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The march of folly continues

Lebanon is beyond the fence behind me
At the Lebanese border in March 2006. Click to big; more here.

Alternate titles for this post:
- The testosterone factor
- The “whose is bigger” contest
- The extremists won again
- Deja vu all over again
- The summer of our discontent
- I cannot cover a war and give up smoking at the same time (nah, too long)

If there is one thing we can always count on in the Middle East, it is this: Just when there are signs of positive developments toward peace, just when we start to hear the voices of sanity, the extremists – the madmen with the crazed eyes who are convinced they have a direct phone line to God (and that God likes to see people kill each other) – spring into action and take us backward. That is what has been happening over the last two weeks, starting with the Hamas incursion from Gaza into Kerem Shalom and culminating yesterday morning with a Hezbollah “operation” inside Israel's northern border.

Yesterday morning I called Menachem Horowitz, the Channel 2 correspondent in northern Israel, to ask if he'd be willing to meet a foreign correspondent with whom I work. The correspondent was on his way up north, I explained, and could use some insight from a veteran Israeli journalist. “Listen, I am in the middle of a war here!” exclaimed the usually soft-spoken and helpful Mr. Horowitz.

And Esther, poor Esther, whom I met yesterday for the first time over breakfast at Ginzburg, had to suffer as my phone rang every few minutes, interrupting our conversation.

I've spent most of the last 24 hours glued to the internet, telephone and television. My head hurts, my thoughts are in a whirl and I really don't feel able to write anything cogent or insightful at this point. All I can think is, “the extremists have won again.”

Just over two weeks ago, Abu Mazen and Ehud Olmert met at a breakfast hosted by King Abdullah in Jordan. They hugged each other and spoke in front of the cameras about imminent negotiations. A moment of hope. And then the incident at Kerem Shalom, followed by the IDF incursion into Gaza. And now Lebanon. Once again, I wonder how much blood must be spilt before we end this ridiculous, tragic conflict. And when we will stop warming our hands in front of the tribal bonfires instead of stepping back and seeing this conflict for what it is – a game of power played by politicians who really do not care all that much about the wellbeing of the people whose interests they claim to protect.

And once again, I wonder when the politicians will learn to act instead of react. As usual, none of the politicians are thinking – not with their brains, anyway. It seems to me that when Israel does exactly what the enemy's leader (Nasrallah) wants it to do, it is probably doing the wrong thing. C., if you're reading this: remember the time you told me that Israel's entire foreign policy was based on the expression, “I'm not a sucker”?  I never forgot that, you clever girl.

And that is as far as I am going to go with political analysis today. I need some time to rest and collect my thoughts first, sorry.

Here are some photos I took along the northern border when I traveled there in March with Michael Totten, who wrote these reports (1, 2) about what we saw and heard.

And below is what some Middle Eastern bloggers are saying:

From Ami, who usually blogs in Hebrew, an open letter to Raja of the Lebanese bloggers:

“Dear Raja,

I'm Ami, a Journalist and a Blogger from Israel…
I enjoy very much reading your blog, especially your last post (“an oblivious resident“) regarding the current situation.

Your vivid and objective
description, as well as the interesting comments giving by your
readers,  enabling us, in Israel to have a direct and first-hand
impression of what's is really going on your side…

While I'm writing
these sentences, our government is having a special meeting in order to
decide what to do, and how to react to Hizballa aggression.
Commentators in Israeli TV channels are raising certain militant
scenarios, and the word “war” is keep popping up while asking civilians
in the streets…

Time now is
22:29. It was a sad day. What will come next? I was thinking to my
self… maybe we could take advantage of the Blog power , and open a
direct channel in the WEB, open to bloggers from Israel and Lebanon as
well. For that purpose I'm going to put this text at
my Blog . Please feel free to comment. “

*********

I recommend reading the Lebanese bloggers. They are providing constant on the scene updates.

************

The Egyptian Sandmonkey's post has a rather interesting comment thread.

**********

Here is a very moving post from a Syrian blogger, excerpted below:

Thank you Nasrallah the angel of death in the Najjad-Assad squad of
destruction for shortselling your Country Lebanon. You decided to sell
what you don’t have to extremism and violence. Do you enjoy destroying
your own bridges and infrastructures…do you celebrate the death of your
own people living in poor villages…are you that blind and stupid to not
know what the consequenses of your stupid action would be? yes enjoy
enflaming the ignorant masses and being a hero…Saddam Hussein was a
hero also when he invaded Kuwait. Is it not enough that the PLO fought
from Lebanon in the 70s and 80s and ensured the destruction and
divisions of the south where you come from! What did they gain from
their war of attrition: nothing!

*************************

Here's an excerpt from a post by She, of Something Something:

“I think of the bloggers across the Arab blogosphere who have afforded
me the privilege of making their acquaintance, exchanging comments and
emails as we work together to break down barriers, barriers put in
place by those whose greatest fear is the discovery that we are all
merely people and not the monsters they make us out to be. We may not
always agree, but there is both a mutual respect and curiosity that we
have chosen to embrace. Despite the actions of governments and
organizations in our countries, we are trying hard to make our
neighborhood a better place. Now, as I sit here on this train heading
south, I can’t help but wonder, is it all for naught?”


************************

From Eliram, an Israeli who blogs in Hebrew, a translated excerpt from her post, “The Israeli mood is at minus 7″ is below:

A million mothers wipe away tears of pain before going to sleep. A million fathers are grinding their teeth in silence. And how many politicians understand now, in the small hours of the night, that their job includes a few things besides their salaries, plenum sessions and a car nearby. It's called responsibility for a whole nation…”

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17 Comments so far (Add 1 more)

  1. Thank you for your opinions and for the great links to other Mideast postings.

    1. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  2. Yes, thanks for the comments and the links. I really appreciate the window you provide on all this sadness and despair.

    2. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  3. As nice as it is to be in touch with other ME bloggers in the rarified atmosphere of the international community on the Web, I came to the conclusion long ago that on the ground real peace in this area of the world will only come when citizens and their governments speak with the same voice and it says, “we want to co-exist with our neighbors” and put those words into action.
    I don't expect this to happen any time soon, if at all. (Just for the record, by nature, I am not a pessimist.)

    3. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  4. With unfortunate timing, the rest of my family leaves for Israel on Sunday. As I have more limited vacation, I catch up with them later in Europe—and I'm afraid I'm the only member who likes to read, and to meet, Internet strangers.
    Having said that, I myself am not so pessimistic as at other times (e.g., the original Lebanon invasion). Even the fact that Sheikh Nasrallah “wanted” Israeli military action does not mean that he will be pleased with the results. Perhaps this time Nasrallah is the one who has miscalculated.
    My impression is that post-Gaza Israel is on firmer ground than at any time since the immediate post-Oslo period. Except for the usual Trotskyites, no one in the West is going to support cross-border kidnappings, and as a result, I think that Olmert will be able to negotiate an eventual disengagement in which the PA and the Lebanese Army will finally take responsibility for their sides of the border. The necessary, and difficult, step is to arrange this in such a way that it does not look like the Arabs are surrendering. With the Western community on one side, I think that the necessary international fig-leaves may grow.

    4. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  5. Sad, bad, mad, foolish news. Clearly some people would rather be dead than alive in peace. I wish you (all) luck and a quick resolution.
    Keep your head down, don't be a hero.

    5. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  6. Oy, Lisa. Please don't feel sorry for me–it was a little like being in a newsroom opposite Lois Lane (or Perry White), but it was a realistic and true moment in the life of a Mideast journalist. I was sorry that you weren't able to enjoy the way you might have during an “off-time,” but we'll have times like those in the future. First things first. And what the other person said, don't be a hero. Be safe.

    6. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  7. No don’t let them do it again. I mean I don’t expect much from Hezbollah but maybe if enough people march to the capitals in both countries as happened in Lebanon last year the disaster can be avoided. How about some arrangements through the weblogs for simultaneous protests?

    7. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  8. A excelent blog to a sad situation.

    8. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  9. Lisa, don't you think you are being a *tad* naive? Its not jsut about testosterone and zealous men; its about attaining a just peace, a homeland, and freedom; and i'm sorry, but “hugs” won't do it, and neither will state sponsored terrorism, and while I am against the targetting of civlians, it is the moral and legal obligation of an occupied people to resist and fight for their rights; thus, the attack against kerem shalom and the capture of the soldier was completely legitimate. While you go and enjoy your beautiful cafes and your priledged life in Tel Avi, because you attained the right to return and live there simply because you are Jewish, the same right is being denied to millions of Palestinian natives of the land; think of that, then you will realize while the folly continues.

    9. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  10. Ah, Anonymous. I was waiting for you. I was waiting for the person who would twist my words (“hugs”?), use meaningless words like justice (for whom?), and, oh yes, the hackneyed and ludicrous accusation that by living in Tel Aviv I am ipso facto oppressing the Palestinian people. And all nicely packaged with the smug little claim that I am “naive” and “privileged.”
    Your comment is crashingly unoriginal and utterly unhelpful. It also illustrates that you know nothing about me or how I live. Indeed, you have no way of knowing, do you?
    And why, oh why, do the negative 'n nasty commenters never leave a name or email? You even blocked your IP address. Why's that?

    10. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  11. “Just over two weeks ago, Abu Mazen and Ehud Olmert met at a breakfast hosted by King Abdullah in Jordan. They hugged each other and spoke in front of the cameras about imminent negotiations.”
    Everything I have read about Abu Mazen suggests he is either a figurehead or complicit with Fatah/Hamas (not much difference between them). Negotiating with him means nothing. He's not running the country. That is really the crux of the Palestinians' problem: the only people ever running the country are terrorists. Any leader or spokesperson or emblem of moderation to hopeful liberals (i.e. Sari Nusseibeh et al) has no power. Anyone who has power is Arafat or Hamas or their ilk.
    My fantasy is that after Iraq gets normalized, the Kurds get invited to occupy Palestine for a few years and teach how to have a zero tolerance policy to terrorists and develop a civil society under difficult conditions. The Tibetans could help too.

    11. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  12. Thanks for including all these great links and perspectives, as always, Lisa. I am finding the news crushing and confusing.

    12. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  13. Thanks for your blog, which I came across by chance. As a slightly-Hebrew speaking Jew living in the OT, your posts give me some fascinating insight into the Israeli political discourse out on the street on your side of the Wall. I also appreciate your links to Lebanese and Syrian (-Canadian) blogs — I've not had a chance to look at them yet, but plan to. In the spirit of dialogue, I have to take issue with one important element of your post on the Gaza invasion: your representation of the chain-of-events. Prefacing the following, allow me to state that I do not believe that violence from either side is the answer to anything, and history has sadly and repeatedly demonstrated this over and over. But if this conflict is to be resolved, then the issue of context, and of cause and effect, urgently needs to be addressed. You cite the instigation of the conflict as the invasion of Kerem Shalom. But this unfortunately — and tragically — ignores the fact that Gaza had been under intense siege and closure by the Israelis since the Israeli “disengagement” last year. (It was under military Occupation of slightly varying degrees of intensity for almost 40 years before that point, but I’ll stick to the more immediate context). In fact, Israel's “disengagement” resulted in a suffocating closure of Gaza, which managed to batter its already barely extant economy to the brink of utter collapse (for example, note the millions of dollars worth of Palestinian produce which were forced to rot at the border crossings because Israel wouldn't open them; crises in food and hospital medical supplies). This brought Gaza to the very brink of humanitarian disaster, as the UN and many other NGO's have repeatedly noted. What's more, 4000 tank artillery shells were shot into Gaza since the end of March alone — a full 2 months before the Kerem Shalom raid. Israel also mounted 77 airstrikes during that period. (In contrast, there were 396 Qassams attacks during this time.) The total number of deaths 2 months prior to Israel's invasion numbered 94 Palestinians (including 35 civilians, 6 women, and 12 children); 2 Israeli soldiers, and no Israeli civilian casualties. Also important to note: the tank battalion which was attacked in Kerem Shalom was part of this military campaign against Gaza, and was apparently readying itself for another attack at the time of the raid. Finally, the night before the raid (on Kerem Shalom), Israeli commandos crossed into Rafah and kidnapped two brothers, Mustafa and Osama Muamar. As Naftali Lavie, who served in an Israeli tank unit near Kibbutz Kerem Shalom noted regarding the commando raid, “All of this is well known but did not make it to the front page. Can it be that Palestinian lives are nothing, Israeli lives are everything? That Palestinian captives are nothing, Israeli captives everything?” (For more of this story, see Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060627.LETTERS27-6/TPStory/?query=lavie).
    Again, like Naftali Lavie, I am noting these facts not because I support violence on any side — because I do not. I agree with the BBC interviewer you cited in the view that militant groups seem to be conniving with the Israeli government against the best interests of everyone — Israeli and Palestinian — to keep this conflict in a perpetual state of deterioration. Like Ms. Lavie, the reason I state these facts is that they are important to give a sense of context to current events that are now unfolding; and because without them, we have way of framing Palestinian actions. Instead, the reigning media stories create a vaguely cartoonish sense of some kind of genetically violent Palestinian people versus a group of Israeli soldiers who were just hanging out minding their own business when they were kidnapped. You are clearly doing a tough job – as you said in your opening post –to provide insight to folks back home (and around the world) on a complex situation, and as I said above, I appreciate many of the insights that you provide here. I'm offering these comments as a plea to consider other aspects of the conflict which might create a clearer sense of context for *both* sides (or I should say “all” — since there are more than 2).
    I wish you all the best, and hope to hear your thoughts on these issues.

    13. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  14. Lisa, Please! This is very much like one of those checkpoints in the Israeli border! I mean commenting in your blog is so sophisticated. Any way, thanks for your post.

    14. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  15. Hi,
    I think I must first mention that i am lebanese, and second that I really appreciate the fact that there are reasonable people on both sides of the border. I have been checking lebanese blogs for the past few days and was frustrated that most of the comments from Israelis were extremely unsympathetic to the plight of the lebanese civilian. We were dubbed as human shields to terrorists, and justifications were given to every civilian death in lebanon. I was appalled.
    I can rest a little easier in this difficult time, because I have found reasonable voices in Israel. By the way, I am having a hard time quitting smoking, with this shit going on too.
    R

    15. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
  16. I find it so dissapointing that Hamas and Hezobah seem so full of hate for another community, even at the expense of their own communities and families. In Australia all the different ethnic communities just try to move on together the best way we know. Part of that process is by been inspired by what others have so we are able to learn to get it too.
    I so wish you all some peace and functioning, and everyone having the best chance of chasing and acquiring THIER true dreams

    16. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am
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    17. Anonymous
    on March 22nd, 2010 at 7:10 am

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