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Israel
justified in striking out at its enemies
Colin
Rubenstein
Canberra Times
- 20 July 2006
IS ISRAEL'S
response to Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon "disproportionate?" To
answer this question it is necessary to explore both what Israel is actually doing,
and why.
Basically, the Israeli army is doing two
things militarily in Lebanon. Firstly, it is attacking Hezbollah bases, storage
sites and command and control centres. Many of these, unfortunately and
illegally, are located in civilian neighbourhoods, even in the same buildings
as civilian apartments. This makes it impossible for Israel to completely avoid
damage to civilian property and accidental wounding and killing of civilians.
No one should minimise the suffering this causes, but under international law,
the responsibility for that suffering lies with the party guilty of hiding its
military assets among civilians.
However, Israel is doing what it can to
minimise civilian casualties, for instance by dropping leaflets in places such
as the Beirut neighbourhood of Dahiya, Hezbollah's main military headquarters,
warning civilians to evacuate, even though this also allows the Hezbollah
leadership to flee with its military assets.
Israeli attacks also seek to isolate
Hezbollah by cutting off transportation links - air travel, roads, bridges,
ports etc. This is a perfectly legal and justified military tactic because it
serves a genuine military purpose - to prevent Hezbollah's rearming by its
patrons Syria and Iran, and to prevent captured Israeli soldiers being taken
out of the country.
Israel's primary purpose is not just to
recover kidnapped soldiers and avenge a cross-border attack. Following this
blatant act of war by Hezbollah, in violation of several international
agreements, Israel is attempting to create security for itself not only against
this attack, but the many attacks likely to come in following months and years
if nothing is done. Moreover, given the nature of those attacking Israel, it is
impossible to see how this can be done without the extensive use of military
force.
The attack into Lebanon is not
independent from the Israeli incursions into Gaza a week and a half earlier,
because the threats posed from both areas are distinctly linked. The link is
Iran, and its ally Syria, which are urgently seeking to further their own
goals, including distracting attention from the mounting international pressure
over Iran's illegal program to build nuclear weapons, and demonstrating how
much trouble they can make if threatened.
Hezbollah is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of the Iranian regime - founded, trained, armed, funded and, in part, directed,
by the Iranian revolutionary guards. It had built up a huge arsenal of more
than 13,000 Iranian-supplied missiles pointed at Israeli towns. It is a strong
supporter of the repeatedly articulated policy of Iran of demanding Israel's
destruction, and uses both terror and the threat posed by the missiles to
further Iran's agenda and interests.
The only possible ways Israel can
dissuade it from launching attacks are either through deterrence, or by
disarming it and moving it away from the border. The Israeli Army has even
concluded that suffering the hundreds of rocket attacks now occurring
throughout Israel's north is worth the price if it prevents even worse attacks
later.
In Gaza, Hamas is also funded and
closely aligned with Iran, and its ally Syria (Hamas has its headquarters in
Damascas). Hamas has also always been committed to Israel's destruction, and
nothing from the leadership in the recent past has indicated any change in this
stance. While maintaining a facade of ceasefire, Hamas' military wing actively
assisted other groups to launch over a thousand missiles into Israel from Gaza,
beginning at a time when Israel was taking no military action, before joining
in a cross-border raid into Israel to kill soldiers and take hostages.
Again, the Palestinians need a
government that both can and will control cross-border terrorism.
It is important to remember that Israel
had completely withdrawn from the areas from which it has been attacked There
was no "occupation" to theoretically justify the aggression against
Israel - only hatred and the self-interest of Iran and Syria.
The obvious resolution of the problem is
to create security for all sides by arrangements that both provide good
Palestinian and Lebanese governance and protect Israel and thus obviate any
need for Israel to respond militarily to attacks. Gaza must have a government
able and willing to ensure law and order, and prevent the launching of attacks
from its territory. Meanwhile, Lebanon needs international assistance to
implement UN Security Council Resolutions 1559, 1566 and 1680 - which call for
the Lebanese Government to disarm Hezbollah and take control over the border
area with Israel.
Moreover, such a situation is an
essential prerequisite of a lasting two-state resolution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israelis overwhelmingly favour such a resolution
and are prepared to provide the necessary territory, as the results of the last
election makes clear. But Israel cannot withdraw from West Bank territory,
which is within a few kilometres of Israel's civilian heartland, if the result
is likely to be an Iranian-influenced Hamas-Hezbollah state there.
It is therefore in the interests of
everybody that, in both Gaza and Lebanon, Israel achieves its objectives of
creating stable arrangements, inhospitable to cross-border terrorism,
especially foreign-inspired terrorism. Those who criticise Israel's methods for
achieving this outcome should instead be contributing to other methods of
realising it - including organising an international consensus on economic and
political pressure on Syria and Iran to rein in their proxies and devising a
fast-executing international mechanism to disarm Hezbollah and restore full
Lebanese sovereignty.
Dr Colin Rubenstein is executive
director of the Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council.
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Copyright
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