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About Mark Silverberg
Mark Silverberg is an attorney
with a Masters Degree in Political Science and International
Relations from the University of Manitoba, Canada. A former
member of the Canadian Justice Department and a past Director of
the Canadian Jewish Congress (Western Office) based in
Vancouver, he served as a Consultant to the Secretary General of
the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem during the first Palestinian
intifada. He is a member of Hadassah's National Academic
Advisory Board, a foreign policy analyst with the Ariel Center
for Policy Research (Israel) and the International Analyst
Network (U.S.), and has been interviewed on Israel National
Radio as an authority on American foreign policy in the Middle
East. His editorials and articles on Middle East affairs have
appeared in the Hebrew and English editions of the NATIV Journal
of the Ariel Center for Policy Research (Israel), American
Thinker, Israel Insider, the Conservative Voice, Israel Unity
Coalition, Midstream and Outpost magazines and Arutz Sheva
(Israel National News). He has lectured extensively on subjects
of counterterrorism, jihadism, homeland security issues and
intelligence matters and is a Featured Writer with the New Media
Journal
(Chicago) and a Contributing Editor for Family Security Matters.
He is the author of "The Quartermasters of Terror: Saudi Arabia
and the Global Islamic Jihad (Wyndham Hall Press, 2005).
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Mark Silverberg
The Third Lebanon War
July 30, 2008
There is
something to be learned from the frenzied love-fest given in Beirut in
mid-July to the most notorious of the Lebanese prisoners released by
Israel. Samir Kuntar was sentenced to 542 years in prison for killing
four people during a raid in 1979. Kuntar executed a father (Danny
Haran) in front of his 4-year-old daughter, then killed the little girl
by smashing her head against a rock with a rifle butt.
But to the Lebanese, Kuntar is a returning hero. He walked down a red
carpet in Beirut. He was kissed by the Hezbollah leader and cheered like
a rock star. In the southern port city of Sidon, posters of Kuntar
adorned the streets and walkways as children rode by on their bicycles,
no doubt dreaming of the day that they too could become "heroes" by
murdering "Zionist" children.
▪ When a banner in
Beirut (according to the New York Times) proclaims "God's Achievement
Through Our Hands";
▪ When The Beirut Daily
Star (in other respects a decent newspaper) headline reads: "Nation
Unites for Heroes' Homecomings";
▪ When the Free
Patriotic Movement (supported by more than 70% of the Christian
population in Lebanon) supports pro-Syrian forces in the May battles
that took place in the streets of Beirut;
▪ When the
second-in-command of the Lebanese Armed Forces (George Adwan) attends
the Kuntar “homecoming" (in his words);
▪ When elected
officials of the Lebanese government including its President Michel
Suliman (who referred to Kuntar as a "freed hero"), prime minister Fouad
Siniora, government ministers and many members of Lebanon's
pro-democracy March 14th Movement call on the Lebanese people to
participate in the public celebration, declare it a national holiday,
issue statements that the prisoner swap was an "historical victory . . .
against the Israeli enemy and its hostile policies”, and call on all
those participating to "raise the Lebanese flag" as a show of unity;
▪ When Parliamentary
Speaker and Amal Shiite leader Nabih Berri and Progressive Socialist
Party and Druze leader Walid Jumblatt declare the release of Kuntar to
be "a day to celebrate freedom, martyrs and human rights";
▪ When public
departments, unions, businesses, municipalities and educational
institutions across the nation close for the day in his honor;
▪ When shouts of joy
and support fill the streets of Beirut and al-Manar television
celebrates the "divine victory" over Israel...
...it would appear that
Kuntar's return was not merely being celebrated by Hezbollah supporters,
but by the Lebanese people and their leaders.
Barry Rubin of the Global Research in International Affairs Center in
Israel has observed: "What horrifies me most are not radicals cheering
terrorist Samir Kuntar, but that most relative moderates feel compelled
to do so. At the airport to greet him were leaders of Lebanon's
anti-Syrian, anti-Iranian Druze and Christian groups as well as the
ambassadors from Egypt, Jordan, the UAE and Morocco. To avoid being
discredited, relative moderates must affirm that anyone who murders
Israeli children is a hero." It can of course be argued that Lebanese
politics requires such posturing in order to create the illusion of
national unity, but such posturing over the return of genocidal
terrorists like Samir Kuntar may have significant consequences should a
Third Lebanon War erupt.
During the Second
Lebanon War in the summer of 2006, the Siniora government was
internationally recognized as a moderate counter-balance to Hezbollah in
Lebanon. That international respectability prevented Israel from
attacking a broad range of Lebanese targets requiring it to restrict its
attacks primarily to Hezbollah missile launching sites, the Haret Hreik
district of south Beirut where Hezbollah and its Al Manar television
station were headquartered, the major airport runways at Beirut's Rafiq
Hariri International Airport (used to transit Hezbollah military
personnel and weapons), the fuel reservoirs of the power station in
Jiyyeh, twenty bridges over the Litani and Zahrani Rivers, a main
highway leading to Beirut International Airport and two Lebanese
military airfields (as a warning to the Lebanese military to stay out of
what was then seen as a purely Israeli-Hezbollah conflict).
But events in recent
months have altered the Lebanese political landscape in favor of
Hezbollah, Syria and Iran blurring the lines between non-state and state
actors. Hezbollah together with its foreign paymasters is now seen as
the undisputed power-broker of Lebanon and the Lebanese government is
gradually being relegated to puppet-status. Hezbollah holds veto power
in the Lebanese parliament. The Lebanese Army is working with Hezbollah
in south Lebanon and recently refused to intervene when pro-government
forces were confronted by Hezbollah militias. The true military power in
Lebanon today rests with Hezbollah. The important decisions relating to
matters of war, peace and diplomacy are being made and conducted by
Hezbollah. The border region with Israel is now being militarized under
Hezbollah, and the power to carry out acts of war against Israel such as
further kidnappings and the firing of missiles from southern Lebanon
into Israeli civilian population centers rests solely with Hezbollah. In
effect, by celebrating the return of Kuntar, the Lebanese have made (or
at least created the perception of having made) common cause with
Hezbollah against Israel and in so doing, they risk sharing Hezbollah’s
fate.
The massive support
shown for Kuntar throughout Lebanon, if taken at face value, has
effectively re-defined the status of the Lebanese government (and, by
extension, the Lebanese people) as the enemy of Israel. As Giora Eiland,
the former chief of Israel's National Security Council noted in Ynet
News: "The only way to prevent another war is to make it clear that
should war break out, Lebanon may be razed to the ground. Not only will
the Lebanese government fear it, so would Hezbollah . . . This will
deter the group, if it realizes that aggression on its part would result
in destruction that would outrage the population and turn it against
Hezbollah." In effect, in the event of a Third Lebanon War, a vast array
of strategic targets throughout Lebanon would no longer be immune from
Israeli retaliation. By making common cause with Hezbollah, the Lebanese
stand to reap the whirlwind.
The destruction of
Lebanon would be a horrible outcome, but to the Israelis it is doubtless
preferable to the destruction of Israel. Deterrence of further conflict
is the preferred alternative. If Israel makes it clear that should war
occur, it is the country as a whole, not just Hezbollah that will
suffer, perhaps cooler heads will prevail in Lebanon.
The costs of the Second
Lebanon War in terms of $5.6B in damages, 1,200 Lebanese killed and over
4,000 injured would pale by comparison if Hezbollah-led Lebanon engages
Israel. The national celebrations for Kuntar in Lebanon, and that
nation's embrace of this murderer and his genocidal compatriots, not
only reveal (again) the depths of Hezbollah's moral bankruptcy, but also
the readiness of other Lebanese to follow it into the abyss.