

July 13, 2006
The Confrontation with Hizbullah
Shlomo Brom
Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies
The Hizbullah operation that
resulted in the kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers
and the death of eight others has ignited a major
confrontation between that organization and Israel.
Unlike previous clashes in recent years, in which it
could be expected that the clash would be
short-lived because of the interest of both sides
preventing escalation and returning to acceptable
rules of the game, the provocation and its
consequences are too great this time to allow Israel
to return to the status quo ante. That would signal
to Hizbullah and other factors operating against
Israel that they can carry out ever-greater
provocations without incurring a major response.
This operation was not a bolt
from the blue. Hizbullah has repeatedly broadcast
its intention to kidnap Israeli soldiers in order to
secure the freedom of Lebanese prisoners remaining
in Israeli hands even after the so-called “Tenenbaum
deal,” and it tried and failed several times before
the its recent success. It is also likely that the
timing of this operation was tied to developments in
the Gaza Strip. After all, Hizbullah is fully aware
of the need for domestic Lebanese and Arab
legitimacy for its operations and it senses that
when Israel is battling Palestinians and the Arab
and international television screens are full of
images of Israel striking at Palestinians, it can
more easily justify its own actions. That may
explain why its first operation following Israel’s
withdrawal from south Lebanon in the spring of 2000,
in which it carried off the bodies of two Israeli
soldiers, was mounted shortly after the outbreak of
the second intifada.
But this latest attack is a
blatant violation of the rules established after
that action in late 2000. According to these rules,
Hizbullah acts only against military forces and only
in the Mount Dov (Shab’a Farms) sector, and Israel
responds in kind. This time, the operation took
place in the western sector of the border and
included the shelling of Israeli civilian
settlements. Hizbullah might have refrained from
launching this operation if Israel had reacted more
vigorously to previous Hizbullah attempts to breach
the rules, which are based on mutual deterrence.
Both sides have the capacity to inflict serious
damage on the other’s civilian population, and
Hizbullah is fully aware that since the Israeli
withdrawal, it has no domestic support for actions
that can escalate and lead to serious damage in
Lebanon, thereby setting back the lengthy
reconstruction process in that country.
Many of the international
constraints on Israeli reactions have diminished
since the withdrawal. In responding to this latest
attack, Israel has apparently set for itself several
objectives. The first is to exact a high price,
both directly – by inflicting casualties on
Hizbullah – and politically – by striking at
Lebanese targets such as electricity plants and
Beirut Airport and by cutting off the south from the
rest of the country in order to undermine
Hizbullah’s political standing. The assumption
behind those strikes is that internal pressure on
Hizbullah will force it to restrain itself and
ultimately disarm. All this is meant to
rehabilitate Israeli deterrence in Lebanon.
The second aim is to prompt
international pressure on Hizbullah’s Syrian and
Iranian patrons so that those countries, too, will
also act to restrain Hizbullah, on the assumption
that the international community wants to avoid
another implosion in Lebanon. The third is to
inflict a serious blow on Hizbullah’s ability to hit
civilian targets in Israel. It may be true that
here, as in Gaza, Israel cannot completely eliminate
the threat of rocket fire, but since 2000, there has
been a marked improvement in the IDF’s capacity to
locate launch teams, which once enjoyed virtual
immunity because of their low signature, and there
is a reasonable prospect that those teams will now
be much more vulnerable, like their Palestinian
counterparts in Gaza.
It is unclear whether Israel’s
current response will actually produce the desired
effects and it may be compelled to escalate even
further, particularly since Hizbullah also has the
means for more destructive action, to which it has
not yet resorted. For example, the organization
possesses long-range rockets supplied by Iran and
Syria with which, according to Israeli intelligence,
it can hit cities inside Israel as far south as
Hadera. Their range covers sensitive targets such
as the city of Haifa and the industrial zone in
Haifa Bay. If Hizbullah decides to react to attacks
on Beirut with these weapons, a much greater
escalation can be expected.
Israel would then have several
options available. It could intensify its strikes
on Beirut and other Lebanese cities, but in that
case Israel would have to walk a fine line between
achieving effects and causing damage so widespread
that the international reaction would minimize the
chances of accomplishing its aims. Israel could
also expand the fighting to Syria, which serves as
Hizbullah’s main source of weapons, both from Syria
and from Iran. Thus far, Syria has paid no price
for its policies but its military weakness makes it
very vulnerable to Israeli air strikes. Finally,
Israel could target Iran’s interests and presence in
Lebanon.
Moreover, Israel might well
initiate ground operations in south Lebanon and
perhaps other areas, as well. Such operations would
be a low-priority choice because Israel has no
desire to get sucked back into the Lebanese quagmire
and understands the implications of a prolonged
physical presence there. But they could take the
form of time-bound incursions, like those mounted in
Gaza, intended to draw out Hizbullah forces and
inflict casualties on them.
In any event, the confrontation
this time is likely to be protracted and involve
substantial costs for Israel because of Hizbullah
capabilities, which far outstrip those of the
Palestinians. The costs could include significant
casualties and the disruption of normal life in a
broad swath of Israeli territory, which would put
the public’s resilience to the test. The duration
of the confrontation will also be function of the
ambitiousness of Israeli goals. If Israel aims at
completely disarming Hizbullah by itself, the goal
could well prove elusive, and Israel may have to
content itself with implementing new rules, such as
moving Hizbullah further away from the border, and
hoping that the current confrontation will stimulate
domestic political processes in Lebanon that could
eventually, albeit indirectly, accomplish the more
far-reaching objective.
___________________________________________________________________
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Published
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