Gilad Atzmon reviews a new
Israeli book on the last war and concludes: For years we tended to believe that Israel would not be defeated in the
battlefield. Learning in detail the events of the last war allows us to consider
that this may not be the case. The Jewish state has already been defeated in
battle and this may happen again sooner than we
think.
Saying NO to the Hunters of Goliath
By Gilad Atzmon
“A few reasons help to create the Nasrallah
obsession (‘dibuk’), that influenced decision makers along the (Second Lebanon)
war. Primarily, Israel always perceived the Arab (leaders) as (private) people
rather than representatives of political systems. Even amongst media analysts
and politicians the references were pointing at “Assad”, “Arafat” or
“Nasrallah” rather than the states and organisations they represent. In the eyes
of the (Israeli) decision-makers, as well as the media and public, the Arab
world was led by individuals rather than by governmental systems and the best
way to influence it was in most cases to drop a bomb in the right
place.”
(“Captives in Lebanon”, Ofer Shelah and Yaov Limor)
[1]
The Israelis tend to personalise conflicts. Yet,
by doing this, they are neither original nor innovative. They in fact follow
a Biblical lesson. Within the Judaic worldview, history and
ethics are often reduced into a banal single binary opposition
principle. For instance, the deadly battle between the ‘righteous’ David
and the ‘evil’ Goliath personalises the struggle between the ‘good’ Israelites
and the ‘bad’ Philistines. Though the Biblical specific tale could be
understood in a mere literary terms, the similarities to the Israelite of our
time are rather concerning. In Israel, there is a direct express path that leads
from the ‘role of the assassin’ to the Government seat. Time after time our
contemporary Israelite supplicate their highly decorated assassins to
become their kings, to lead their army and then to integrate into
the cabinet. This obviously happened to Sharon, Barak, Mofaz, Halutz,
Dichter and many more.
However, Israelis are not alone here. The tendency to
personalise and concretise history is rather common amongst Jews. In the eyes of
many Jews the Third Reich is reduced into Hitler and Goebbels. Anti-Semitism is
often reduced into Wagner, Marx, Weininger and so on. On the face of it,
personification indeed simplifies the surrounding reality, the course of history
and its interpretation. Once Hitler is gone, the Third Reich may be gone as
well, once Wagner is banned, the same may happen to anti-Semitism. This tendency
to personalise conflicts, ideologies and worldviews follows an infantile
perception: that which you no longer see may cease to exist. It fits as well
with the Biblical “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth” paradigm. Yet, it
is nothing but a pattern of self-deception. It misleadingly associates the
abstract with some banal concretisation. It saves its followers from
any intellectual engagement with ideology, criticism or self-reflection.
Clearly, the Zionist interpretation is engaged with
nothing more than the concrete symptom, with the simplest manifestation of
the animosity that surrounds it rather than with the core of the problem
itself. Hitler was indeed defeated, Jews are now more than welcome in
Germany and in Europe, yet, the Jewish state and the sons of Israel are at
least as unpopular in the Middle East as their grandparents were in Europe
just six decades ago. Seemingly, it is the personification of WW2 and the
Holocaust that blinded the Israelis and their supporters from internalising
the real meaning of the conditions and the events that led towards
their destruction in the first place. Would the Zionists understand the
real meaning of their Holocaust, the contemporary Israelite may be able to
prevent the destruction that may be awaiting them in the
future. Similarly, Wagner may be banned in Israel, yet, the
conditions that led Marx, Weininger and Wagner to say what they had to say
remain unchanged. As it seems, more and more people in wider circles are now
reacting critically, politically and ideologically to Israel, Zionism,
Jewish tribalism and the atrocious inhuman policies that are implied by
Jewish nationalism and its political and cultural offshoots.
But let’s face it, it isn’t just the Israelis who
personalise conflicts. Thanks to the Neocons and their tremendous current
influence within the Anglo-American political realm, we are all subject to
some oversimplification and personalisation of almost every Western conflict.
Seemingly, every current Western war has a ‘face’ attached to it. The ‘war
against terror’ has the bearded face of Osama Bin Laden. The alleged ‘liberation
of the Iraqi people’ had Saddam Hussein’s face on top of the ‘hit list’. Within
the Neocon’s Zionised war, every ideological conflict becomes a personal
‘targeted assassination’ plot. May I remind us all that before Neocons launched
their pretty successful attempt to Zionise America and Britain, these two
countries were engaged in proper impersonalised ideological wars and political
conflicts. Britain and the USA fought courageously against Third Reich
Germany (rather than just against Hitler). They coldly clashed with ‘The Reds’
as well (rather than with just Stalin).
Clearly, this isn’t the case anymore. Within a world
shaped by Neocons, the political system is reduced into a simplistic
Biblical Goliath chase. We the righteous, the Davids, pursue the
Goliaths: Saddam, Bin Laden, Assad, and Ahmadinejad.
However, by now we should all know how futile this
philosophy is. As much as Israel failed to defeat Palestinian resistance by
killing every noticeable emerging Palestinian leader, as much as Israel
failed to defeat the Hezbollah by aiming at its leadership, America and Britain
are doomed to fail in their current murderous Zionised battles. Saddam is
dead and yet, Iraq and its oil fields are still far beyond reach. Bin Laden
never shows his face in public and yet the war against terror has yet to achieve
a thing.
I want to believe that the emerging defeat of Israel
and its supporting lobbies will be appropriately grasped by the Western public.
We must say NO to Zionised tactics, we must say NO to Zionist agents, we
must say NO to the hunters of Goliath.
Anatomy of a Colossal Defeat
One year after the humiliating Israeli defeat in
Lebanon I found myself reviewing the Israeli fiasco through the eyes of two
renowned Israeli military analysts, Yoav Limor and Ofer Shelah. In a recent book
named ‘Captives Of Lebanon’ the two have managed to assemble a very detailed
journal of the chain of events that led to the war, the war itself and the
endless lists of Israeli operational, tactical and strategic failures. However,
Limor and Shelah do not stop just with the Army and its commanders, they
skilfully convey an image of a society that has lost its way, a society that has
gradually become detached from its own reality and from its surrounding
environment. A society that is facing total moral collapse, led by an egotistic,
self-centred leadership, both politically and militarily.
Israel’s military defeat last year in Lebanon took the
world by surprise. It initially shocked Bush’s Administration as well as Tony
Blair who were both very quick and keen to give Israel a green light to destroy
Lebanon’s Shia leadership, not to mention obliterating Lebanon’s civilian
infrastructure. Bush and Blair weren’t the only ones who came in for a shock, it
also stunned the Arab world. Arab leaders are not used to the defeat of the
Israeli Army. Moderate Arab leaders found themselves following the TV images in
which a single Muslim cleric was teaching Israelis what defiance was all about.
Seemingly, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah and an insignificant number of warriors,
proved to be the first Arabs to defeat the Israeli Army on the ground. Their
victory left Israel in shatters. The Israeli power of deterrence disappeared
completely. It became a subject for historical research. The IDF Supreme Command
was shocked as well: a month after the war, General Udi Adam, the IDF Chief
Commander of the northern front, had resigned. It didn’t take too long for Dan
Halutz, the IDF Chief of Staff, to follow his lead. Amir Peretz, the Minister of
Defence, was ousted by former PM Ehud Barak. It is rather clear that the
Israelis are fully aware of the scale of their defeat in Lebanon. Yet, it seems
as if the Israelis do not know how to amend the damage. They are truly in love
with their ‘good life’, they are captivated by the image of technology and
wealth.
Though I am not so sure whether the book is going to be
translated into other languages (it is in Hebrew), I would classify this book as
a ‘must read’ for anyone who is interested in the affairs of this region. The
book is a glimpse into Israeli society in what seems to be its final
dysfunctional yet destructive state. I am convinced that those Americans who
have been moronically sponsoring the Israeli death apparatus for almost four
decades, those who still believe that Israel is a ‘regional super power’ better
read this journal of Israeli military cowardice and general political
malfunctioning.
Though the book wouldn’t say it, the message is rather
clear. Israel operates as a megalomaniac violent Jewish ghetto motivated by some
bizarre murderous zeal flooded with American lethal technology. As Limor and
Shelah reveal, in spite of the fact that the conflict on the ground took place
on a very narrow strip of land (the Israeli border on the south and Litani River
on the north), the Israeli artillery had managed to shoot over 170,000 shells.
In comparison, in the 1973 war while fighting against two strong state armies
over two very large fronts, the Israelis had launched only 53,000 shells. The
figures relating to the Air Force are even more striking. Though less than a few
concrete targets were available for the IDF intelligence, the IAF (Israeli Air
Force) had launched as many as 17,550 combat missions, this translates into 520
missions a day, almost as many as in the 1973 war (605 a day). Yet, in 1973 the
IAF was fighting two well-equipped air forces, it was engaged in a fair amount
of air-to-air combat and a relentless struggle against the latest Soviet
ground-to-air missiles. None of that happened in the Second Lebanon War. The IAF
was engaged solely in hammering the Lebanese soil. It literally threw and
launched everything it had in its disposal, presenting a merciless method that
in places (southern Beirut for instance), had a similar effect to the infamous
1940s Anglo-American carpet bombardment.
Why did the Israelis react so harshly to a local border
incident? Why did Israeli politicians and military chiefs lose their ability to
employ strategic and tactical considerations? Why did they all fail to
define achievable military goals, something that would give their war a time
frame, shape and justification? In short, why did the Israelis lose their
way? This is indeed a crucial question. Though Limor and Shelah refrain
from asking these questions, their book manages to provide some answers. I will
try to summarise some of their points.
The Military
Let’s start with the Army. The Israeli Army has
undergone a serious transition in the last four decades. In the years that
followed the rapid 1967 invasion, it was ground officers and tank brigadiers in
particular who were promoted to lead the Army. Post 1967 Israel believed in
Blitzkrieg, an offensive onslaught that simultaneously puts into action some
large ground forces together with close air support. After the 1973 war,
following the limited success of ground forces and tank divisions, this trend
has changed. Gradually, it was the veterans of the Israeli special units who had
been promoted to high command positions. Probably the most famous among those
veterans was Ehud Barak, the highly decorated commando officer who ended his
military career as the IDF Chief of Staff. It was Barak who as Chief of
Staff appointed his ex subordinates for high positions in the Israeli Supreme
Command. Ground officers were pushed aside.
This transformation within the Israeli Army had two
motivations behind it: first, the intelligence assumption that not a single Arab
state would consider a total war against Israel in the near future; and second,
since the first Intifada and the general rise of Palestinian civil resistance,
the Israeli army found itself engaged in more and more policing operations.
Within such a shift there was not much need for massive ground training. Tank
and artillery brigades seemed to be useless and even irrelevant to the newly
emerging defence needs of the Jewish state. Large units of combatant soldiers
were diverted into policing tasks in the West Bank and Gaza. Within the
changing scenario, it was initially Israeli special units and security chiefs
who took the lead in what the Israelis perceived as their ‘war against terror’.
Consequently, more and more Israeli commando veterans found their way to the IDF
high command and later straight into the highly militarised Israeli political
life.
But things didn’t stop just there; it didn’t take long
before Israeli special units failed to provide the solutions to what seemed to
be a constantly growing Palestinian civil resistance. Sending the salt of
the Jewish earth into Gaza in the wee hours proved to be too dangerous. It must
be told that as much as Israelis love to see their young boys terrorising
Palestinians, they cannot stand seeing their beloved Rambos being ambushed and
killed.
It was just a question of time before the Air Force was
left to deal with Palestinian defiance. Capitalising on some advanced American
technologies, Israel let its F-16s and Apache helicopter gunships launch guided
missiles against Palestinian civilian and military targets. The philosophy was
rather simple: the IAF was there to maintain the Palestinians in a state of a
constant awe. As it happened, in the last decade, the IAF has become the leading
force in the war against Palestine, the Palestinian people and their imminent
Islamic leadership. The IAF was quick to develop a tactic that was soon named
‘targeted assassination’ . According to the new Israeli military doctrine, all
that was needed was some intelligence on the ground, which would be followed by
a single Israeli jet launching an American guided missile in highly populated
Gaza. The achievements were rather clear. In many cases targeted Palestinians
were assassinated, in very many cases they found their death alongside innocent
civilian bystanders who were unlucky enough to be in the proximity. These
unfortunate people were in the wrong place at the very wrong time. In many other
cases the pilots just missed or were misled by intelligence. As a result, many
Palestinian civilians, old people, women and children found their death.
Clearly, no one in Israel could care less. When Dan Halutz, still the IAF
commander, was asked how it feels to drop a bomb that kills fourteen Palestinian
civilians, his answer was short and simple. ‘It feels like a light bounce on
your left wing’. Halutz, the cold-blooded officer, the man who ordered the
murder of so many Palestinians, was the right man in the right place, it didn’t
take long before he was asked to take the lead of the Israeli Army.
As time went by, the Israeli government refrained from
endangering young Israeli soldiers. The Israeli ‘war against terror’ has become
very safe warfare on the verge of a computer game. Sheik Yassin, Dr. Rantisi and
many other civilians fell victim to this form of murderous tactic. Apparently,
Israeli military leadership has been overwhelmed with the success of their new
killing method. The people of Israel had a new God, namely ‘technological
superiority’. The last Israeli wave of generals, many of them pilots and special
units’ veterans, got accustomed to the belief that Israel may maintain its
regional supreme power by capitalising on its technological superiority and
overwhelming firepower.
As Limor and Shelah reveal in their book, in the last
decade Israeli soldiers literarily stopped training of any form of large
tactical operations. With the IAF chasing the enemies of Israel in their
bedrooms, who needs tanks and artillery? Young Israeli tank drivers were
redeployed soon after their initial and minimal training into elementary guard
tasks in the occupied territories. In practice not only were those soldiers
foreign to their original military tasks in tanks and artillery, they were not
familiar at all with any form of large operational tactical manoeuvres. In other
words, as far as the Israeli army is concerned, it lost its readiness to
war.
So The Palestinians Actually Won
Many analysts regard the Palestinian resistance as a
militarily futile struggle. At the end of the day, not much harm can be
inflicted by a bunch of kids throwing stones. Reading Limor and Shelah may imply
that in reality, the Palestinian struggle was actually far from being futile. In
fact, it was precisely Palestinian civil resistance that has managed to exhaust
the Israeli army. It was the Palestinian resistance that led the Israeli army
into a state of paralysis. It was the Palestinian resistance that stretched the
IDF manpower to its limit and stopped the Israeli army from training towards the
‘next war’. It was the Palestinians who turned the Israeli soldiers and their
commanders into a bunch of cowards who prefer to win wars while sitting in front
of computer monitors moving joysticks. It was actually the Palestinians who
devastatingly dismantled the IDF readiness for war.
It is very much as Sheik Hassan Nasrallah has been
suggesting in one of his most declamatory speeches. Israel was indeed ‘hiding
behind technological superiority just to cover its cowardice and incomprehension
of what the living in the Middle East may entail’
[2]. The Israeli army has become used to smashing
Palestinian civilians in their homes, to murdering their emerging leadership, to
terrorising pregnant women in roadblocks, to shelling young kids in their school
classes, so this was indeed very easy. Yet, when the IDF was asked to engage
some tiny groups of lightly trained paramilitary enthusiasts, it collapsed
shamefully. It collapsed in spite of its technological superiority; it was
defeated in spite of its overwhelming firepower, in spite of Bush’s and Blair’s
disgraceful support. The Israeli Army collapsed because it was incompetent, it
was not ready to fight, it did not know how to fight and most concerning for the
Israelis, it didn’t even realise what it was fighting for.
Soon after the conflict in Lebanon developed into a
total war (at least in the eyes of the Israelis) it became clear to most Israeli
generals that the IDF doesn’t have the means to address the rain of Hezbollah
Katyusha rockets. If the initial Israeli goal was to stop the Katyusha rockets
and to bring home the two captured Israeli reserves, these goals proved to be
beyond reach. The Israeli commander soon learned that without proper and quality
intelligence, their superior firepower and technology lost any relevance.
As funny as it may sound, in a matter of a few days the Israeli leadership
adopted some post-structuralist vocabulary. Rather than providing the people of
Israel with a simple straightforward ‘victory’ they all started to communicate
in terms of a ‘narrative of victory’. Days from the launch of the Israeli
campaign the Israeli military began to talk in terms of ‘an Image of victory’
rather than ‘victory’ per se. Shimon Peres started to use the term ‘perception’
of a victory. Yet, even ‘perception’ and ‘image’ of a victory proved to be far
beyond reach.
The Only Democracy in the Middle East
As useless as the Israeli army proved to be, the
Israeli government wasn’t any better. Ehud Olmert, the PM, the man who was voted
to ‘disengage’ from Palestinian territories, had very little understanding of
military affairs. If this is not enough, Amir Peretz, the Labour leader, the man
whom Olmert appointed to be his Minister of Defence, lacked any significant
knowledge in defence matters as well. For the first time in its history, Israel
was led by two professional politicians who had no military background. On the
face of it, one may expect that such a dramatic shift would curve the Israeli
hawkish tendency within the military and political realm. In practice, the
opposite happened. Both Peretz and Olmert found themselves dragged and
manipulated into a large-scale conflict by the bloodthirsty Chief of Staff.
Considering their inexperience and the short time that they had been holding
office, neither Olmert nor Peretz could come up with some creative alternative
solutions that might avoid conflict yet would achieve something more. Rather
than holding the Army back and giving diplomacy a chance, they both let Halutz
lead the country towards unnecessary escalation. Without understanding the full
picture, the Israeli government ended up promising Halutz the necessary time and
support to achieve goals that were beyond reach to start with.
But the truth must be said. Olmert and Peretz were not
alone in their cabinet. In fact, they were surrounded by military analysts,
intelligence experts, ex-generals and security services veterans. Olmert had in
his government Reserved General Shaul Mofaz, the ex Chief of Staff, a man who
spent the late phase of his military career fighting the Hezbollah. Avi
Dichter, a Security Services veteran was there to comment on the IDF operative
suggestions. They had in the government Benjamin Ben Eliezer as well, a reserve
Brigadier who had been an expert on Lebanese issues for the last three decades.
Shimon Peres was himself a Prime Minister and a Defence Minister in the
past. Reservist General Ami Ayalon, and ex-IDF General as well as a former
Chief of the Internal Security Services offered his help to Amir Peretz. Yet,
none of these experts managed to form a decision-making body, none of the above
managed to moderate the military enthusiasm of Halutz, Olmert and Peretz.
Like a leaf in the wind, the Israeli government was manipulated by the Generals
and later by the public opinion that turned dramatically against the leadership
and its inadequate achievement.
As time went by, with military failure becoming public
knowledge, the more desperately Olmert, Peretz and Halutz tried to change the
course of the war just to save their future careers. Though they realised that
the chances of achieving a victory were melting down by the hour, they were
determined to present the public something that would look like a victory or
even simply as an achievement. This is apparently what political survival in the
Israeli democracy means for real, you have to present something that may look
like a victory. To call it a name, Peretz, Halutz and Olmert ordered the Army to
cause some real devastation, assuming that this would gratify the Israeli voter.
The IAF and the artillery command reacted instantly, some heavy barrages of
cluster bombs, missiles and shells rained over southern Lebanon. In the last 48
hours leading to the ceasefire, Israel emptied it entire stock of weaponry.
According to Shelah and Limor, Israel’s ammunition stocks reached the ‘red
light’ position.
In order to save the political careers of Olmert and
Peretz, the IDF launched more and more pointless risky operations with very
limited tactical value. These operations failed one after the other without
achieving a single thing. Yet they exposed the IDF’s weaknesses. They revealed
an Army and a political leadership in a state of a panic. Towards the final
hours of the war, some isolated patches of Israeli special units were stranded
and starved along the southern Lebanese front with no access to water and
food. A few units of Hezbollah warriors had managed to encircle top
Israeli commandos. Seemingly, no one in Israel dared to risk logistic convoys
into the battlefield. Food and ammunition that was dropped from cargo airplanes
fell into the hands of the Hezbollah. In some areas, the wounded IDF
commandos were lying on the ground, waiting many hours for rescue units. The
defeat was total. The humiliation was colossal. Not only was the ‘Israeli
Defence Army’ unable to defend Israel anymore, it even failed in defending
itself.
Limor and Shelah expose many more interesting
issues:
Brigadiers who failed to fight alongside their
soldiers, instead they preferred to run the battle from secluded bunkers inside
Israel.
Helicopter gunships were not allowed to enter Lebanese
air space just to avoid the risk of being shot down, as a result, Israeli
commandos were left to fight Hezbollah on equal terms (lacking air
support).
A Lieutenant Colonel who refused to lead his soldiers
into Lebanon admitted being deficient in operative tactical knowledge.
Reservist soldiers were heading towards the front with
hardly any of their combatant gear because of some severe shortage in the army
emergency stockrooms. Some of those reservists ended up spending their own money
so that they could buy the necessary gear.
More details regarding Dan Halutz’s 12 July stock
exchange affair. Apparently, the Chief of Staff, General Halutz phoned up the
bank and ordered them to sell his investment portfolio soon after he learned
about the clashes in the north. All this happened just before he himself
ordered a further escalation.
Seemingly, the Israeli army is ‘all over the place’, it
is under trained, it is heavy, it is messy, and its leaders are corrupted to the
bone. The Israeli political leadership isn’t any better. Though Peretz is no
longer at the Ministry of Defence, Olmert, Mofaz, Dichter and now Barak - all
qualified mass murderers - are still cabinet members. Considering the state of
its army, Israel may have to consider a swift change of direction, it cannot
fight anymore. It lacks the endurance. But seemingly this is not going to
happen. As it seems, in the next Israeli election we are probably going to see
the eloquent yet belligerent Benjamin Netanyahu fighting the belligerent yet far
less eloquent Ehud Barak.
For years we tended to believe that Israel would not be
defeated in the battlefield. Learning in detail the events of the last war
allows us to consider that this may not be the case. The Jewish state has
already been defeated in battle and this may happen again sooner than we
think.
[1] Captives in
Lebanon, Ofer Shelah/Yaov Limor, Miskal, Yedioth Ahrononth and Chemed Books,
2007 Pg 95.
[2] Sheik Hassan
Nasrallah, a speech given at Bint Jabel after the Israeli
Evacuation.