http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/07/17/opinion/main1808602.shtml
U.S. And Israel Make Major Mistakes
CBS News, July 17, 2006
(The Nation) This column was written by the editors of The
Nation.
With the spreading violence in Lebanon and Gaza, the Israeli
doctrine of absolute security and massive retaliation — the
notion that any attack or threat of attack on Israel will be met
with a disproportionate response — is again proving
counterproductive to Israel's own security as well as to the
larger stability of the region. It makes no sense for Israel to
destroy the civil infrastructure of the Palestinians and of
Lebanon in response to the kidnapping of its soldiers, or to
further weaken the capacity of the governments of Lebanon and
the Palestinian Authority while at the same trying to hold them
accountable for the actions of groups and militias they cannot
reasonably control. This collective punishment of the
Palestinian and Lebanese people is not only inhumane and should
be condemned but also leads to more radicalization and to more
chaos.
That was the lesson of the Israeli siege of the Palestinian
Authority in 2002, which severely weakened its ability to
govern, helping to pave the way for the political success of
Hamas. And it will be the lesson of the increasing destruction
of Lebanon. Indeed, the most likely casualty of the latest case
of Israel's massive retaliation will be the fragile social peace
and the democratically elected government in Lebanon.
Ironically, the much-trumpeted Cedar Revolution, the only
example of the success of the Bush doctrine that
neoconservatives can still point to, could be brought down by
the Likudnik policies of Israel that the neo-cons so champion.
It took Lebanon more than 20 years to recover a degree of
stability and civil peace after the last major incursion. How
long will it take to recover from the unraveling of the
stability that American and Israelis policies are helping to
bring about?
It is now clear that the American and Israeli strategy of trying
to isolate Hamas and Hezbollah, on the one hand, and Syria and
Iran on the other, has backfired. Would the situation in Gaza
have gotten so out of hand if Israel, the United States, and the
European Union had tried to work with the democratically elected
Hamas government from the outset? And would Hezbollah have felt
the freedom to take the reckless action it took — the deplorable
firing of rockets on Israeli civilians? As Juan Cole points out
today on Informed Comment: "A Lebanon with no Syrian troops and
Hizbullah in the government was inherently unstable. With Syria
gone, Hizbullah filled a security vacuum and also was less
restrained."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has said that Syria has a
special responsibility to resolve this crisis. But the whole
thrust of American policy of the last two years has been to
reduce unconditionally Syria's influence in Lebanon so as to
leave Lebanon to the Lebanese. By what logic does the
Administration now seek to hold Syria accountable for the
reckless action of Hezbollah militia in southern Lebanon? As
Cole suggests, the hasty unplanned departure of Syrian forces
may have ironically given Hezbollah more freedom to act than
before. A dialogue with Syria together with an effort to have a
more careful planned disengagement of Syrian forces would have
given the Lebanese government a better chance of establishing
control over its sovereignty in southern Lebanon.
The big beneficiaries of American policy have been the more
radical wings of Hamas and Hezbollah and the Iranians, who more
and more look like the champions of the Palestinian people. The
big losers are the so-called moderate Arab regimes, which again
look helpless in the face of what is seen as Israeli aggression,
and the moderate Israelis, Palestinians, and Lebanese who hoped
for some normalcy of life with the prospect of peace, especially
when the Hamas leadership appeared to be moving toward
recognition of Israel. The United States and the larger world,
too, are losers, for no one benefits from this mindless
escalation of violence, particularly at a time of growing
sectarian violence in Iraq and rising oil prices.
The events of the past two weeks should remind us that the peace
and stability of the region is too important to be left to
Israel and to Washington. There is a need for much greater and
more forceful U.N. and European Union involvement and for the
kind of diplomacy that the Europeans and the UN conducted in the
late 1980s and the early 1990s that led to the mutual release of
prisoners and eventually to the Oslo peace process. The U.N.
Quartet — consisting of the U.N., the United States, Russia and
the EU — has been far too deferential to the Bush
Administration's failed road map strategy and it is time for
more active and comprehensive G-8 and U.N.-led diplomacy.
Secretary General Kofi Annan's dispatch of two representatives
to the region is a start, but it must be followed up by G-8 and
U.N. Security Council action to rein in forces on all sides.
This diplomacy should be aimed first at establishing a
cease-fire and a mutual prisoner exchange and second at
recognizing Hamas in Palestine and establishing talks with Syria
and Iran. The United States must urgently back this diplomacy as
well as make clear to Israel that it cannot support its current
military action. The price it will pay in Iraq and in the region
as a whole for doing so is just too large.
Reprinted with permission from The Nation.
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