 |
Hitlerites plan new Blitzkrieg
Disproportionate Force: Israel's Concept of Response in Light of the Second Lebanon War
10.03.2008 | INSS Insight No. 74 (http://www.imra.org.il)
By Siboni, Gabriel
Not long ago Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah was quoted as saying, "the
Zionists will think ten thousand times before attacking Lebanon." Nasrallah's
remark appears to have been in reference to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's
declaration, made while visiting the IDF Home Front Command, that the IDF
would face fewer limitations in future confrontations. Indeed, the pressure
on Nasrallah seems to be taking its toll. The Hizbollah leader is beginning
to internalize what he understands as a fundamental change in Israel's
approach in responding to a threat emanating from Lebanon.
Indeed, an updated Israeli security concept regarding Israel's response to
rocket and missile threats from Syria, Lebanon, and the Gaza Strip is
gradually evolving. Now, more than two years after the Second Lebanon War,
it appears that Israel's immediate response after the July 2006 kidnapping
attack significantly boosted its ability to deter Hizbollah and Syria from
operating against Israel.
The current predicament facing Israel involves two major challenges. The
first is how to prevent being dragged into an ongoing dynamic of attrition
on the northern border similar to what in recent years developed along the
border with the Gaza Strip. The second is determining the IDF's response to
a large scale conflict both in the north and in the Gaza Strip. These two
challenges can be overcome by adopting the principle of a disproportionate
strike against the enemy's weak points as a primary war effort, and
operations to disable the enemy's missile launching capabilities as a
secondary war effort.
With an outbreak of hostilities, the IDF will need to act immediately,
decisively, and with force that is disproportionate to the enemy's actions
and the threat it poses. Such a response aims at inflicting damage and
meting out punishment to an extent that will demand long and expensive
reconstruction processes. The strike must be carried out as quickly as
possible, and must prioritize damaging assets over seeking out each and
every launcher. Punishment must be aimed at decision makers and the power
elite. In Syria, punishment should clearly be aimed at the Syrian military,
the Syrian regime, and the Syrian state structure. In Lebanon, attacks
should both aim at Hizbollah's military capabilities and should target
economic interests and the centers of civilian power that support the
organization. Moreover, the closer the relationship between Hizbollah and
the Lebanese government, the more the elements of the Lebanese state
infrastructure should be targeted. Such a response will create a lasting
memory among Syrian and Lebanese decision makers, thereby increasing Israeli
deterrence and reducing the likelihood of hostilities against Israel for a
an extended period. At the same time, it will force Syria, Hizbollah, and
Lebanon to commit to lengthy and resource-intensive reconstruction programs.
Recent discussion of "victory" and "defeat" in a future war against
Hizbollah has presented an overly simplistic approach. The Israeli public
must understand that overall success cannot be measured by the level of high
trajectory fire against Israel at the end of the confrontation. The IDF will
make an effort to decrease rocket and missile attacks as much as possible,
but the main effort will be geared to shorten the period of fighting by
striking a serious blow at the assets of the enemy.
Israel does not have to be dragged into a war of attrition with Hizbollah.
Israel's test will be the intensity and quality of its response to incidents
on the Lebanese border or terrorist attacks involving Hizbollah in the north
or Hamas in the south. In such cases, Israel again will not be able to limit
its response to actions whose severity is seemingly proportionate to an
isolated incident. Rather, it will have to respond disproportionately in
order to make it abundantly clear that the State of Israel will accept no
attempt to disrupt the calm currently prevailing along its borders. Israel
must be prepared for deterioration and escalation, as well as for a full
scale confrontation. Such preparedness is obligatory in order to prevent
long term attrition. The Israeli home front must be prepared to be fired
upon, possibly with even heavy fire for an extended period, based on the
understanding that the IDF is working to reduce the period of fighting to a
minimum and to create an effective balance of deterrence.
This approach is applicable to the Gaza Strip as well. There, the IDF will
be required to strike hard at Hamas and to refrain from the cat and mouse
games of searching for Qassam rocket launchers. The IDF should not be
expected to stop the rocket and missile fire against the Israeli home front
through attacks on the launchers themselves, but by means of imposing a
ceasefire on the enemy.
By instilling proper expectations of the IDF response among the civilian
population, Israel will be able to improve its readiness and the resilience
of its citizens. Still, the IDF's primary goal must nonetheless be to attain
a ceasefire under conditions that will increase Israel's long term
deterrence, prevent a war of attrition, and leave the enemy floundering in
expensive, long term processes of reconstruction.
SHARE THIS POST:
|
 |
 |
 |



What we can do:
On Gaza, West Bank, East Jerusalem & the Occupation:
On the Lobby & "the New anti-Semitism"
On Hezbollah & Hamas:
- The Guardian: Hamas acted on a very real fear of a US-sponsored coup. (06.22.2007)
- Haaretz: Haniyeh: Hamas willing to accept Palestinian state with 1967 borders. (11.09.2008)
- Henry Siegman, International Herald Tribune: Bring in Hamas. (03.04.2008)
- The Washington Post: No Peace Without Hamas. (04.17.2008)
- Al Jazeera English: Talk to Jazeera - Khaled Meshaal. (03.05.2008)
- International Herald Tribune: Bring in Hamas. (03.04.2008)
- "the Hezbollah model"
and "There is this claim that the obstacle [to peace] is that Hamas won't recognize Israel..." (09.30.2006)
"Israel always depended on the fact that its adversaries were stupid, incompetent... and, in fact, they were right... That when they were dealing with a Nasser, he was a blowhard; a Saddam Hussein,
he was a windbag; when they were dealing with Yasser Arafat, he was a hot air ballon.
They were nothing of any substance... [inaudible]... That was Israel's ace in the hole. Now comes along an Arab leader who says we have to use "reason."
It's a very remarkable thing to read. We have to use "reason."
We have to think, plan, organize."
- Hamas: A reasonable statement. (Los Angeles Times, 07.10.2007)
- The Guardian: Hamas condemns the Holocaust. (05.12.2008)
- Salon.com: The "hiding among civilians" myth. (07.28.2006)
- AIPAC v. Norman Finkelstein: A Debate on Israel's Assault on Gaza. (06.29.2006)
- Foreign Policy: Habitat for Hezbollah. (08.2006)
- The Irish Times: Hizbullah rockets cannot be fired from buildings. (07.31.2006)
Finkelstein on Israel:
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
Video: On the place of civility
in academic life (10.18.2007)
Finkelstein's talk at the academic freedom conference
Tenure Denial Letters
(June - November, 2007)
On How Actual Survivors Were Cheated by
Jewish Organizations:
- Haaretz: "The Claims Conference intentionally defrauded Holocaust survivors." (09.25.2008)
- Ynet: Where did the Shoah money go? (12.11.2006)
'First Class flights around the world, accommodation at deluxe hotels, dining at fancy restaurants and a series of credit cards, this is how the Claims Conference, which deals with restitution of stolen Jewish property from the Holocaust, operates.'
- Haaretz: Survivors' protest makes foreign journalists gasp, security vanish (08.06.2007)
"I want the Germans to know where the money they gave Israel went," he said angrily. "I want the Germans to know that Israel took the money we should have received. I want them to answer one question: Where did our money go?"
- AP: Holocaust survivors blast $20 stipend (07.31.2007)
'Survivors have long claimed that European countries treat them far better than Israel, where many elderly survivors live in poverty.'
- Jewish Week: Holocaust Cash Went To Shadowy Pal Of Ousted WJC Leader (05.04.2007)
'Israeli finance minister, now being probed for corruption, urged death camp tour group to hire little-known N.Y. consultant; Singer friend Curtis Hoxter can't explain what he did for $709,000.'
- Jewish Week: "Survivors Balking At Lawyer's Fee" (03.02.2006)
- Shocking revelation in the London Jewish Chronicle. ("The man on the left earns $437,811 a year handling Shoah claims. So why are so many survivors pleading poverty?"; 05.30.2006)
- Survivors Protest Holocaust Industry Shakedown (08.29.2000)
- Finkelstein: Will The Holocaust Industry Incite Anti-Semitism? (08.11.2000)
- Finkelstein: Lessons of Holocaust Compensation (2001)
Finkelstein on Jimmy Carter:
Israeli civil libertarian's introduction to German edition of Beyond Chutzpah. (03.27.2006)
Communication for Middle East Journal. (02.19.2006)
Alleged Errors in Beyond Chutzpah. (2005)
MEMRI NAZIS (again) (10.23.2006)

New evidence of old lies (2005)
Under the heading DIABOLICAL PLOTS, I stated in Beyond Chutzpah...



Articles and Reviews Related to The Holocaust Industry

Preface to German edition of The Rise and Fall of Palestine
Postscript to German edition of The Rise and Fall of Palestine
The Dershowitz File:
|
 |