�The world has become accustomed to the idea of mass
migrations and has become fond of them . . . Hitler -- as odious as he is to us
-- has given this idea a good name in the world.� Ze�ev Jabotinsky; Ideological
founder of the Likud Party, �One Palestine Complete,� p 407
�The raw logic of Israel�s distorted self-image and
racist doctrines is exposed beyond confusion by the now-stark reality: the
moonscape rubble of once-lovely Lebanese villages; a million desperate people
trying to survive Israeli aerial attacks as they carry children and wheel
disabled grandparents down cratered roads; limp bodies of children pulled from
the dusty basements of crushed buildings. This is the reality of Israel�s
national doctrine, the direct outcome of its racist worldview.� Virginia Tilley
�The Case for Boycotting Israel� Counterpunch
By bombing the highways and main bridges into Beirut, Israel
has cut off the capital from the outside world and put the entire nation under
siege. Israel can now execute its plan to pummel Lebanon into rubble without
the threat of foreign intervention.
The north has been effectively severed from the south
allowing the IDF to continue its ethnic cleansing operations as well as its
search-and-destroy missions for Hezbollah fighters. They have meticulously
destroyed all the main points of entry at the Syrian border and blockaded the
coastline. Israel believes that their earlier occupation (which ended in year
2000) failed due to the unrestricted flow of supplies and weaponry from Syria
and Iran. The Bush administration has assisted this effort by providing crucial
intelligence from the NSA about the movement of material from the outside.
By now, it should be apparent that Israel�s military
campaign has nothing to do with Hezbollah�s capturing of the two Israeli
soldiers on July 14. The present plan, which was drawn up more than a year ago
(and of which high-ranking members of the Bush administration were fully
briefed) is designed to establish a new northern border for Israel at the
Litani River and create an �Israel-friendly� regime in Beirut.
The plan to annex the land south of the Litani River dates
back to the founding of the Jewish state when Israel�s first prime minister,
David Ben Gurion, described the country�s future borders this way: �To the
north the Litani River, the southern border will be pushed into the Sinai, and
to the east, the Syrian Desert, including the furthest edge of Transjordan.�
(See map
of post WW1 Zionist plan for region)
In 1978 the IDF launched Operation Litani with the intention
of annexing the southern part of Lebanon and setting up a Christian
client-regime in Beirut that would take orders from Tel Aviv. Israel said that
it needed a �buffer zone� for its security, the same excuse that it uses today.
The 1982 invasion devolved into an 18-year onslaught which ravaged the Lebanese
economy and killed more than 20,000 civilians. In 2000, Israel was driven from
Lebanon by the persistent attacks of the Lebanese resistance organization,
Hezbollah.
The media portrayal of the current conflict is blatantly
absurd. It has nothing to due with �captured soldiers� or Israel�s �right to
defend itself.� This is a traditional war with clear territorial and political
objectives. The border controversy is nonsense. Israel is trying to seize more
land to realize its vision of �Greater Israel,� while reducing an adjacent Arab
country to a �permanent state of colonial dependency.�
This explains the vast and deliberate destruction to
Lebanon�s civilian infrastructure. Israel�s dominance requires that its
neighbors endure abject poverty and oppression. By destroying the
infrastructure and life-support systems, Israel hopes to eliminate the rise of
a potential rival as well as to diminish the ability of the Lebanese resistance
to wage war against the Jewish state. Once Lebanon is decimated, it will be delivered
to Zionists at the World Bank (Paul Wolfowitz) who will apply the shackle of
reconstruction loans and structural readjustment, which will keep Lebanon as an
indentured servant to the global banking establishment. This model of economic
servitude has been used throughout the developing world with varying degrees of
success. It anticipates Israel�s regional ascendancy while ensuring that
Lebanon�s sovereignty will be compromised for decades to come.
The United States has played a unique role in Israel�s war
on Lebanon. In its 230-year history, the US has never deliberately assisted in
an attack on an ally. That record will end with Lebanon.
Lebanon's was a demonstrably �pro-American� government on
friendly terms with Washington. In fact, American NGOs and intelligence
organizations helped to activate the �Cedar Revolution,� which gave rise to the
Fouad Siniora government and the eventual expulsion of Syrian troops. To a
large extent, Washington and Tel Aviv had achieved what they wanted to by
meddling in Lebanon�s political affairs. The country was singled out as a
shining example of Bush�s �global democratic revolution,� which was the
stated goal of American intervention in the Middle East.
Lebanon has since been rewarded for its cooperation by the
total obliteration of its economy and infrastructure. The Bush administration
has abandoned any pretense of being an �honest broker� and is now providing
Israel with precision-guided missiles to prosecute a war against a (mainly)
civilian population. They are also actively collaborating with the Olmert
regime to foil all plans for an immediate cease-fire. The United States is a
fully engaged partner in the premeditated destruction of a democratic country.
It is as much a part of the Israeli aggression as any IDF tank commander
rumbling towards Beirut.
The United Nations has been sidelined by the
administration�s obstructionism at the Security Council. The efforts of the
Bolton-Rice team are tantamount to a �declaration of war.� So far, the Israeli
offensive has uprooted nearly 1 million people in the south; making refugees of
approximately 25 percent of Lebanon�s total population. The UN has done nothing
to respond to this calamity. Its ineffectiveness casts doubt on whether it will
survive the present crisis. Security in the new century will ultimately depend
on alliances between the individual countries. The UN model of one, monolithic
international institution trying to "preserve the peace� has
proved to be a wretched failure.
The scene in the south of Lebanon is hauntingly similar to
the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in 1948; the Nakba. Once again, Israel is
seen driving Muslims from their homes in an attempt to expand its territory.
The �deliberate� attack on Qana, which killed 57 civilians, as well as the
bombing of clearly marked ambulances and �white flag-waving� mini-buses
chock-full of fleeing villagers, shows that the Israeli high-command still
understands the importance of using terror as a means of controlling behavior.
Israel�s carefully calculated atrocities have had the desired effect;
triggering the mass-exodus of hundreds of thousands of frightened civilians and
leaving Hezbollah guerillas to fight it out with the IDF.
The Bush administration is now attempting to pacify its
critics by pushing a resolution that calls for a �full cessation of
hostilities.� The resolution does not demand that Israel stop attacking
Hezbollah nor does it require the IDF to leave Lebanon. It is Munich all over
again; a miserable �sell-out� by the Security Council that guarantees a steady
increase in the violence as well as an intensification of the rage that is
sweeping across the Muslim world. The UN has unwittingly endorsed Israeli
occupation of southern Lebanon and created the foundation for another
generation of terrorists. The resolution shows that the UN is nothing more than
a �cat�s paw� for US/Israeli geopolitical ambitions and that the
�post-colonial� European allies are willing to succumb to the neocon
plan for a "New Middle East."
The UN is not an �honest broker�; its bumbling attempts at
peace have only provided the cover of international legitimacy to Israel�s
rampage. Israel will now continue its crusade unobstructed; setting up outposts
throughout the south, pushing the Shia off their land, attacking Hezbollah as
they see fit, and installing an Israeli-client in Beirut.
Israel will never return to its �internationally recognized�
northern border unless it is beaten-back by the Lebanese national resistance,
Hezbollah.
What does Israel
want?
The only way that Israel can maintain its dominance in the
region is by becoming a main-player in the oil-trade. Otherwise it will
continue to be dependent on the United States to strengthen its military and
defend its interests. Israel�s determination to �stand on its own two feet� is
outlined in the neocon plan for �rebuilding Zionism� in the 21st century; �A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm.� The document is the
blueprint for redrawing the map of the Middle East and eliminating rivals to
Israeli power. Most of the attention has been focused on the parts of the paper
which presage the attacks on Iraq, Lebanon and Syria; including this ominous
passage:
Securing the Northern Border:
Syria challenges Israel on Lebanese soil. An effective
approach, and one with which America can sympathize, would be if Israel seized
the strategic initiative along its northern borders by engaging Hezbollah,
Syria, and Iran, as the principle agents of aggression in Lebanon, including
by:
- paralleling
Syria�s behavior by establishing the precedent that Syria is not immune to
attacks emanating from Lebanon by Israeli proxy forces.
- striking
Syrian military targets in Lebanon, and should that prove to be
insufficient, string at select targets in Syria proper.� (�A Clean Break�;
Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, David Wurmser)
Clearly, this is the basic schema for US/Israeli aggression
in the region. What has been overlooked, however, is Israel�s determination to
�break away� from its traditional dependence on American support.
As stated in the text: (Israel intends to) �forge a new
basis for relations with the US -- stressing self-reliance, maturity, strategic
cooperation on areas of mutual concern, and furthering values inherent to the
West. This can only be done if Israel takes serious steps to terminate aid,
which prevents economic reform. Israel can make a clean-break from the past and
establish a new vision for the US-Israeli partnership based on self-reliance,
maturity, and mutuality -- not one narrowly focused on territorial disputes.
(Israel) does not need US troops in any capacity to defend it . . . and can
manage its own affairs. Such self-reliance will grant Israel greater freedom of
action and remove a significant lever of pressure used against it in the past.
. . . No amount of weapons or victories will grant Israel the peace it seeks.
When Israel is on sound footing, and is free, powerful, and healthy internally,
it will no longer simply manage the Arab-Israeli conflict; it will transcend
it.�
Israel�s �economic freedom� depends in large part on its
ability to become a central petroleum-depot for the global oil trade. In Michel
Chossudovsky�s recent article �Triple
Alliance: US, Turkey, Israel and the War on Lebanon,�
the author provides a detailed account of the alliances and agreements which
underscore the current war. As Chossudovsky says, �We are not dealing with a
limited conflict between the Israeli Armed Forces and Hezbollah as conveyed by
the Western media. The Lebanese War Theater is part of a broader US military
agenda, which encompasses a region extending from the Eastern Mediterranean
into the heartland of Central Asia. The war on Lebanon must be viewed as �a
stage� in this broader �military road map.��
Chossudovsky shows how the recently completed Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan
pipeline has strengthened the Israel-Turkey alliance and foreshadows an attempt
to establish �military control over a coastal corridor extending from the
Israeli-Lebanese border to the East Mediterranean border between Syria and
Turkey.�
Lebanese sovereignty is one of the unfortunate casualties of
this Israel-Turkey strategy.
Most of the oil from the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline will be
transported to western markets but, what is less well-known, is that a
percentage of the oil will be diverted through a �proposed� Ceyhan-Ashkelon
pipeline which will connect Israel directly to rich deposits in the Caspian.
This will allow Israel to supply markets in the Far East from its port at Eilat
on the Red Sea. It is an ambitious plan that ensures that Israel will be a
critical part of the global energy distribution system. (See Michel Chossudovsky, The
war on Lebanon and the Battle for Oil, July 2006)
Oil is also a major factor in the calls for �regime change�
in Syria. An article in the UK Observer �Israel Seeks Pipeline for Iraqi Oil�
notes that Washington and Tel Aviv are hammering out the details for a pipeline
that will run through Syria and �create and endless and easily accessible
source of cheap oil for the US guaranteed by reliable allies other than Saudi
Arabia.� The pipeline �would transform economic power in the region, bringing
revenue to the new US-dominated Iraq, cutting out Syria, and solving Israel�s
energy crisis at a stroke.�
The Israeli Mossad is already operating in northern Iraq
where the pipeline will originate and have developed good relations with the
Kurds. The only remaining obstacle is the current Syrian regime which has already
entered the US/Israeli crosshairs. The Observer quotes a CIA official who said,
�It has long been a dream of a powerful section of the people now driving this
administration and the war in Iraq to safeguard Israel�s energy supply as well
as that of the US. The Haifa pipeline was something that existed, was
resurrected as a dream, and is now a viable project -- albeit with a lot of
building to do.�
Former US Ambassador James Atkins added, �This is a new
world order now. This is what things look like particularly if we wipe out
Syria. It just goes to show that it is all about oil, for the United States and
its ally.�
The Middle East is being reshaped according to the
ideological aspirations of Zionists and the exigencies of a
viciously-competitive energy market. Behind the bombed-out ruins of Qana and
the endless sorties laying Lebanon to waste, are the tireless machinations of
the energy giants, the corporate media, the banking establishment and Israel.
Don�t expect a quick return to peace. This war is just
beginning.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com.