WASHINGTON - July 19 -
ILAN PAPPE,
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=107&ItemID=10590
Currently in Haifa, Ilan Pappe is senior lecturer in the University
of Haifa Department of Political Science and Chair of the Emil Touma
Institute for Palestinian Studies in Haifa. He said: "The Israeli army's
main vision for the battlefield is today still that of 'shock and awe'
rather than chasing snipers, suicide bombers and political activists. The
'low intensity' war questions the invincibility of the army and erodes its
capability to engage in a 'real' war. ... In the last week, [Israeli
generals] have had a field day. No more random use of one-kilo bombs,
battleships, choppers and heavy artillery. The weak and insignificant new
minister of defense, Amir Perez, accepted without hesitation the army
demand for crushing the Gaza strip and grinding Lebanon to dust. But it may
not be enough. It can still deteriorate into a full-scale war with the
hapless army of Syria, and [the generals] may even push by provocative
actions towards such an eventuality. And, if you believe what you read in
the local press here, it may even escalate into a long-distance war with
Iran, backed by a supreme American umbrella. ... It is not too late to stop
the Israeli designs from creating a new and terrible reality on the ground.
But the window of opportunity is very narrow and the world needs to take
action before it is too late."
Pappe is author of "Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine," scheduled for
publication this fall.
ROBERT DREYFUSS, http://www.robertdreyfuss.com, http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/07/17/neocons_rise_from_mideast_ashes.php
Author of the recent book "Devil's Game: How the United States Helped
Unleash Fundamentalist Islam," Dreyfuss said: "Israel's actions in no way
can be seen as a legitimate response to the small-scale attacks from Hamas
and Hezbollah. Instead, what Israel has done has used the pretext of those
pin-prick attacks -- a couple of border raids and a handful of errant
rockets -- to launch a strategic attack whose goals are to crush Hamas and
the remaining institutions of Palestinian self-rule and decapitate and
destroy Hezbollah politically and militarily in Lebanon. Second, it's clear
that Israel would never have launched this war without having made the
calculation that it would win the support of the United States. ... Third,
by invading and bombing Lebanon and acting brutally to crush the
Palestinian Authority, Israel has created a unified field theory of the
Middle East's crises, uniting the escalating world showdown with Iran, the
unraveling civil war in Iraq, the crisis over Syria's role in Lebanon, and
the Arab-Israeli conflict itself into one big tangle.
"Until last week, before Israel went to war, the neoconservatives
were losing across the board. They watched in horror as the war in Iraq
faltered, and they were appalled by President Bush's Condi-led opening to
Iran. Indeed, to many it seemed as if the entire post-9/11 project to
remake the Middle East and build American hegemony on that cornerstone was
in jeopardy. ... Now that Israel is at war, they have the chance once again
to go on the offensive, against Iran, in Iraq, against Syria and against
the mythical Terrorist International that they warn about so regularly."
TRITA PARSI, http://www.tritaparsi.com,
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=33983
A specialist in Israeli-Iranian relations, Parsi wrote the article
"Israel Readies for Iran Showdown by Attacking Lebanon." He said:
"Recalling Hezbollah's close ties to Iran and Syria, both Washington and
Tel Aviv argue that the recent clashes must have the support and blessing
of these two states. ... Such a conclusion rests on the assumption that
Tehran and Hezbollah could have predicted Israel's reaction to the ambush
and kidnaping of two Israeli soldiers. ... Israel's heavy-handed response,
which risks embroiling the entire region in a war, is rather unprecedented
and unlikely to have been predicted by Hezbollah, despite Israel's shelling
of the Gaza strip after Palestinian fighters took an Israeli soldier prisoner."
Parsi added: "An overextended United States may embolden Israel's
enemies, who may be tempted to test Israel's resolve and ability to uphold
its tough posture. Through its crushing response and by expanding the
conflict, Israel seeks to conceal this potential vulnerability and signal
the Arabs to abandon any adventurous ideas that the U.S. difficulties in
Iraq may have given them."
Parsi is the author of "Treacherous Triangle -- The Secret Dealings
of Iran, Israel and the United States," scheduled for publication next year.
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