
Bush and Israel, Midwives to Radical
Islam
by Chris Hedges
www.truthdig.com, November 6,
2006

Editor's note: In this column, the former
New York Times Mideast bureau chief argues that America's failure
in Iraq and Israel's humiliation in Lebanon have emboldened and
empowered those in the Arab world who seek to topple U.S.-backed
regimes in the Middle East and cripple the Jewish state.
__The Israeli debacle in Lebanon, along
with the failed occupation in Iraq, has given many Arabs, after
decades of humiliation, hope that armed guerrilla resistance by
Islamic radicals will topple U.S.-backed regimes in the Middle
East and cripple the Jewish state. The callous comment by Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice that the Israeli bombing of Lebanon
signaled "the birth pangs" of a new Middle East has
turned out to be true, although not in the way the secretary intended.
__The dogged resistance by bands of irregular fighters, disciplined
in battle and indoctrinated with radical Islam, has seen Washington's
most vociferous enemies, including Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, lionized throughout the
region. This resistance has eroded the power of pro-Western regimes
in Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia. As we prepare for Round Two,
with Israel plotting to again bomb and invade Lebanon, it is clear
that these wars of attrition are about to become cyclical, with
Israel and Washington clinging blindly to the illusion that increased
force will solve their dilemmas.
Israel and Washington see Lebanon and
Iraq as temporary setbacks. They believe that these setbacks
can be rectified with modified tactics, greater force and more
sophisticated counterinsurgency campaigns. But the Arab world
views Lebanon and Iraq differently. It sees the battles there
as finally challenging the long subjugation at the hands of the
Zionist state and its American backer. A second attempt to neutralize
Hezbollah will mark the beginning of a prolonged conflict between
radical Islamists and the Jewish state. A strike by Washington
on Iran will unleash waves of rage and revulsion throughout the
Arab nations. These are battles Israel and America cannot win.
The 34 days of fighting, which saw Israel
withdraw in humiliation without freeing its captured soldiers
or defeating Hezbollah, along with the potent insurgency in Iraq,
has awakened the Arab world from its stupor. Hezbollah is busy
regrouping, rearming and restocking the rockets and weapons its
guerrilla fighters used effectively against Israel's conventional
army. The network of tunnels and bunkers, along with the classic
hit-and-run tactics of small teams of fighters, neutralized the
Israeli air campaign and incursion. And Israel, whose soldiers
in Lebanon often lacked basic supplies, including food, gasoline
and water, along with useful intelligence, was left to lash out
blindly at an elusive enemy, as its American counterpart does
daily in the streets of Baghdad.
The U.S. failure in Iraq and Hezbollah's
stubborn resistance illustrate that modern armies such as Israel's,
equipped with the world's fourth largest air force, are not invincible.
These failures have exposed the impotence of the U.S.-backed
regimes in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan and Egypt, which have
nothing to show for their collaboration with Washington other
than increasing repression, isolation and corruption. Iran and
radical Shiites are now at the vanguard of the struggle to wipe
out the Jewish state and remove the United States from the region,
something that makes the Sunni-led regimes, especially those in
countries with large Shiite populations, very nervous.
This is the first time since the creation
of the state of Israel that an Arab force has withstood an Israeli
assault. The despair that has gripped the Arab world since Israel
crushed the Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian armies in the 1967
war has been replaced by a giddy hope that radical Islam is the
tool to restore Arab dignity. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak,
Saudi King Abdullah and Jordan's King Abdullah II, all of whom
have criticized Hezbollah and excoriated the Iranian regime, have
been silent, especially with opinion polls in their own countries
showing wide support for Iran and Hezbollah. The old politics
of appeasement with Washington, which they represent, have failed.
The new politics of armed confrontation, led by Shiite radicals,
have been validated. Another upheaval in the Middle East, such
as U.S. bombing of suspected nuclear sites in Iran or a second
Israeli incursion into south Lebanon, could see the cracks in
these unpopular pro-Western regimes lead to their disintegration.
An attack on Iran will solidify the power of the Iranian regime.
At best, these pro-Western regimes, with little credibility and
support, will become ineffectual, unable, because of popular revulsion,
to do Washington's bidding. Such attacks will also see widening
support for armed radical groups that have captured the imagination
of many in the Islamic world. The Iraqi prime minister, Nuri
al-Maliki, for example, refused to condemn Hezbollah and did not,
although pressured by Washington, side with Israel.
Israel and Washington appear not to have
grasped this seismic change. Israeli leaders, busy studying the
failures of the first incursion, appear as intoxicated with their
military power as when they began bombing Lebanon. Washington
mouths its usual empty promises about a negotiated solution to
the Palestinian and Israeli conflict and its tired clichs about
building democracy in Iraq and the Middle East. The quiet endorsement
of the Israeli strangulation of the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority,
along with the carnage unleashed by U.S. forces in Iraq, makes
Washington appear more and more remote, even ridiculous.
The blunders by Israel and the United
States have left Iran as the undisputed leader in the Muslim world.
These blunders have empowered the radical Islamic groups allied
with Iran and have indeed ushered in the birth of a new Middle
East, one that understands that the days of Israel and Washington's
hegemony in the region are doomed.
Chris
Hedges page
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