IRAN'S PROXY WAR WITH ISRAELWhile it might be hard to tell sometimes, this is actually a blog that has something to do with foreign policy. After some appropriate links, my comments on the war between Israel and the PA, various terrorist groups, Islamist militias and their state supporters, Syria and most importantly, Iran.
Blogging the War:Abu Aardvark,
Atlas Shrugged,
Aqoul ,
American Footprints,
American Future,
Austin Bay,
Belmont Club,
Bliss Street Journal,
Captain's quarters,
Collounsbury,
Chicago Boyz,
Centerfield,
Cliopatria,
Coming Anarchy, Counterterrorism Blog,
Dan Drezner,
Deja Vu,
Democracy Project,
Glittering Eye,
Global Guerillas,
History Unfolding,
Instapundit,
Iraq the Model,
Juan Cole,
Memeorandum,
Michael Totten,
Middle East Perspectives,
OPFOR,
Penraker,
Rightwing Nuthouse,
Shloky,
Sic Semper Tyrannis,
SyriaComment,
Thomas P.M. Barnett,
WhirledviewNow that the Right, the Left, the Middle, scholars, amateurs, soldiers, strategists, journalists, partisans and professors have had their say, I'll weigh in with a brief analysis:
Iran, and specifically Ahmadinejad's faction in the leadership, have sought to provoke Israel into action for some time now. Scratch Hezbollah enough and you find the Pasdaran - particularly when Hezbollah suddenly demonstrates newfound military capabilities.
Conflict serves to strengthen Ahmadinejad's hand and allow Shiite Iran to pose as the champion of Islam against the "Zionist Entity"- a goal of the late Ayatollah Khomeini and a dual propaganda blow against both the conservative Sunni monarchies of the gulf and the radical Salafist movement that regards Shiites as "apostates". Provoking Israel distracts the Europeans away from Iran's illegal, covert, nuclear weapon program and toward the more comfortable and politically safer topic of condemning Israel for defending itself.
On the Israeli side of the equation, it is evident that invading Lebanon will not get any kidnapped soldiers back nor is it intended to do so. It is primarily intended to disrupt the Hezbollah, Pasdaran and Syrian intelligence networks in Southern Lebanon and secondarily as a punitive expedition against Lebanon for Hezbollah's ( read Iran and Syria's) transgressions. In principle a good thing, but it would be of more practical use directed against Syria and cause Israel far less political damage. The Lebanese state may be passively complicit in Hezbollah's attacks and be legally responsible, but Damascus is
actively complicit as Iran's satellite, and is a better target in terms of maintaining Israel's moral legitimacy. The Lebanese government no more controls its own territory than the Governor of Maine controls the Mexican border.
If Israel rolls through Lebanon, destroys and disperses the Hezbollah network, hangs Nasrallah or some other notorious figure from a nearby tree and gets out quickly, the Israelis will at least win some tactical gains. They will also send a message to Syria and Iran that proxy warfare is going to be regarded as warfare - particularly if some Syrian infrastructure takes some heavy hits along the way. If Olmert drags the military process out and replays Begin's televisually shocking seige of Beirut, he courts strategic defeat.
As for the soldiers, they will only return through quiet negotiations, if at all, after the dust settles.