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Now that Hezbollah has “abducted” two Israeli soldiers in Lebanon, we can expect a “wider Mideast military confrontation,” according to Bloomberg. Ehud Olmert holds “Lebanon responsible for the fate of the missing soldiers,” who were captured near Aita al-Shaab on the Lebanese side of the border, that is to say the soldiers violated the sovereignty of Lebanon, a common occurrence. “Israeli ground forces also crossed into Lebanon to hunt for the missing soldiers, Israeli Army Radio said,” reports Reuters, and then offers an excuse, per usual: “Israeli troops have not struck deep into Lebanon since they withdrew from a southern border strip in 2000 after Hizbollah’s Shi’ite fighters waged an 18-year war of attrition against them,” in other words they resisted the illegal occupation of the southern part of their country, as they now resist the illegal occupation of the Shebaa Farms area and continual Israeli border provocations (and violations of Lebanese airspace by Israeli fighter jets). No mention of this by Reuters or Bloomberg. Like the civilians of Gaza, the civilians of Lebanon will be required to pay for Hezbollah capturing prisoners of war. “Army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz warned the Lebanese government that the Israeli military will target infrastructure and ‘turn back the clock in Lebanon by 20 years,’ if the soldiers were not returned, Israeli TV reported,” notes the Associated Press. Only a little bit of translation is required, as Israel does not usually mince words. Israel will destroy civilian infrastructure in Lebanon, as it did in Gaza, a violation of international humanitarian law. But then Israel in Palestine and Lebanon, as the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan, does not do international law. Of course, the New York Times chimed in. “The fighting erupted when Hezbollah attacked northern Israel with rocket fire this morning, injuring several Israeli civilians in the northwestern town of Shlomi, the Israeli military said. Israel responded with artillery fire and air strikes that targeted Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon. Later, Israeli troops moved into southern Lebanon in the first such incursion since Israel pulled its troops back into Israel in 2000.” Reading the New York Times, or any other corporate media newspaper for that matter, you get the impression Hezbollah simply fires Katyusha rockets into northern Israel out of vindictiveness. Israel’s border provocations and targeting of Lebanese civilians is rarely mentioned. In predictable fashion, Israel is now attacking Lebanese civilians in response to the “abduction” (capture) of its soldiers. “In southern Lebanon, Israeli fighter jets bombed five bridges in quick succession, effectively cutting off that region from the rest of the country. At least two Lebanese civilians were killed in one of the bridge strikes, civil defense officials said, and a power plant was badly damaged. Airstrikes hit the cities of Marjuyun and Kfar Shouba, and warships shelled roads connecting cities to each other.” As expected, the Times chalks all of this up to an attempt to stop the movement of the “kidnappers,” or resistance forces in engaged in a long tradition—taking prisoners during wartime. “Troops entered Lebanon soon after the 9 a.m. abduction, striking 30 military and infrastructure targets in an effort to slow the movements of the gunmen holding the kidnapped soldiers.” Of course, destroying “infrastructure targets” will not stop Hezbollah, although it will create a refugee problem and make life a living hell for Lebanese civilians. “Scores of suddenly stranded Lebanese wandered back roads looking for a way home—their faces grim and worried, their belongings stuffed into plastic bags. Sirens wailed in the background.” Since the 2000 “pullback” (i.e., the Hezbollah resistance defeated Israel), the Israeli military has consistently attacked civilian infrastructure in Lebanon. In 2000, for instance, Israel targeted three key electric plants “that limited power supplies to a few hours a day for Beirut and other parts of Lebanon,” as the Los Angeles Times noted at the time. As Israeli diplomat Abba Eban explained in 1981, attacking and slaughtering civilians is a “rational prospect.” Hizbollah understands this policy all to well, as do the civilians of al-Mansouri, Majdal Zoune, Zibqin, Kafra, Yater, Eita al-Jabal, al-Ezizeh, and other Lebanese cities indiscriminately shelled by Israeli artillery over the years. A prime example of this brutality can be seen in the Israeli shelling of Qana, a village located southeast of Tyre, resulting in the killing of 106 civilians. It should be obvious what is going on here—Olmert and the Likudites are escalating hostilities in the region in an effort to draw the United States in even more, the situation in Iraq not withstanding. Olmert, the Likudites, and their neocon collaborators understand well the military prowess and red ink checkbook of the United States will be required to take on the Lebanese, Syrians, Iranians, and the Palestinians, long designated mortal enemies of the Israeli state. For as Israeli foreign policy expert Yehoshafat Harkabi noted in 1988, “Israeli intentions to impose a Pax Israelica on the Middle East, to dominate the Arab countries and treat them harshly,” cannot be accomplished, considering current realities. “Writing from a realist perspective, Harkabi concluded that Israel did not have the power to achieve that goal, given the strength of the Arab states, the large Palestinian population involved, and the vehement opposition of world opinion. He hoped that ‘the failed Israeli attempt to impose a new order in the weakest Arab state—Lebanon—will disabuse people of similar ambitions in other territories.’ Left unconsidered by Harkabi was the possibility that the United States would act as Israel’s proxy to achieve the overall goal,” writes Stephen J. Sniegoski. In fact, it appears this is precisely what Israel is attempting to do now. Soon enough, Israel will paint itself into a corner, unable to stem the growing tide of resentment and violent reaction, and will call on the United States to attack its enemies. Or, more to the point, Israel’s vocal choir in the United States will demand a response, beginning with Syria and eventually Iran, two targets already highlighted on the neocon hit list, the “evil empire” roster. Addendum Ari Rabinovitch, writing for Reuters, muses: “The violence has knocked the hopes of many Israelis that it might one day be possible to break from conflict with various foes through a mixture of withdrawing from some occupied land and protecting boundaries with overwhelming force.” Israelis need to realize their government never had any intention of ending the “conflict with various foes” who had and continue to have their land systematically stolen, their communities destroyed, their civilian infrastructure targeted. Israelis need to go back to the United Nations Partition Plan (resolution 181) conceived in 1947 (see this map). Instead, the Palestinians live on a fraction of land as original proposed (see this page). Israelis need to realize they support apartheid, a refashioned and high-tech Warsaw ghetto wall, and also understand their society is riddled with anti-Arab racism and hatred. Israelis need to consider the following quotes issued from their founders and leaders: “There is no such thing as a Palestinian people… It is not as if we came and threw them out and took their country. They didn’t exist.” — Golda Meir Statement to The Sunday Times, 15 June, 1969. “How can we return the occupied territories? There is nobody to return them to.” — Golda Meir (quoted in Chapter 13 of The Zionist Connection II: What Price Peace by Alfred Lilienthal ) “We shall try to spirit the penniless population across the border by procuring employment for it in the transit countries, while denying it any employment in our own country …. expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out discreetly and circumspectly.” — Theodore Herzl (from Rafael Patai, Ed. The Complete Diaries of Theodore Herzl, Vol I) “… it is the duty of the [Israeli] leadership to explain to the public a number of truths. One truth is that there is no Zionism, no settlement, and no Jewish state without evacuating Arabs, and without expropriating lands and their fencing off.” — Yesha’ayahu Ben-Porat, (Yedi’ot Aharonot 07/14/1972) responding to public controversy regarding the Israeli evictions of Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza, in 1972. (Cited in Nur Masalha’s “A Land Without A People” 1997, p.98) “The very point of Labor’s Zionist program is to have as much land as possible and as few Arabs as possible!” –Yitzhak Navon (”moderate” ex-Israeli president and a leading labor party politician.) Cited on p.179 of Nur Masalha’s A Land without a People who cites Bernard Avishai’s The Tragedy of Zionism 1985 p.340 “One million Arabs are not worth a Jewish fingernail.” “In working for Palestine, I would even ally
myself with the devil” “In strategic terms, the settlements (in Judea,
Samaria, and Gaza) are of no importance.” What makes them important,
he added, was that “they constitute an obstacle, an unsurmountable
obstacle to the establishment of an independent Arab State west of the
river Jordan.” “Our fathers had reached the frontiers recognized
in the partition plan; the Six-Day War generation has managed to reach
Suez, Jordan, and the Golan Heights. This is not the end. After the present
cease-fire lines, there will be new ones. They will extend beyond Jordan
… to Lebanon and … to central Syria as well.” “They [Israel] have typically concealed the
continually expansionist nature of their project from their western sponsors
and pursued a “step by step” process toward these goals. While
pointing to militant Arab rhetoric to frighten Jews and convince them
that the Arab world is genocidal against Jews and that no peace is possible
with them, Israeli leaders have been quite aware of the actual inability
of the Arab world to deliver on this militant rhetoric. ” “The main difference between Bosnia and Palestine
is that ethnic cleansing in the former took place in the form of dramatic
massacres and slaughters which caught the world’s attention, whereas
in Palestine what is taking place is a drop-by-drop tactic in which one
or two houses are demolished daily, a few acres are taken here and there
every day, a few people are forced to leave” “The demolition and sealing of houses are among
the most severe methods of punishment used by the authorities against
Palestinians in the Occupied Territories. To our knowledge, this harsh
form of punishment is unique to Israel and is not employed by any other
nation. Demolition and sealing of houses in the territories contravene
international law that prohibits collective punishment and arbitrary injury
to property.” “It is an open secret that Israeli policy makers
hoped for a massive emigration of Palestinians as a result of economic
and demographic pressure. Therefore, they also developed a clever system
which caused numerous Palestinians born here to lose their residency rights
when they went to work or study abroad.” While campaigning for the prime ministership, Binyamin
Netanyahu Criticized his Labor party opponents for missing an opportunity
during the Tiannamen Square massacre. “Had he been prime minister,
he said, he would have seized the chance then, while the world was watching
China, to carry out the transfer of the Palestinians.” “[Israel will] create in the course of the
next 10 or 20 years conditions which would attract natural and voluntary
migration of the refugees from the Gaza Strip and the west Bank to Jordan.
To achieve this we have to come to agreement with King Hussein and not
with Yasser Arafat.” “To solidify their gains after the 1967 war,
according to UN figures, the Israelis destroyed during the period between
June 11, 1967 and November 15, 1969 some 7,554 Palestinian Arab homes
in the territories seized during that war; this figure excluded thirty-five
villages in the occupied Golan Heights that were razed to the ground.
In the two years between September 1969 and 1971 the figure was estimated
to have reached 16,312 homes.” “Jews came and took, by means of uprooting
and expulsion, a land that was Arab. We wanted to be a colonialist occupier,
and yet to come across as moral at the same time… The Arab armies
— chiefly from Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Transjordan, now Jordan —
totaled just over 20,000 men. The core of the Arab nations’ fighting
forces remained behind, in part to ensure the internal stability of their
own fledgling regimes…. Crucially, Israel had a quiet agreement
with Transjordan that its Arab Legion, the strongest of the invading armies,
would take over only the West Bank, which the U.N. partition plan had
intended as the center of a Palestinian Arab State.” “Till then everyone in Israel spoke about Arabs
who had just run away in 1948, but there existed no real historical research
on it. There were two conflicting propaganda versions, one Arab and another
Jewish. As one who received his education in Israel, I thought I knew
that the Arabs had ‘run away.’ But I knew nothing else. The
Jewish generations of 1948, however, knew the truth and deliberately misrepresented
it. They knew there were plenty of mass deportations, massacres and rapes
. . . . The soldiers and the officials knew, but they suppressed what
they knew and were deliberately disseminating lies.” “Israel’s conquests included not only
such major cities as Jaffa, Lydda and Acre, but also 418 Palestinian villages
that were destroyed and another 100 villages that were occupied by Jews.
In all Israelis took over more than 50,000 homes, 10,000 shops and 1,000
warehouses. It was estimated that about a quarter of the buildings in
the new state were originally the property of the Palestinians.” “Indiscriminate plundering of Palestinian property
by Jews [in 1948] was so common that it caused Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion
to confide to his diary that he was ‘bitterly surprised’ by
the ‘mass robbery’ in which all parts of the population participated.
[…] Tom Segev reported: ‘In Haifa, Jaffa and Jerusalem there
were many civilians among the looters.’ Another Israeli writer,
Moshe Smilanky, reported: ‘Individuals, groups and communities,
men, women and children, all fell on the spoils. Doors, windows, lintels,
brinks, roof-tiles, floor-tiles, junk and machine parts …’
Segev commented that Smilansky ‘could have also added to the list
toilet bowls, sinks, faucets and light bulbs.’” -------------------------------------------------------------- INFOWARS: BECAUSE THERE'S A WAR ON FOR YOUR MIND
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