Israel Gives Up on Disarming Hezbollah

by Michael J. Totten

TEL AVIV — Israel has finally figured out what everyone in Lebanon knew already, that disarming the Hezbollah terror-guerilla militia is not going to happen.

Israel has essentially given up hope of Hizbullah being disarmed, and instead is now concentrating on ensuring that an arms embargo called for in UN Security Council resolution 1701 be implemented, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

Furthermore, senior Israeli officials have made it clear in recent days during talks with foreign governments that Israel realizes a Hizbullah presence south of the Litani River is unavoidable, if for no other reason than because the organization is so well rooted there that the only way to get rid of Hizbullah would be to evacuate the entire region.

What Israel does expect, however, is that the Lebanese Army and the international force that will deploy there ensure that Hizbullah doesn’t have offensive weaponry to attack Israel, and that if they do try to attack, there will be someone there to stop them.

The impression Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni has left in recent days on her European counterparts during meetings both in Israel and in Europe is that Israel recognizes it is unrealistic for anyone to take away Hizbullah’s weapons, and that what is most important at this time is to ensure that there is an effective embargo on any new weapons to Hizbullah.

Those inside and outside Israel who believed disarming Hezbollah by force was possible in a short time frame were supremely delusional. It’s not 1967 anymore, when Israel could defeat three Arab armies in six days. Hezbollah is a guerilla army, as well as a terrorist army, and assymetrical warfare is hard. Look at how much longer it is taking the US to put down a Baathist insurgency in Iraq compared with the Baathist army in Iraq when Saddam Hussein was in power.

Israel fought Hezbollah in Southern Lebanon for almost two decades. That war was also fought to a standstill.

Hezbollah didn’t win either. Michael Young, a Lebanese national based in Beirut, put it this way in Reason magazine:

Hezbollah’s victory is no different than most other Arab victories in recent decades: the "victory" of October 1973, where Egypt and Syria managed to cross into Israeli-held land, their land, only to be later saved from a thrashing by timely United Nations intervention; the "victory" of 1982, where Palestinian groups were ultimately expelled from West Beirut, but were proud to have stayed in the fight for three months; the Iraqi "victory" of 1991, where Saddam Hussein brought disaster on his country but still held on to power. Now we have the Hezbollah "victory" of 2006: the Israelis bumbled and blundered, but still managed to create a million refugees, to kill over 1,000 people, and to kick Lebanon’s economy back several years. One dreads to imagine what Hezbollah would recognize as a military loss.

The Meanest Sailor Dubuque’s Ever Seen

by David Weigel

On first glance, this campaign site by James Hill, "the only Pirate and truly independent candidate" for Congress who "no bounty from any Person, Party, Organization or Corporation," is exactly what you’d expect. Equal parts stupid and crazy.

I would have your wife right in front of you. I would smoke the last of your glaucoma medication. Then I will surely drink your liquor cabinet dry. However, know this my friend. I will never break an oath to uphold the public trust. My affidavit will be signed in my own blood. A Pirates crimson mark, with real binding effects into my after life. Laugh if you will then ask yourself if you could do it.

Yeah, whatever. Not that impressive, in this era of "YouTubes of the Day," until you realize Hill is running for Congress in Iowa. Which is, relatively speaking, totally landlocked.

Slow Week, Proof of, Part 1

by Ana Marie Cox

Interested in a webcast of me debating Pluto’s demotion to non-planet status with Ann Althouse? Of course you are! Whole thing here. I think I get unusually indignant here.    

UPDATE: Co-guest blogger David notes that Blogginghead.tv is ALWAYS boring and quotes Reason’s head rebel, Nick Gillespie: "The first time I saw that site, I thought I’d stumbled across a lost act of Waiting for Godot."

UPDATE: In case you were wondering, any level of indiganation over the demotion of Pluto to non-planet status is "unusual."

 

All Olmert But The Shoutin’

by David Weigel

Israelis to their Knesset leadership: Drop dead.

The Israeli government came under increased pressure today with the publication of a newspaper poll showing that for the first time a majority want Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to resign over perceived failings in his handling of the war with Hizbullah.A poll in the mass-circulation Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper showed 63% want Mr Olmert to go.

The defence minister, Amir Peretz, appears even more vulnerable with 74% calling for his resignation, while 54% want the chief of staff, Lieutenant General Dan Halutz, to resign as well.

Who’s going to break it to the Israelis that their undermining of the prime minister is emboldening the enemy? Ken Mehlman to Tel Aviv, ASAP!

UPDATE: Philip Klein at the American Spectator makes a valid point:

That comparison makes some sense and I’ve personally never made the "don’t criticize the president during wartime" argument because I know that if I disagreed with the president, I wouldn’t want to be silent. But a crucial difference is that

Israel

is a parliamentary system in which elections can be held at any time. So, by calling for Olmert to go, there’s a better chance that a new government will be put in place. And that’s quite common. However, in the American form of government, barring an extraordinary set of circumstances, a president who gets elected is going to serve out a full four years. Only once has a president been forced to resign, and it had nothing to do with policy. So, by not just criticizing but villainizing the president, you’re just weakening someone who, like it or not, is going to be in power through the next election.

The dynamics of Israeli and American politics are different, sure, but not all criticism of the president is "villainizing." Long-term, honest public pressure can force an administration to make changes or change course on a failed policy. It works on domestic issues: witness the Porkbusters campaign, which has rapped the president and Congress without apologies in an effort to shame them into cutting spending. The American public has been clamoring for a change of course in Iraq for months now; I think the GOP could have done all of us a favor by responding and opening investigations into the conduct of war, instead of resorting to the "you’re undermining the president/troops" political attacks.

E-mail of the Day

by David Weigel

A report from Alabama:

I’m a resident of Birmingham, Alabama; an acquaintance of Patricia Todd’s; and a longtime foot soldier for various Democratic Party causes down here (I worked my tail off for the Kerry campaign two years ago and am helping out one of our Democratic candidates for a statewide judicial race). I know quite a few people at various levels  of the state party organization, and your post on Patricia, particularly the implication that the state Democratic Party was involved in a comprehensive attempt to get her purged from the House seat she’d won fair and square, is inaccurate.

Not that the truth is much more flattering, but this categorically is not an anti-gay crusade on the part of Todd’s opponents. Rather, this has to do with the fact that the 54th House District had long been held by African-American representatives but was won by a white woman, and one man, Joe Reed, decided he didn’t like it.

Dr. Reed is, as the New York Times article states, highly influential in the state Democratic Party, but by no means do his various opinions reflect the official stance of the  party as a whole. In fact, one of the top three state Party officials testified at the Democratic subcommittee hearing that the obscure finance-report-filing rule hadn’t been complied with by ANY candidate in years, so there was no point in arbitrarily invoking it now. But Joe Reed’s going to do what Joe Reed’s going to do, and so now we’re stuck in the current situation.

None of this is to say that Dr. Reed and Gaynelle Hendricks’s supporters haven’t behaved abominably, because they have. And again, Reed’s influence in the state party apparatus is considerable. But your post gives the heavy implication that the entire state party is somehow anti-gay and that the effort to deny Patricia her seat is official policy, and that simply isn’t the case.

I hope you’ll post a correction or a clarification of this either on Hit & Run or on Sullivan’s blog, because we here in Alabama have to take enough crap as it is from Democrats and Republicans alike in the rest of the country about being backward and hate-filled; we don’t need inaccurate reports from "outsiders" making matters worse. Again, the truth of this matter is not something I’m the least bit proud of either, but it is not completely as you have described it.

I’ve corrected the post to make it clear the official Democratic party isn’t in charge. This stuff gets lost in translation.

The Democratic Blanket Party

by David Weigel

Alabama was set to elect its first openly gay state representative this fall, after  Patricia Todd won the primary for a safe Birmingham seat the GOP wasn’t even contesting. But Todd is being knocked out of the race by… quick, guess. An injunction by Roy Moore? Pat Robertson’s glutamine-powered mindwaves? No, by an enemy in her own Democratic party.

On Thursday, a Democratic Party subcommittee heard a challenge to Ms. Todd’s candidacy on the ground that she had violated a rule that, by party officials’ own admission, has not been enforced in nearly 20 years. The subcommittee voted to disqualify both Ms. Todd and her runoff opponent, a black businesswoman named Gaynell Hendricks, because neither had complied with the rule.

When Ms. Todd and Ms. Hendricks wound up in a runoff, things got nasty, by both sides’ reckoning. Anonymous fliers circulated calling Ms. Todd a “confessed lesbian” and applying racial slurs to Ms. Hendricks. The two primary opponents who threw their support to Ms. Todd woke to find signs in their yards accusing them of being “Uncle Toms,” said one of them, Charlie L. Williams.

The district’s voters stood athwart this wave of bigotry and shouted "stop!" One of their fellow Democrats was shouting something else entirely.

(Cross-posted at Hit and Run.)