Friday, August 06, 2010

Mideast Girds for an Epic Battle of Moderates Versus Extremes – New Post By Uri Goldflam


Uri Goldflam

I'm about to confuse you.

A short summary of the past few days in the neighbourhood:

* Unprovoked, the Lebanese army shoots and kills an Israeli soldier.

* Six rockets are fired from Sinai, Egypt into Israel and Jordan. A Jordanian civilian is killed.

* Three rockets and two mortars are fired from Gaza into Ashkelon and Sderot, in Israel.

* U.S. President Barack Obama announces an American pullout from Iraq by August 31.

* Unrest in Egypt, as the health of President Hosni Mubarak is in question.

* Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets Jordan's King Abdullah. * Arab League agrees to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas beginning direct negotiations with Israel.

* Abbas scrambles to find excuses against direct talks.

* Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah visits Syria, then flies to Lebanon with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

* Al Qaeda attacks and kills five police officers in Baghdad.

* In Iran, an assassination attempt against President Mahmoud Ahmedinijad.

* U.S. Congress is asked to approve a $30 billion arms deal to…Saudi Arabia.

What's going on?

I'll get back to that question later.

I have taken dozens of groups to look over at the Lebanese border from kibbutz Misgav Am, which has been the the target of many terror attacks, and most recently of rocket attacks from Lebanon. Across the valley is the Lebanese village of Addaiseh. From a lookout at the edge of the kibbutz it is easy to spot the Hezbollah flags, bunkers and personnel, even a big poster featuring the Iranian Ayatollah alongside Ahmedinijad. It is also clear that the village is not really a village at all, but an elaborate system of bunkers and shooting platforms designed to look like houses. There are no villagers, tractors, or agricultural activities. No fires burning, kids going to school or trucks unloading goods at a local store.

On August 3, the quiet on this front was disturbed by an organized attack on Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) soldiers.

The soldiers were clearing trees and bushes that were obscuring the technical fence. While the Israelis crossed the fence, they but stayed well south of the Lebanese border (Blue line) inside Israel. And prior to the operation, the IDF updated UNIFIL (United Nations) forces and the Lebanese army. This is why the Lebanese knew in advance to invite the media.

From one of those roof top platforms the Lebanese opened accurate sniper fire on the Israelis, killing 45-year-old Dov Harari, a reservist battalion commander. It was supposed to be his last reserve tour of duty. In the Israeli response three Lebanese soldiers and a reporter were killed.

As the preparations for the attack took place, the UNIFIL forces stood waiving blue UN flags. Pictures show they were literally centimetres away from Lebanese army soldiers carrying RPGs, machine guns and other weapons. They saw and witnessed the attack unfolding within arms length.

And what did UNFIL do?

They stood, shouted and waived flags.

A UNIFIL peacekeeper, right, waves as a Lebanese soldier, center, carries an RPG in front of Israeli troops patrolling the border fence in the southern border village of Adaisseh, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Lutfallah Daher)

Addaiseh is a Hezbollah stronghold. Could the press have been invited without Hezbollah's approval? No. The Lebanese battalion involved in this incident is Shiite. Hezbollah is the Shiite arm of the Iranian Shiite regime. Is there a connection? Maybe.

Now let's zoom out.

Lebanon is a pressure pot about to burst. An international tribunal will soon announce that Hezbollah is responsible for the assassination of Rafik Hariri, the anti-Syrian former Prime Minister of Lebanon.

Hariri was killed in 2005, when an explosive device equivalent to 1,000 kg of TNT was detonated as his motorcade drove by. Hezbollah has always denied responsibility, instead blaming Israel. Lebanon's current Prime Minister Saad Hariri, son of the slain PM, met recently with Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and accepted his explanation. But the accusation, backed by hard evidence, makes Nasrallah a liar. Hariri will lose face. In Lebanon, it means the brink of (another) civil war.

In an unprecedented move, the Saudi king flew met the Syrian president. In another unprecedented move, both leaders flew to Lebanon to meet the Lebanese PM. They were trying to create a pressure release valve.

Meanwhile, Nasrallah announced that if the international tribunal finds someone in Hezbollah to be responsible for the assassination they "will know what to do." And by that, it looks like he meant kill a few Israelis and divert the attention.

However, Hezbollah's sole purpose is to attack Israel when Iran sees fit. Since Iran is not yet ready to engage, it must use another proxy. Enter the Shiite battalion of the Lebanese army.

Do things start to make sense now?

Back to our opening list. What's going on?

An epic battle between moderation and extremism is raging in the Middle East. Arab regimes are fearful that a nuclear Iran will cause unrest among their population. Radical Islamists are doubling their efforts in anticipation of the American withdrawal. You can also expect an increase in terror attacks as the end of August approaches and the direct peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians get closer to resuming.

The West can no longer afford to act like the UN, waiving flags, sitting idly by while the bad guys shoot their guns. Trying to accommodate or compromise with these extreme forces will embolden them. To support peace one must take a tough stand against radicalism.

The great Irish statesman Edmond Burke said: When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle. In other words, for evil to prevail, good people must remain silent.

No comments: