[lit-ideas] Re: What the Hizbullah says

  • From: "Lawrence Helm" <lawrencehelm@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2006 08:01:39 -0700

David Selbourne in The Losing Battle with Islam, 2005, describes the sort of
thing Ali Fayyad does in his article below as brain scrambling.  We know
that Hezbollah invaded Israel to kidnap two soldiers.  We also know that
they fired rockets into Israel before it responded, but the brain-scrambling
analysis is that Israel's response is far worse than the Hezbollah attack.  

 

On page 152 Selbourne writes, "Similarly brain-scrambling was the response
in November 2002 by a Jordanian analyst, Labib Kamhawi, to the bomb-attack
already referred to, on an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa.  He suggested
that Israel would now 'join the war on terror' -- as if they had not been
part of such war for years -- but if they did join it, declared Kamhawi, it
would 'confirm all the suspicions that Israel and the US are in cahoots and
that the war on terror is a war on Arabs and Muslims'.  That is, it was
again the nature of the response and not the attack itself to which Muslims
should attach the greater moral significance.  For this response would
disclose the essential ill-intent of non-Muslims toward them."

 

Lawrence

 

-----Original Message-----
From: lit-ideas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:lit-ideas-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Omar Kusturica
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2006 7:40 AM
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Subject: [lit-ideas] What the Hizbullah says

 

We are defending our sovereignty 

 

Ali Fayyad, Hizbullah leadership

Tuesday July 25, 2006

The Guardian 

 

 

For nearly two weeks Israel has been waging a war of

terror and aggression against Lebanon. Its stated

justification is the capture by the Islamic Resistance

(Hizbullah) of two Israeli soldiers with the aim of

exchanging them for Lebanese prisoners. The war has

already resulted in the killing of around 400 and

wounding of more than 1,000 Lebanese. Most are

civilians (a third children), crushed in their homes

or ripped to pieces in their cars by Israeli bombs and

missiles.

 

In reality, the Israeli escalation is less about the

two soldiers and more about its determination to

disarm the Lebanese resistance. According to the US,

Israel and some other western states, this would

implement UN security council resolution 1559, which

led to the withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon

last year.

 

Most Lebanese, however, do not regard the resistance

forces of Hizbullah as militias, as referred to in the

UN resolution, let alone any kind of terrorist

organisation. Our resistance accomplished a major

national mission by forcing Israeli troops to withdraw

from most Lebanese territory in 2000 after 22 years of

occupation. Since then there has been intense national

debate about how Lebanon can defend itself in future

once the resistance has achieved the liberation of the

remaining occupied Lebanese land (the Shaba'a farms

area) and the release of Lebanese detainees.

 

The Lebanese people's support for the resistance was

demonstrated by the fact that Hizbullah and its allies

won more seats in the 2005 elections, following the

Syrian withdrawal, than when Syrian troops were still

in the country. That is why Israel is now targeting

civilians.

 

In the context of the continued occupation, detention

of prisoners and repeated Israeli attacks and

incursions into Lebanese territory, the capture of the

Israeli soldiers was entirely legitimate. The

operation was fully in line with the Lebanese

ministerial declaration, supported in parliament, that

stressed the right of the resistance to liberate

occupied Lebanese territory, free prisoners of war and

defend Lebanon against Israeli aggression.

International law also allows peoples and states to

take action to protect their citizens and territory.

The Israeli onslaught is aimed not only at liquidating

the resistance and destroying the country's

infrastructure but at intervening in Lebanese politics

and imposing conditions on what can be agreed.

 

There is now a clear national consensus on the need to

maintain the military power necessary to prevent

Lebanon from being subjugated by Israel's war machine.

Popular resistance is a way of redressing the huge

imbalance of power, defending Lebanon's sovereignty

and preventing Israel from intervening in Lebanese

internal affairs, as has happened repeatedly since

1948. It is also - as has been the case in the

prisoner-capture operation - dictated by an entirely

local agenda, rather than reflecting any Syrian or

Iranian policy.

 

The aggression against Lebanon, which has primarily

targeted civilians and failed to achieve any tangible

military objectives, is part of a continuing attempt

to impose Israeli hegemony on the area and prevent the

emergence of a regional system that might guarantee

stability, self-determination, freedom and democracy.

 

Hizbullah has tried from the start of this crisis to

limit the escalation by adopting a policy of limited

response while avoiding civilian targets; its aims

were restricted to freeing the prisoners of war held

in both camps. However, Israel's systematic

destruction of entire civilian areas in Beirut and

elsewhere and perpetration of scores of horrific

massacres prompted Hizbullah to shift to an all-out

confrontation to affirm Lebanon's right to deter

aggression and defend its territorial integrity and

its citizens, just as any sovereign state would do.

 

Thus far, Hizbullah has had surprising military

successes, while maintaining its position in the face

of Israel's superior fire power, and preserved its

capacity to wage a long-term war. But Hizbullah is

still ready to accept a ceasefire and negotiate

indirectly an exchange of prisoners to bring the

current crisis to an end.

 

This is what Israel has so far rejected, with the

support of the US. For this is also a war of American

hegemony over the Middle East, and the US - supported

by the British government - is fully complicit in the

Israeli war crimes carried out in the past two weeks.

It would appear that the peaceful option will not be

given a chance until Hizbullah and the forces of

resistance have demonstrated their ability to confront

Israel's aggression and thwart its objectives, as

happened in 1993 and 1996. That is why resistance is

not only a pillar of our sovereignty but also a

prerequisite of stability.

 

. Ali Fayyad is a senior member of Hizbullah's

executive committee

 

 

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