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20 August, 2006 Countdown to Conflict: Hizballah's
Military Buildup and the Need for Effective Disarmament
[1]
Brig. Gen. (res.) Dr. Shimon
Shapira
[2]
õ
In May 2000, Israel
completed a full withdrawal from Lebanon in accordance with UN
Security Council Resolution 425 from 1978. Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah,
however, the "liberator of the South," did not recognize the new
border. His patrons in Iran
ordered continued jihad against Israel.
õ
The Israeli withdrawal in 2000 did not lead Hizballah to become
just another political party, and the belief that this would occur was an
illusion. The movement's charter, published in 1985, was not changed. Its
leadership remained religiously and politically loyal to the leader of the
Islamic revolution in Iran,
Ali Khameini.
õ
All the nonsense about Hizballah's Lebanese nationalism was
exposed by the strategy that Iran
crafted in Lebanon, which
rested on three main components: turning Lebanon
into an Iranian front against Israel,
building an Islamic society in Lebanon
in the image of Iran, and
active involvement in the jihad that the Palestinians are waging against
Israel.
õ
Nasrallah was surprised by the Israeli response to the kidnapping
of its soldiers and so were his Iranian patrons. From Iran's
standpoint, the region had been ignited too early, before its nuclear program
was ready. Hence, it lost an important factor of deterrence it had built in Lebanon against Israel. The large-scale use of
rockets and missiles against the Israeli home front has impaired the power of
the threat.
õ
Any end to the war that does not involve Hizballah's disarmament
will enable the jihadist movement to rise again like a phoenix,
rehabilitate itself, and continue its jihad against Israel.
Hizballah has stated that it refuses to disarm, a situation that elevates the
importance of an embargo on supplying Hizballah with weapons, as called for in
the UN resolution.
õ
Right now, Resolution 1701 just calls on Lebanon to
secure its borders; UNIFIL may assist the Lebanese government if requested. The
resolution also only calls on states to refrain from selling weaponry to
Hizballah, but does not authorize any state to enforce an arms embargo. There
has been no decision to deploy a special force that would supervise the embargo
on the Syrian-Lebanese border and in the Lebanese seaports and airports.
Hizballah After Israel's May 2000 Withdrawal from Lebanon
õ
In May 2000, Israel
completed a full withdrawal from Lebanon in accordance with UN
Security Council Resolution 425 from 1978. The Lebanese government was full of
praise for the move and Israelis were relieved. The UN Security Council adopted
Resolution 1310 to confirm that Israel
indeed fulfilled its obligation to leave Lebanese territory. Hizballah leader
Hassan Nasrallah, however, the "liberator of the South," did not
recognize the new border. His patrons in Iran
ordered continued jihad against Israel. As a pretext for his
military buildup and provocations against Israel,
Nasrallah argued that Israel
had not pulled out from the Shebaa Farms which were on the Golan Heights and
disputed between Israel and Syria. Syria agreed to play along with the Lebanese
claims to the Shebaa Farms, without formally acknowledging their being under
Lebanese sovereignty, in order to enable the ongoing armed struggle against Israel to
continue.
õ
In October 2000, Hizballah kidnapped three IDF soldiers after
attacking an Israeli patrol along the main border road near the Shebaa Farms.
Nasrallah awaited the Israeli response, which was not long in coming, and he
was astonished by its feebleness. To him, the Israeli response bore no relation
to the boastful threats and warnings that Israel's leaders had voiced before
and after the May 2000 withdrawal. This reinforced Nasrallah's belief that
Israeli society was made of "spider webs" and that its leaders were
so traumatized by Lebanon
that they were loath to use their armed forces for fear of sinking into the
Lebanese mud. Nasrallah listened in amazement to voices in Israel stating
that "Restraint is strength"; he rubbed his eyes in wonder at the
sight of Israeli soldiers taking cover in special protective cages when stones
were thrown at them from across the fence.
õ
A short time later, Hizballah began building military outposts
along the border to enable its troops to freely observe what was happening on
the Israeli side. From the line of outposts northward to the suburbs of Beirut, Hizballah built
the state of Hizballahstan with Iranian assistance. It also established an
extensive network of welfare, cultural, educational, and religious
institutions, along with the militia Al-Muqawama Al-Islamia - the
Islamic Resistance. This force was equipped by Iran
and Syria with everything
from shoelaces to long-range missiles, and was entrenched in dense defensive
networks brimming with advanced weapons systems that were intended to strike at
Israel.
õ
Hizballah has never deviated from its jihadist path. The
Israeli withdrawal in 2000 did not lead Hizballah to become just another
political party, and the belief that this would occur was an illusion,
cultivated by shortsighted people in academia and by politicians guided by the
whims of their hearts. Jihad continued to be Hizballah's life-force and
raison d'?tre. The armed struggle against Israel was fuel for the Islamic
revolution that remained Hizballah's objective.
Hizballah's First Loyalty is to Iran
õ
Hizballah's "Lebanonization" process continued to expand
without contradicting its jihadist aspirations. Hizballah exploited the rules
of the Lebanese political game to increase its power in parliament and also,
after Syria withdrew from Lebanon, sent
two ministers to the Lebanese government to ensure that its military force
would remain intact. Meanwhile, Hizballah stayed faithful to its Khomeinist
revolutionary ideology. The movement's charter, published in 1985, was not
changed, and its leadership remained religiously and politically loyal to the
leader of the Islamic revolution in Iran, Ali Khameini.
õ
Nasrallah's declarations that "Hizballah is a Lebanese party
that makes its decisions independently and the Iranian ambassador in Beirut reads about them
in the paper," did not stand the test of reality. Lebanese President Emile
Lahoud told FOX News: "Hizballah is Lebanese and its demands are [made] in
the service of Lebanese sovereignty....Its fights are Lebanese, not Syrian or
Iranian,"1 but the reality is very different. Nasrallah was appointed
the representative in Lebanon
of the Marja Taklid (supreme Shiite religious authority), and the source
of authority, Ali Khameini, ensured that he worked under Iran's orders.
Indeed, Hizballah's representative in Iran
was quoted in the Iranian press on August 7, 2006, as saying: "Everything
we have, we [obtained] thanks to the Islamic Revolution [in Iran]."2 All the
nonsense about Hizballah's Lebanese nationalism was exposed by the strategy
that Iran crafted in Lebanon, which
rested on three main components:
ü Turning Lebanon into an Iranian
front against Israel, which involved
deployment of an array of short- and long-range missiles, so as to create a
balance of deterrence with Israel
that would prevent it from attacking the Iranian nuclear program. Iran explicitly threatened that any strike on
its nuclear facilities by the United States
and/or Israel would result
in immediate missile fire on Israel.
Accordingly, Iran also
stationed long-range, Zelzal-2 missiles in Lebanon,
capable of reaching deep into Israel's
interior with their 250-kilometer (155 mile) range. These were supplied in late
2003 when Syrian transport aircraft flew to Iran with humanitarian aid for
earthquake victims and returned with military cargo including the Zelzal
missiles. Ali Akbar Mohtashamipour, who heads Iran's
Headquarters for Intifada Support, revealed in an Iranian newspaper that Iran had delivered Zelzal rockets to Hizballah.3 Parts from
Fajr missiles fired by Hizballah at Israel bear the symbol of Iranian
military manufacture.4
Iran's
involvement in Lebanon included training Hizballah operatives in the use of
advanced weaponry and military tactics: During the recent fighting, Israel
captured a 22-year-old Shiite from Hizballah named Hussein Ali Suleiman, who
admitted that he had undergone extensive training in Iran along with 40-50
other Hizballah operatives.5 Hizballah
operatives in Israeli custody have also disclosed that the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards visited their forward positions along Israel's northern
border.
ü Building an Islamic society in
Lebanon in the image of Iran, one loyal to the Imam Khameini. Iran,
like Hizballah, recognized the limits of its ability to set up an Islamic
republic in Lebanon
under the existing political conditions. Hence it looks to the future, prepares
the ground socially, and puts its trust in the demographic strength of the
Shiites as the basis for establishing an Islamic republic in Lebanon when
political conditions change.
ü Active involvement in the jihad
that the Palestinians are waging against Israel. Iran
has become the main source of military assistance to the Palestinian armed
struggle. Through Hizballah,
Iran provides
funds and weapons and keeps the flames of jihad burning.
õ
Nasrallah, dizzy from his adulation in the Arab world as the
modern Saladin and as the first leader who defeated Israel and caused an
Israeli withdrawal from Arab land, sent fighters again and again to try and
kidnap Israeli soldiers. While the ostensible goal was to free Lebanese and
Palestinian prisoners, the real one was to demonstrate openly that even after Syria's pullback from Lebanon,
Hizballah was continuing the jihad against Israel.
The Beginning of the War
õ
On July 12, 2006, Hizballah succeeded in kidnapping two wounded
Israeli soldiers after a cross-border ambush. Although Nasrallah expected an
Israeli response similar to the one in October 2000, this time Israel reacted
with great force. It destroyed Hizballah's headquarters in Dahiya, its social
institutions, and also the home and offices of senior Lebanese Ayatollah
Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, who, despite his past rivalry with Nasrallah,
nonetheless supported him. Nasrallah shifted in a moment from being a public
orator, to becoming a supplier of pre-recorded tapes. He was surprised by the
Israeli response and so were his Iranian patrons.
õ
Iran, which had replaced Syria as the primary actor in the
Lebanese arena, was not pleased with the timing of Nasrallah's move, but
nonetheless supported it. From Iran's
standpoint, the region had been ignited too early, before its nuclear program
was ready. Hence, it lost an important factor of deterrence it had built in Lebanon against Israel. The large-scale use of
rockets and missiles against the Israeli home front has impaired the power of
the threat.
õ
Israel's aim in the war was to break Hizballah's military power.
At the same time, however, the Palestinians, Syria,
and Iran are watching Israel and
gauging its resolve to use force. Each side will draw its lessons in the
future. From Hizballah's standpoint, any settlement that ends the war without
involving its disarmament will enable the jihadist movement to rise
again like a phoenix, rehabilitate itself, and continue its jihad
against Israel.
A Weapons Embargo?
õ
It is, therefore, vitally important to implement the relevant
articles of UN Security Council Resolution 1701 regarding the disarmament of
Hizballah. Unfortunately, this obligation, also contained in Resolution 1559
from 2004, is the subject of a plan which, according to Resolution 1701, is to
be developed in the next month by the UN secretary-general and implemented at a
later date. In the meantime, Hizballah has stated that it refuses to disarm.
This situation elevates the importance of an embargo on supplying Hizballah
with weapons, as called for in the UN resolution. However, there has been no
decision to deploy a special force that would supervise the embargo on the
Syrian-Lebanese border and in the Lebanese seaports and airports.
õ
Right now, Resolution 1701 just calls on Lebanon to
secure its borders; UNIFIL may assist the Lebanese government if requested. The
resolution also only calls on states to refrain from selling weaponry to
Hizballah, but does not authorize any state to enforce an arms embargo. What is
necessary is the establishment of special forces that will carry out this
mission of monitoring the entry-points into Lebanon.
õ
Given the huge amounts of Iranian weaponry that were delivered to
Hizballah in the past six years, this is a glaring inadequacy in the
resolution. This point was also made by Lebanese Druze leader Walid Jumblatt,
who stated: "As long as Syria
can send weapons to Hizballah, there will be no change in the situation. Not
with this regime in Damascus.
We need a force that can cover all of Lebanon, like in Kosovo. Monitor
the Syrian border, then talk."6 Failure to
enforce a real arms embargo against Hizballah will empty the entire UN
resolution of its content and increase the risk of a violent clash erupting
between Hizballah and the international force, and of continued military
conflict between Hizballah and Israel.
Notes
1. "Arab Media Accuses Iran and Syrian of Direct
Involvement in Lebanon War," MEMRI Special Dispatch Series - No.
1249, August 15, 2006;
http://memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=archives&Area=sd&ID=SP124906
2. "Iranian and Syrian Media Stepping Up Statements on the War," MEMRI
Special Dispatch Series - No. 1239, August 9, 2006;
http://memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=archives&Area=sd&ID=SP123906
3. "An Iranian Figure Who Had a Key Role in Founding Hezbollah Publicly
Announced that Long-Range Iranian Zelzal-2 Rockets were Delivered to the
Organization," Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center
for Special Studies, August 8, 2006;
http://www.terrorism-info.org.il/malam_multimedia/English/eng_n/html/ali_akbar_e.htm
4. "Display of Hezbollah Weaponry," Israel Defense Forces Website;
http://www1.idf.il/DOVER/site/mainpage.asp?sl=EN&id=7&docid=56786.EN
5. Intelligence and Terrorism
Information Center
at the Center for Special Studies;
http://www.terrorism-info.org.il/malam_multimedia/English/eng_n/html/ali_suleiman.htm
6. Michael Young, "Mountain Main: The Leader of Lebanon's Druze Talks
about the Syrian Threat," Wall Street Journal, July 29, 2006;
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110008721
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