If Lebanese dislike Hizbollah, they hate Israelis By Robert Fisk

If Lebanese dislike Hizbollah, they hate Israelis

By Robert Fisk

07/16/06 “The Independent” — -It will be called the massacre of
Marwaheen. All the civilians killed by the Israelis had been ordered to
abandon their homes in the border village by the Israelis themselves a few
hours earlier. Leave, they were told by loudspeaker; and leave they did,
20 of them in a convoy of civilian cars. That’s when the Israeli jets
arrived to bomb them, killing 20 Lebanese, at least nine of them children.
The local fire brigade could not put out the fires as they all burned
alive in the inferno. Another “terrorist” target had been eliminated.

Yesterday, the Israelis even produced more “terrorist” targets – petrol
stations in the Bekaa Valley all the way up to the frontier city of Hermel
in northern Lebanon and another series of bridges on one of the few escape
routes to Damascus, this time between Chtaura and the border village of
Masnaa. Lebanon, as usual, was paying the price for the Hizbollah-Israeli
conflict – as Hizbollah no doubt calculated they would when they crossed
the Israeli frontier on Wednesday and captured two Israeli soldiers close
to Marwaheen.

But who is really winning the war? Not Lebanon, you may say, with its more
than 90 civilian dead and its infrastructure steadily destroyed in
hundreds of Israeli air raids. But is Israel winning? Friday night’s
missile attack on an Israeli warship off the coast of Lebanon suggests
otherwise. Four Israeli sailors were killed, two of them hurled into the
sea when a tele-guided Iranian-made missile smashed into their Hetz-class
gunboat just off Beirut at dusk. Those Lebanese who had endured the fire
of Israeli gunboats on the coastal highway over many years were elated.
They may not have liked Hizbollah – but they hated the Israelis.

Only now, however, is a truer picture emerging of the battle for southern
Lebanon and it is a fascinating, frightening tale. The original border
crossing, the capture of the two soldiers and the killing of three others
was planned, according to Hassan Nasrallah, the Hizbollah leader who
escaped assassination by the Israelis on Friday evening, more than five
months ago. And Friday’s missile attack on the Israeli gunboat was not the
last-minute inspiration of a Hizbollah member who just happened to see the
warship.

It now appears clear that the Hizbollah leadership – Nasrallah used to be
the organisation’s military commander in southern Lebanon – thought
carefully through the effects of their border crossing, relying on the
cruelty of Israel’s response to quell any criticism of their action within
Lebanon. They were right in their planning. The Israeli retaliation was
even crueller than some Hizbollah leaders imagined, and the Lebanese
quickly silenced all criticism of the guerrilla movement.

Hizbollah had presumed the Israelis would cross into Lebanon after the
capture of the two soldiers and they blew up the first Israeli Merkava
tank when it was only 35 feet inside the country. All four Israeli crewmen
were killed and the Israeli army moved no further forward.. The long-range
Iranian-made missiles which later exploded on Haifa had been preceded only
a few weeks ago by a pilotless Hizbollah drone aircraft which surveyed
northern Israel and then returned to land in eastern Lebanon after taking
photographs during its flight. These pictures not only suggested a flight
path for Hizbollah’s rockets to Haifa; they also identified Israel’s
top-secret military air traffic control centre in Miron.

The next attack – concealed by Israel’s censors – was directed at this
facility. Codenamed “Apollo”, Israeli military scientists work deep inside
mountain caves and bunkers at Miron, guarded by watchtowers, guard-dogs
and barbed wire, watching all air traffic moving in and out of Beirut,
Damascus, Amman and other Arab cities. The mountain is surmounted by
clusters of antennae which Hizbollah quickly identified as a military
tracking centre. Before they fired rockets at Haifa, they therefore sent a
cluster of missiles towards Miron. The caves are untouchable but the
targeting of such a secret location by Hizbollah deeply shocked Israel’s
military planners. The “centre of world terror” – or whatever they imagine
Lebanon to be – could not only breach their frontier and capture their
soldiers but attack the nerve-centre of the Israeli northern military
command.

Then came the Haifa missiles and the attack on the gunboat. It is now
clear that this successful military operation – so contemptuous of their
enemy were the Israelis that although their warship was equipped with
cannon and a Vulcan machine gun, they didn’t even provide the vessel with
an anti-missile capability – was also planned months ago. Once the
Hetz-class boats appeared, Hizbollah positioned a missile crew on the
coast of west Beirut not far from Jnah, a crew trained over many weeks for
just such an attack. It took less than 30 seconds for the Iranian-made
missile to leave Beirut and hit the vessel square amidships, setting it on
fire and killing the sailors.

Ironically, the Israelis themselves had invited journalists on an
“embedded” trip with their navy only hours earlier – they were allowed to
film the ships’ guns firing on Lebanon – and the moment Hizbollah hit the
warship on Friday, Hizbollah’s television station, Al-Manar, began showing
the “embedded” film. It was a slick piece of propaganda.

The Israelis were yesterday trumpeting the fact that the missile was
made in Iran as proof of Iran’s involvement in the Lebanon war. This
was odd reasoning. Since almost all the missiles used to kill the
civilians of Lebanon over the past four days were made in Seattle,
Duluth and Miami in the United States, their use already suggests
to millions of Lebanese that America is behind the bombardment of
their country.

© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited


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