Israel seems to have no real strategy currently in lebanon, not one that will work.
It has not been brough up, but there is a reason Lebanon saw a 20 year civil war, and has been a problem before that- it is a contry rife with secterian divisions.
I bet those Lebanese bloggers that dislike Hizbullah are probably either Maronite Christian or Sunni Moslem. The Sunnis and Maronites have been the ones holding the power in Lebanon, and fighting amongst themselves for that power. The Shia were always marginalized, unimportant. But they happen to be the biggest single group in Lebanon. The Israeli invasion of '82 and the Iranian revolution radicallized and politicized them, and Hizbullah is their political party. The government in Beirut, one of Maronites and Sunni's, can;t take on Hizbullah because they have not shown much ability to offer anything to the Shia. Why then should the Shia back a "Lebanse government" that does not represent them like Hizbullah does?
Lets take the suggestions made, the Israel bomb just Hizbullah positions-that would be proportionate, certainly, as oposed to their current actions, but if the Beirut government stayed silent and tacitcly let Israel do that, are they not sending the message that they will let a foreign power kill fellow Lebanese simply because, well, it serves their interests? What kind of "national government" would do that? Anbd what messages does that send to the Shia in southern Lebanon?
At the same time Israel does not want to invade southern Lebanon, probably because they are aware of what that would mean, and what it would really lead to (another long occupation like last time). So all they do is bomb Lebanon, hoping they can get the Maronites and Sunnis to take on the Shia, which would just lead to another civil war, and in no way actually helps Israel because Iran will back its religious breatheren, and Syria has every interest in letting Lebanon fall apart again, and making things hard for Israel.
Yes, Israel is in a tough spot, but they seem incapable of taking a step back, breathing, and trying to come up with a strategy that actually will work long term, as opposed to simply reacting, and making things even more complicated.
It has not been brough up, but there is a reason Lebanon saw a 20 year civil war, and has been a problem before that- it is a contry rife with secterian divisions.
I bet those Lebanese bloggers that dislike Hizbullah are probably either Maronite Christian or Sunni Moslem. The Sunnis and Maronites have been the ones holding the power in Lebanon, and fighting amongst themselves for that power. The Shia were always marginalized, unimportant. But they happen to be the biggest single group in Lebanon. The Israeli invasion of '82 and the Iranian revolution radicallized and politicized them, and Hizbullah is their political party. The government in Beirut, one of Maronites and Sunni's, can;t take on Hizbullah because they have not shown much ability to offer anything to the Shia. Why then should the Shia back a "Lebanse government" that does not represent them like Hizbullah does?
Lets take the suggestions made, the Israel bomb just Hizbullah positions-that would be proportionate, certainly, as oposed to their current actions, but if the Beirut government stayed silent and tacitcly let Israel do that, are they not sending the message that they will let a foreign power kill fellow Lebanese simply because, well, it serves their interests? What kind of "national government" would do that? Anbd what messages does that send to the Shia in southern Lebanon?
At the same time Israel does not want to invade southern Lebanon, probably because they are aware of what that would mean, and what it would really lead to (another long occupation like last time). So all they do is bomb Lebanon, hoping they can get the Maronites and Sunnis to take on the Shia, which would just lead to another civil war, and in no way actually helps Israel because Iran will back its religious breatheren, and Syria has every interest in letting Lebanon fall apart again, and making things hard for Israel.
Yes, Israel is in a tough spot, but they seem incapable of taking a step back, breathing, and trying to come up with a strategy that actually will work long term, as opposed to simply reacting, and making things even more complicated.
Comment