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Monday, July 24, 2006
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
This war may have just begun
by Paul Greenberg
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Every war, as a practical-minded American general named Eisenhower once noted, will surprise you. Cry havoc, let slip the dogs of war, and whom they will turn on is never as clear as the armchair generals, or even the real ones, may imagine.

And this Arab-Israeli war may be different from all the others. For one thing, it isn't an Arab-Israeli war, not yet, but an Islamist-Israeli war. Surprisingly, the Arab League withheld its automatic stamp of approval for any and all assaults on Israelis.

Can it be that autocratic Arab rulers like those in Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia have realized they have more to fear from jihadist outfits like Hezbollah - and its backers - than the Israelis do?

What backers? Syria's fingerprints, and Iran's as well, are all over the rockets landing hourly in Nahariyah, Haifa, Nazareth . . . and all around northern Israel.

Meanwhile, across the border, caught between Hezbollah and Israel, a battered, burning Lebanon is ceasing to be a country and is becoming a battlefield. And this war may have only begun. The skirmishes along the border herald a full-scale ground war.

Things do change in the Middle East and in the crises there: This time the United States isn't playing the role of Honest Broker, aka Uncle Sucker. Washington hasn't joined the reflexive cry for stopping the Israeli offensive ASAP. In that regard, George W. Bush seems a different kind of president - one interested not so much in putting an end to this immediate crisis as seeing that it not recur in the future.

How? By helping to ensure that, whenever this unpleasantness ends, Hezbollah will no longer be in a position to stage a repeat performance of the attacks that triggered this one.

That's a tall order. Just how do Washington and Jerusalem propose to achieve such a goal? There's no secret about that: Ideally, Hezbollah's militia would be cleared out of southern Lebanon, disarmed and replaced with another force - like the Lebanese army. Or maybe with an international contingent that, unlike the U.N. force on the border now, might actually be of use. And, oh, yes, those Israeli hostages would be returned unharmed. (Do you think they're still alive?) Continued...

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Subject: I agree, Lazlo
They seem to be so happy to die on a bus/in a restaurant with a bomb belt around their waist, and a dozen or more Israelis around them, to go to their "72 virgins in Paradise." Why don't we give them a nice send off? In their favorite language (violence), we can teach them to say "daisycutter" and "MOB" (aka "Mother Of all Bombs"). It would probably be a good move to set off all the nuclear weapons in Iran where they are, right now - on the ground - too.

As a safety measure, there might be more than one button that must be pushed simultaneously to launch weapons like those - and they might be intentionally placed too far apart for one person to do it. If so, I'll volunteer to push another button.

One problem: We'll need one (or more) EMP bombs for Syria, and another one (or more) for Iran. In between them - check your map - is Iraq, which we would want to protect. Cooking ALL of Hezbollah's hardware is going to be challenge: how do know where all of Hezbollah's hardware is? They aren't a country, they have no borders. Is there a Hezbollah sleeper cell wihtin 50 miles of you right now? How do you know?

Shirley's airwar
Shirley, I mean no offense, but I see a potential problem with your air-only war: does Iran have any nuclear weapons factories, or stored weapons, underground?

We might kill every Iranian and destroy every building aboveground, leaving it all radioactive for the next 100,000 years. I'm supposing that our airwar would melt/vaporize every electric generator above ground, but if there are ten or twenty of those fanatic kooks in some cave in the side of some mountain, with access to battery-powered controls for the stored weapons, they might survive long enough to push their buttons, and where would those missiles go?

In addition, did you think that Hezbollah came up with the hide-in-the-middle-of-civilians strategy on their own? Or if they did, do you suppose they haven't talked to their friends in Iran about it? Morally, I think we have to do what we can to avoid killing Iranian Civilians, while recognizing that some will be inevitable, especially if they follow Saddam's example and store such weapons in the basements of hospitals, mosques, and elementary schools. (They might also put some command centers, where they push those infamous buttons, in those basements, too.)
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