targeted a Palestinian
faction in the Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp in Sidon, killing
a UNRWA staff member. Sixty two refugees had been killed in
an attack on this camp six days prior to the incident.
During the campaign Hezbollah
fired between 3,970
and 4,228
rockets. About 95% of these were 122 mm (4.8 in) Katyusha
artillery rockets, which carried warheads up to 30 kg (66
lb) and had a range of up to 30 km (19 mi). An estimated 23%
of these rockets hit built-up areas, primarily civilian in
nature.
Cities hit included Haifa,
Hadera, Nazareth, Tiberias, Nahariya, Safed, Afula, Kiryat
Shmona, Beit She'an, Karmiel, and Maalot, and dozens of
Kibbutzim, Moshavim, and Druze and Arab villages, as well as
the northern West Bank. Hezbollah also engaged in guerrilla
warfare with the IDF, attacking from well-fortified
positions. These attacks by small, well-armed units caused
serious problems for the IDF, especially through the use
hundreds of sophisticated Russian-made anti-tank guided
missiles (ATGMs). Hezbollah destroyed 38 Israeli Merkava
main battle tanks and damaged 82. Fifteen tanks were
destroyed by anti-tank mines. Hezbollah caused an
additional 65 casualties using ATGMs to collapse buildings
onto Israeli troops sheltering inside.
After the initial Israeli
response, Hezbollah declared an all-out military alert.
Hezbollah was estimated to have
13,000
missiles at the beginning of the conflict. Israeli newspaper
Haaretz described Hezbollah as a trained, skilled,
well-organized, and highly motivated infantry that was
equipped with the cream of modern weaponry from the arsenals
of Syria, Iran, Russia, and China. Lebanese satellite TV
station Al-Manar reported that the attacks had included a
Fajr-3 and a Ra'ad 1, both liquid-fuel missiles developed by
Iran.
Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah defended the attacks, saying that Hezbollah had
"started to act calmly, we focused on Israel[i] military
bases and we didn’t attack any settlement, however, since
the first day, the enemy attacked Lebanese towns and
murdered civilians — Hezbollah militants had destroyed
military bases, while the Israelis killed civilians and
targeted Lebanon's infrastructure." Hezbollah apologized for
shedding Muslim blood, and called on the Arabs of the
Israeli city of Haifa to flee.
On 13 July 2006 in response
to Israel's retaliatory attacks in which
43
civilians were killed, Hezbollah launched rockets at Haifa
for the first time, hitting a cable car station along with a
few other buildings
On 14 July 2006 Hezbollah
attacked the INS Hanit, an Israeli Sa'ar 5-class missile
boat enforcing the naval blockade, with a what was believed
to be a radar guided C-802 anti-ship missile.
24 sailors
were killed and the warship was severely damaged and towed
back to port.
On 17 July 2006 Hezbollah hit
a railroad repair depot, killing twenty-two workers.
Hezbollah claimed that this attack was aimed at a large
Israeli fuel storage plant adjacent to the railway facility.
Haifa is home to many strategically valuable facilities such
as shipyards and oil refineries.
On 18 July 2006 Hezbollah hit
a hospital in Safed in northern Galilee, wounding twenty
three.
On 27 July 2006 Hezbollah
ambushed the Israeli forces in Bint Jbeil and killed
forty one
soldiers, and destroyed
12 IDF
vehicles and destroyed three armored vehicles and seriously
damaged eight more. Israel claimed it also inflicted heavy
losses on Hezbollah.
On 3 August 2006 Nasrallah
warned Israel against hitting Beirut and promised
retaliation against Tel Aviv in this case. He also stated
that Hezbollah would stop its rocket campaign if Israel
ceased aerial and artillery strikes of Lebanese towns and
villages.
On 4 August 2006 Israel
targeted the southern outskirts of Beirut, and later in the
day, Hezbollah launched rockets at the Hadera region.
On 9 August 2006 twenty three
Israeli soldiers were killed when the building they were
taking cover in was struck by a Hezbollah anti-tank missile
and collapsed.
On 12 August 2006
24 Israeli
soldiers were killed; the worst Israeli loss in a single
day. Out of those 24, five soldiers were killed when
Hezbollah shot down an Israeli helicopter, a first for the
militia. Hezbollah claimed the helicopter had been attacked
with a Wa'ad missile.
One of the most controversial
aspects of the conflict has been the high number of civilian
deaths. The actual proportion of civilian deaths and the
responsibility of it is hotly disputed.
Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch blamed Israel for systematically failing
to distinguish between combatants and civilians, which may
constitute a war crime, and accused Hezbollah of committing
war crimes by the deliberate and indiscriminate killing of
civilians by firing rockets into populated areas
On 24 July 2006, U.N.
humanitarian chief Jan Egeland said Israel's response
violated international humanitarian law, but also criticized
Hezbollah for knowingly putting civilians in harm's way by
"cowardly blending...among women and children".During the
war, Israeli jets distributed leaflets calling on civilian
residents to evacuate or move north.
In response to some of this
criticism, Israel has stated that it did, wherever possible,
attempt to distinguish between protected persons and
combatants, but that due to Hezbollah militants being in
civilian clothing (thus committing the war crime of perfidy
this was not always possible.
Direct attacks on civilian
objects are prohibited under international humanitarian law.
The United Nations Development Program (UNDP) initially
estimated about
35,000 homes and businesses in Lebanon
were destroyed by Israel in the conflict, while a quarter of
the country's road bridges or overpasses were damaged. Jean
Fabre, a UNDP spokesman, estimated that overall economic
losses for Lebanon from the month-long conflict between
Israel and Hezbollah totaled "at least $15 billion, if not
more."] Before and throughout the war, Hezbollah launched
over 4000
unguided rockets against Israeli population centers, seeking
to terrorize the Israeli population. This was in direct
response to Israel’s attack on residential sections and the
deliberate targeting of civilians
Amnesty International
published a report stating that "the deliberate widespread
destruction of apartments, houses, electricity and water
services, roads, bridges, factories and ports, in addition
to several statements by Israeli officials, suggests a
policy of punishing both the Lebanese government and the
civilian population," and called for an international
investigation of violations of international humanitarian
law by both sides in the conflict.
Israel
defended itself from such allegations on the grounds that
Hezbollah's use of roads and bridges for military purposes
made them legitimate targets. However, Amnesty International
stated that "the military advantage anticipated from
destroying [civilian infrastructure] must be measured
against the likely effect on civilians."
Human Rights Watch strongly
criticized Israel for using cluster bombs too close to
civilians because of their inaccuracy and unreliability,
suggesting that they may have gone as far as deliberately
targeting civilian areas with such munitions. Hezbollah was
also criticized by Human Rights Watch for filling its
rockets with ball bearings, which "suggests a desire to
maximize harm to civilians"; the U.N has criticized Israel
for its use of cluster munitions and disproportionate
attacks.
Amnesty International stated
that the IDF used white phosphorus shells in Lebanon. Israel
later admitted to the use of white phosphorus, but stated
that it only used the incendiary against militants. However,
several foreign media outlets reported observing and
photographing “a large number” of Lebanese civilians with
burns characteristic of white phosphorus attacks during the
conflict.
Hezbollah casualty figures
are difficult to ascertain, with claims and estimates by
different groups and individuals ranging from
43 to
1,000.
Hezbollah's leadership claims that
43 of their
fighters were killed in the conflict, while Israel estimated
that its forces had killed
600
Hezbollah fighters. In addition, Israel claimed to have the
names of 532
dead Hezbollah fighters but when challenged by Hezbollah to
release the list, the Israelis dropped the issue. A UN
official estimated that
50
Hezbollah fighters had been killed, and Lebanese government
officials estimated that up to
49 had been
killed.
The Lebanese civilian death
toll is difficult to pinpoint as most published figures do
not distinguish between civilians and militants, including
those released by the Lebanese government. In addition,
Hezbollah fighters can be difficult to identify as many do
not wear military uniforms. However, it has been widely
reported that the majority of the Lebanese killed were
civilians, and UNICEF estimated that
30% of those killed were
children under the age of 13
The death toll estimates do
not include Lebanese killed since the end of fighting by
land mines or unexploded US/Israeli cluster bombs. According
to the National Demining Office,
297 people
have been killed and
867 wounded
in such blasts.
Official Israeli figures for
the Israel Defense Forces troops killed range from
116 to
120.
The Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs gives two different
figures – 117
and 119
– the latter of which contains two IDF
fatalities that occurred after the ceasefire went into
effect.In September 2006, two local Israeli news papers
released insider information ensuring that the israeli
military death toll might climbed to around
540
soldiers. Israel refuses any outside agency access to its
lists of the dead and wounded but an examination of all the
accurate information available as of January 1, 2007
indicates that Israeli Defense Forces lost a total of
2300
killed with
600 of
these dying in military hospital facilities subsequent to
the conclusion of the fighting and an additional
700 very
seriously wounded.
Hezbollah rockets killed
43
Israeli civilians during the conflict, including
four who died of heart attacks during rocket attacks. In
addition, 4,262
civilians were injured –
33
seriously, 68
moderately,
1,388
lightly, and 2,773
were treated for shock and anxiety
Last month, (March, 2007) the
Israeli comptroller had planned to release an interim report
that was expected to accuse the army and Olmert of leaving
Israeli civilians virtually defenseless during last summer's
Lebanon war, in which Hezbollah guerrillas fired a barrage
of rockets and missiles at northern Israel. |