by Caroline B. Glick
The three lessons of the Second Lebanon War taught us to be wary of appeasers both here and in the US.
This truth is exposed in all its ugliness by the political and military realities five years on. Today, Hezbollah is not simply in charge of Israel’s former security zone in South Lebanon.
Five years ago this week, Iran’s Lebanese proxy opened war with Israel. The war  lasted 34 days, during which Hezbollah launched more than 4,000 missiles against  Israel. Now five years later, under US President Barack Obama, America is  pushing a policy that drastically escalates the chance that a new war between  Israel and Iran’s Lebanese army will break out again in the near  future.
Back in 2006, Israel’s response to Hezbollah’s aggression was  swift but incompetent. While Israel scored some blows against the Iranian proxy  force, the war ended with Hezbollah still shooting. Israel failed to defeat the  terror army. And because Hezbollah survived, it won the war.
It is in charge of all of Lebanon. The  Hezbollah-controlled government controls all aspects of the Lebanese state that  it wishes. These include the military, the telecommunications networks, and the  international borders, airports and sea ports, among other things.
Today,  Hezbollah has not merely refilled its depleted missile arsenals. It has tripled  the size of its missile arsenals. In 2006, IAF strikes in the first 24 hours of  the war knocked out all of Hezbollah’s long-range missiles. Today, not only have  those stocks been replenished, Hezbollah’s arsenal includes missiles with ranges  covering all of Israel, with larger payloads and many with guidance  systems.
The lessons of the war are easy to see. And the Israeli public,  which learned them five years ago, still hasn’t forgotten them.
GENERALLY  SPEAKING, the war taught us three lessons. The first lesson is that you can’t  convince terrorists to lay down their arms simply by walking away. Israel  withdrew from its security zone in southern Lebanon in 2000. The withdrawal was  a precursor to its withdrawal from Gaza in 2005. In 2006, Israel was attacked  from both territories.
In the lead-up to both withdrawals, Israel’s  national leadership told the public that the only reason terrorists from these  territories were attacking us was that we were there. If we went away, they  would stop hating us and we would be safe. We were the problem, not them, so we  could solve the problem by giving them what they wanted.
Although  then-prime minister Ehud Olmert and then-foreign minister Tzipi Livni continued  to push appeasement through their insistence that Israel surrender Judea and  Samaria, the war of 2006 showed the public the folly of their plans. And at  first opportunity, the public elected the Likud and other right-wing parties –  which oppose appeasement – to form the current government.
The second  lesson the public learned is that when a nation goes to war against an enemy  that seeks its destruction, it must fight to win. You cannot fight a half-war  against an implacable foe. And if you fail to win, you lose.
This is not  how Israel fought the war of 2006. Partially due to pressure from then-secretary  of state Condoleezza Rice and partially due to his own strategic  incomprehension, Olmert believed it was possible to fight to a draw without  losing.
In the event, there was only one way for Israel to defeat  Hezbollah – by regaining control over southern Lebanon.
Any other  conclusion to the war would leave Hezbollah standing. And simply by surviving  intact, as Lebanese Druse leader Walid Jumblatt warned at the time, the road  would be paved for Hezbollah to take over Lebanon.
But Olmert – and Livni  – wouldn’t even consider retaking control of South Lebanon. The option was  discarded contemptuously as a delusional recipe for forcing Israel back into the  “Lebanese quagmire.” The fact that the “Lebanese quagmire” came to Israel after  we left Lebanon, and that it will only end when Israel defeats Hezbollah, was  completely ignored.
Olmert’s and Livni’s reason for rejecting the one  strategy that would have brought Israel victory is explained by the third lesson  of the war. That lesson is that once a leader is ideologically committed to a  policy of appeasement, he is unable to allow rational considerations to permeate  his thinking.
THE OLMERT government was elected in 2006 on the basis of  its plan to repeat the Lebanon and Gaza withdrawals in Judea and Samaria. During  the war, Olmert told his supporters that victory in Lebanon would enable him to  carry out his planned withdrawal from Judea and Samaria. And this was true. But  because of the circular logic of appeasement, there was no way that Olmert could  fight to win.
If Israel had retaken control of southern Lebanon, Olmert  would have had a chance of convincing the public that unilateral withdrawal was  a viable strategy. He would have been able to argue that just as the IDF retook  control of southern Lebanon, so it would retake control of Judea and Samaria if  the Palestinians used the vacated lands to attack the rest of the  country.
But because he was committed to appeasement, Olmert could not  fight to win in Lebanon. The appeasement agenda is predicated on the disavowal  of the notion of military victory and the embrace of the mantra, “There is no  military solution.”
If victory is an option, then surrender along the  lines that Olmert preached in Judea and Samaria is also an option.
That  is, surrender is an option, not an imperative, as he claimed. And if victory is  an option, then clearly it has much more to recommend it than defeat.
But  with their appeasement agenda reigning supreme – as appeasement agendas always  do – instead of fighting to win, Olmert and Livni sued for a cease-fire. That  is, they sought a diplomatic solution to a military problem. And since by not  losing, Hezbollah won the military contest, it also came out the victor in UN  Security Council Resolution 1701, which set the conditions of the  cease-fire.
Resolution 1701 was a massive victory for Hezbollah. The  resolution placed the international terror group run by Iran on equal footing  with Israel, a sovereign state. The security arrangements in the resolution were  an invitation for Hezbollah to rearm. It was pure fantasy to believe that the  Hezbollah-dominated Lebanese government would block Hezbollah’s rearmament. And  it was utter madness to think that European military forces would lift a finger  to prevent Hezbollah from reasserting full control over the border with  Israel.
But again, if you accept the circular logic of appeasement – that  always puts the burden of proof on the non-aggressor – then you will never learn  these, or any other lessons. And as a consequence, appeasers will always and  forever foment wars in the name of peace.
THE ISRAELI public learned  these lessons and elected a government that understands them. Perhaps if the  American people had elected Senator John McCain to succeed George W. Bush in  2008, the US government would have learned these lessons as well. And then maybe  together the Israeli and the US governments might have set about fixing at least  some of the damage the war caused them both.
But in their wisdom, the  American people elected Barack Obama to succeed Bush in the White House. And  Obama has learned none of the lessons of the last war. Consequently Obama’s  current policies are increasing the likelihood of another war between Israel and  Iran’s Lebanese proxy in the near future.
Far from recognizing the nature  of Hezbollah, the Obama administration has tried to wish away its implacability.  Last May, Obama’s counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan spoke of the  administration’s plan to cultivate “moderate elements” in the Iranian-run  jihadist organization.
The Obama administration’s notion that the US can  adopt a nuanced approach to the terror group is put paid by Hezbollah’s takeover  of the Lebanese government, its growing capabilities in the Western hemisphere,  its continued devotion to the cause of Israel’s destruction, its participation  in the killing of Syrian anti-regime protesters, and Iran’s clear control over  all aspects of the organization’s operations. And yet, by all accounts, the  administration refuses to acknowledge that there can be no nuance toward  Hezbollah.
The dangers of Obama’s rejection of these basic truths were  exposed this week. Sunday the government approved the demarcation of Israel’s  territorial waters along the border with Lebanon. The borders will be submitted  to the UN.
Israel’s move was forced on it by the Obama  administration.
The dispute over the sea border arose after Israel  discovered massive quantities of natural gas in its territorial waters in 2009.  Acting on orders from Hezbollah and Iran, the Lebanese government immediately  claimed erroneously that the waters belonged to Lebanon. Last August, Lebanon  submitted its claim to the UN.
Israel negotiated its maritime borders  with Cyprus in 2007. The same year, Cyprus also negotiated its maritime borders  with Lebanon. At the time, Lebanon did not claim the areas in which Israel has  discovered natural gas deposits or the areas abutting those areas, which are  suspected of similarly containing large natural gas deposits. Lebanon’s current  claim includes Israel’s territorial waters abutting the gas fields it discovered  in 2009.
In staking this false claim, as it did with the Shaba Farms on  Mount Dov in the Golan Heights in 2000, Lebanon is setting up a casus belli  against Israel.
Under the circumstances, the only rational policy that  the US can possibly adopt is to loudly and strenuously back Israel’s claim and  reject all Lebanese contentions to the contrary.
Only by completely  rejecting Lebanon’s claim can the US deny Hezbollah and Iran the ability to use  Israel’s gas finds in its territorial waters as a justification for  war.
Rather than do this, guided by its appeasement ideology, the Obama  administration has refused to take sides. It urged Israel to submit its  counter-claim to the UN – where it can bully Israel into accepting arbitration  of the dispute by the inherently anti-Israel UN.
More generally, by  refusing to take sides, the US is in fact siding with its enemy Iran and Iran’s  proxy Hezbollah against its ally Israel.
According to media reports, the  Obama administration claims that by acting in this manner, it is seeking to  prevent a flare-up of hostilities. That is, the administration believes that if  it shows Hezbollah its good will by treating Israel’s honest claim as equal to  Lebanon/Hezbollah/Iran’s false claim, it will appease the latter into not waging  a war of aggression against the former.
But again, what the last war  taught us is that this sort of behavior is what emboldens aggressors to attack.  Obama’s even-handedness in the face of a US enemy’s aggression against a US ally  is placing Israel and Lebanon on a straight path to a new  war.
Caroline B. Glick
Source:  http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=228892
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors. 
 
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