Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Sunday, July 30, 2006

Renewed Israeli Airstrikes Kill Family,
Others, Wound 2 UN Troops;
Nasrallah Vows Longer Range Rocket Strikes


The Israelis continued air strikes on Saturday. Naharnet.com carries this via AFP and AP:


'Elsewhere, Israeli warplanes demolished houses, killing seven people, including a woman and her five children . . . Lebanese civilians have born the brunt of the Israeli onslaught. The woman and her children were crushed in their home by a strike outside the market town of Nabatiyeh, which also killed a man in a nearby house, Lebanese security officials said. In the border village of Ain Arab in southeast Lebanon, six bodies were dug from the rubble of a house destroyed by a strike Friday, police said. Thirty-two Lebanese villagers killed in Israeli raids were also laid to rest in a mass grave in the southern port city of Tyre. '



Other Israeli attacks on Lebanon:

'Early Saturday, Israeli fighter jets renewed raids on Beirut's southern suburbs destroying a four-wheel-drive vehicle in a missile strike. The driver escaped unharmed when he jumped out of the vehicle. Israeli forces have repeatedly targeted cars and trucks . . . Two people were wounded in an attack on a lorry in the Bekaa Valley area of Sultan Yaacoub, the National News Agency said. Israeli forces also bombarded from the air and the sea various regions of south Lebanon, targeting valleys and houses. There were no immediate reports of casualties. '


And there was this:

' Before dawn on Sunday, Israeli warplanes hit the Masnaa border crossing, cutting the main road that links Lebanon to Syria and forcing the closure of the main transit point for refugees fleeing and humanitarian aid entering Lebanon. Two more missiles hit the area early Sunday. . . Two Indian UN peacekeepers were wounded on Saturday in an Israeli air raid on their post in south Lebanon. Four UN military observers were killed earlier this week in an Israeli strike on their observation post. '


The Israeli military mysteriously and suddenly pulled out of the far-south town of Bint Jbeil on Saturday, after a hard-fought battle to take the town of 30,000 that cost the lives of 8 Israeli troops last Wednesday alone. Naharnet says, "On Friday, the Israeli army said seven of its soldiers were wounded, including one seriously, when Hizbullah fighters attacked a ridge overlooking Bint Jbeil and the nearby village of Maroun al-Ras. " It appears to be the case that the Israelis were over-confident and have been taking much higher casualties than they had been prepared for, and so withdrew lest the casualties mount, until they figured out what to do about Hizbullah's tactics.

Altogether about 33 Israeli troops have been killed in the fighting with Hizbullah, with 17 civilians dead. The Lebanese authorities estimate that some 400 Lebanese civilians have died in the Israeli assaults, plus another 200 that likely are still buried in rubble.

Hizbullah fired 90 rockets at Israel on Saturday, again, but none did significant damage or inflicted severe wounds. 7 civilians and 3 soldiers were reported injured.

Hizbullah leader Shaikh Hasan Nasrallah pledged Saturday to hit even further into the heart of Israel with his rockets if the Israeli bombardment of Lebanon did not cease. He denied that the Israelis had won any victories, pointing to their destruction of the Lebanese infrastructure as a "savage achievement."

Israel rejected a plea from the UN for a 72-hour ceasefire to allow aid to be distributed. Some food and other aid has arrived in Beirut but relief workers are afraid to distribute it because the Israelis are targeting moving trucks for destruction.

Hundreds of Egyptians demonstrated at al-Azhar mosque on Friday against the Israeli war on Lebanon. They called for Hizbullah to destroy Tel Aviv and denounced Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Saudii King Abduallh for not intervening with all their energies to denounce Israel.

3 Comments:

At 3:29 AM, Blogger James-Speaks said...

" 'The Israeli military mysteriously and suddenly pulled out of the far-south town of Bint Jbeil on Saturday, after a hard-fought battle to take the town of 30,000 that cost the lives of 8 Israeli troops ......' It appears to be the case that the Israelis were over-confident and have been taking much higher casualties than they had been prepared for, and so withdrew lest the casualties mount, until they figured out what to do about Hizbullah's tactics."

From Hardened Hizbollah ready for Israel (Reuters), Dean Yates stated:

"What has raised concern in Israel is that the forces already taking casualties while conducting small-scale ground attacks in southern Lebanon to destroy Hizbollah bunkers are highly trained elite units. .... Ben-David said Israel's special forces were at a tactical disadvantage in that Hizbollah was waiting to ambush them."

The enemy put Israel at a special disadvantage by waiting to ambush them.

And this....

"Israel rejected a plea from the UN for a 72-hour ceasefire to allow aid to be distributed."

So, when Israel loses, because its elite troops meet an evenly matched enemy, it responds by denying humanitarian measures to the civilian victims of its war crimes.

Does any of this sound like a nation we want as our friend?

Hizbollah is beating Israel's best troops because Hizbollah is well trained. Who trained Hizbollah? Syria? Iran?

How will Israel proceed with its Clean Break considering that Syria and Iran have mountains and regular armies? Will Israel accuse Syria of abducting two soldiers and then bomb Iran? What about the sophisticated missles Iran and Syria have purchased from Russia?

I think Israel's best hope is for al Qaeda to step in and blow up something. If al Qqaeda needs help, Mossad coujld help them, again, but that would be treachery now, wouldn't it.

 
At 6:32 AM, Blogger Christiane said...

The targeting and destruction of a powerplant in Jounieh about a week ago has now created a huge oil slick which the Lebanese aren't able to stop. It has already smeared most of the beaches in Lebanon, including the only beach of Beirouth and Biblos. It is now threatening to invade the whole east Mediterranean sea (which is a very vulnerable sea, because it's a closed sea). It is now directly threatening Cyprus and Crete, but will probably extend untill Turkey and Syria and Israel itself.
Given the continuing Israel bombings it's very difficult to take the needed measures to stop it. Further, the beaches of Lebanon are mostly composed of rocks which makes manual cleaning a must. This will definitively kill tourism, but also fishes and plants and will infest the region for years.
It seems frivolous to report about this now that Israel is cutting all roads to the refugees and forbiding relief to the South. The nefarious consequences of this irresponsible deed will become clear slowy, but this is not only an ecological catastrophe, it's also another blow to the economy of Lebanon, as if she was needing one.
Yesterday, Saturday, about 3'000 demonstrators came in the streets of Bern (Switzerland); they protested against the disproportionated Israel bombings and targetting of civilians, the unconditional support of the US. They also urged the Swiss government to make a decisive condemnation of Israel and this war and to request that the Geneva conventions be respected. Given the population of Bern (about 130'000 inhabitants) and the summer holidays, this was a big protest. Unlike a preceeding one in Geneva, the protesters were mostly Swiss.
This is only an example showing how much the EU opinion is upset by this unjust war. There were also other demonstrations in EU (but I didn't hear detailed reports).
Concerning the 4 UNAFIL soldiers which were killed by Israel bombings, I heard a footage with Kofi Annan at a press conference. He said clearly that this wasn't an accident. The post to which thedr soldiers belonged was not only well known by the Israelians. It also used radio contacts six times in order to warn the Israelians that they were sending their bombs too near of the UN post.

 
At 9:01 AM, Blogger John Koch said...

In US circles, discussion of the Lebanon crisis gets no further than, "Hizbullah kidnapped two IDF troops on Israeli soil. Right. Lebanon does nothing to stop Hizbullah. Right? So Israel has no choice: destroy Hizbullah. Let the Lebs get out of the way or die with their terrorists." Any other remarks win cold glares: "What are you? A terrorist?" Easier to profess belief in alien abduction.

The US Mexican war began with similar certitude: they attacked us on our Texas soil. In fact, US troops had wandered on to Mexican soil.

Is it beyond question here that Hizbullah, out of the blue, without provocation and perhaps at Tehran's prompting, snuck into Israel and kidnapped two IDF soldiers. This is more or less "given" in the NYT "journal of record" chronology. Some press wires include articles that suggest a foggier situation.

Where, if anyplace, is a chronology that lays out the plausible sequence of events?

 

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