Note: The translations of articles from the Hebrew press
are prepared by the Government Press Office
as a service to foreign journalists in Israel.
They express the views of the authors.
What Is The War About?
(Op-Ed by Ron Ben-Yishai, "Yediot Ahronot", Mar 2, 1999, p. B5)
The IDF is fighting in southern Lebanon in order to continue our hold over
the Golan Heights. Until Assad becomes flexible, the alternatives to
fighting in the security zone are worse.
The public debate on whether or not to withdraw unilaterally from Lebanon
has long since turned into a popular ritual. Like any recurring ceremony,
the same arguments are repeated over and over, and like the eternal
argument between secular and ultra-Orthodox Jews, neither side has any
chance of convincing the other.
And since most of the elements of Israel's political and military
establishment reject a unilateral withdrawal, the debate on a withdrawal
from Lebanon has only one purpose to let off steam, to kill the
frustration we all have in the face of the apparently endless, purposeless
and hopeless fighting and casualties in southern Lebanon That is the
reason that the debate breaks out every time we suffer losses or when
Katyushas fall on the northern communities and it ebbs after a day or two,
when the feeling of frustration dims and another news item grabs the
headlines.
It seems to me that one of the reasons that this has become a useless
ritual is the exaggerated focus by both camps on peripheral rather than
core issues. The heart of the debate is how the IDF should deploy and
operate against Hizballah in order to give the maximum security and normal
life to the residents of the northern Galilee communities. However, the
main reason for the continued fighting in Lebanon is not the ambition of
the Shi'ites to liberate southern Lebanon, rather it is the Syrians'
desire to get the Golan Heights back.
An analysis of the speeches by Shi'ite leaders in the not so distant past,
as well as intelligence material, clearly shows that Hizballah and Amal
have no burning desire to continue the battle into Israeli territory.
Despite the Islamic fervor that beats within them, and despite Iranian
incitement, it is reasonable to assume that if they were free to decide
for themselves, they would stop fighting us the moment the IDF withdraws
to the international border. The proof for this is the fact that Hizballah
and Amal, as is known, barely bother the northern communities and do not
attack movement along the northern roads although they have the ability
to do so with relative ease.
But in the existing situation, with the Syrians having complete control of
Lebanon, Hizballah and Amal cannot themselves decide their policy or
positions in the Israeli-Lebanese conflict. If they do not fulfill the
role given to them by Damascus to fight Israel, they risk their supply
line from Iran being cut off and becoming marginal factors in the Lebanese
economic-political arena.
The inescapable conclusion is that the IDF is not fighting in southern
Lebanon for the safety of the northern Galilee communities, but rather for
Israel's hold on the Golan Heights. Therefore, the fighting will not stop
even if Israel withdraws to the international border. In contrast, there
is almost no one in Israel who does not understand that if the Syrians are
satisfied on the Golan Heights, the fighting in Lebanon would cease
immediately.
Since the IDF, and in fact no modern army of a democratic state, cannot
totally defeat a guerrilla organization, there is no point debating
whether it is better to fight Hizballah from the line of the international
border or from within the security zone. Instead, the debate should focus
on the question from what position and method should we take in
negotiations with the Syrians, that will be the quickest and best way to
bring about a cease-fire in the fighting against us in southern Lebanon.
Assad's uncompromising demand that Israel should announce, even before
negotiations begin, that it is prepared to withdraw to the international
border, as a condition for negotiations, forces Israel to choose one of
three options: accept the Syrian diktat and agree in principle to come
down from the Golan Heights as far as the international border; to enter
into a direct confrontation with the Syrians while risking all-out war, in
order to make it clear to them that continuing war-by- proxy against us in
Lebanon will cost them dearly then perhaps they will re-evaluate
whether their stubbornness is worth the cost; to continue the low
intensity warfare in Lebanon until the Syrians, for some reason and under
international pressure, reach the conclusion that they are prepared to
compromise over the Golan Heights.
The first option depends on a total concession on the Golan. The second
option could exact a heavy price in blood. Therefore, the government chose
the third. So long as this is its position, it seems that the IDF's
deployment in the security zone and the war for the Golan from there, with
a minimum of casualties and a maximum of security for the northern
communities, is the least bad solution.