Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Military Madness > America won't allow Israel to win their war; Hezbollah sets up another dummy for target practice; 600 Hamas drop their pants and surrender

 

America Wants Israel to Be Able to Defend Itself,

But Not to Win


Ever since Henry Kissinger put pressure on Israel’s government during the Yom Kippur War to prevent Ariel Sharon from destroying Egypt’s Third Army that Sharon’s troops had surrounded, the American policy has been to support Israel’s defense but not to let it win overwhelmingly. More on this policy can be found here: 

US policy for 50 years:

Israel is not allowed to win any wars

Elder of Ziyon, October 27, 2024:

From the National Security Agency archives:

During the Arab-Israeli War in October 1973, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had frequent discussions with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin. During a conversation on 18 October 1973, after he agreed that the military situation was stable, even stalemated, Kissinger declared that “my nightmare is a victory for either side.” Dobrynin observed: “it is not only your nightmare.”

No reason is given. The commentary guesses that “he may have worried that if either Egypt or Israel attained a decisive military advantage it would weaken U.S. influence over post-war peace talks. Dobrynin likely had the same concern for the Soviet position.”

But perhaps it is just that the US foreign policy is to keep things as close to the status quo as possible, because any changes means an entirely new paradigm where the US could lose influence.

Had Israel been allowed the overwhelming victory it might have achieved had General Sharon been allowed to destroy Egypt’s Third Army, Israel would then have been powerful enough to decrease its dependence on the U.S., a dependence that Kissinger wanted to maintain. He persuaded then-Prime Minister Golda Meir to let the entire Third Army return to its Egyptian base without being attacked by Sharon’s troops.

And we’ve certainly been seeing that with Israel (and, for that matter, Ukraine.)  The US has said that Israel can defend itself, but it has never said it supports Israel winning – achieving its military goals of the destruction of Hamas or the defeat of Hezbollah, let alone ending the Iranian regime.

One can postulate that US policy towards its allies in regional conflicts around the world has been more to avoid their defeat rather than help them emerge victorious. There are several reasons for this:

A US perception that complete victory by one side could destabilize entire regions

The concern that a dominant regional power might be harder to influence than multiple competing states

The desire for states like Israel to have continued dependence on US support

Avoiding escalation that might draw in other major powers…

One more possibility - The American War Industry does not want any war to end because that stops the inventory of death from moving, and that costs the American War Industry kazillions of dollars.  

The Americans want Israel to continue to depend on the US for military support and for diplomatic support at the UN, especially by exercising its veto at the Security Council. Only by threatening to cut back on military supplies can the US successfully pressure Israel to not “escalate” the conflict with Iran, as, for example, by bombing oil installations and nuclear facilities. Israel promised the US it would refrain from doing either, and on October 26 it kept its promise, hitting only missile production sites and air defense systems, with precision strikes on ballistic missile factories and on air defense systems that led to the deaths of only four Iranians.

The net effect is that the US is claiming to support Israel but is hamstringing Israel at the same time from actually winning wars.

Which is what we saw this weekend. The US made clear to Israel that it cannot do major damage to Iran’s economy – yet that is what needs to be destroyed to end Iran’s support for the worst terrorist groups in the world. Without decimating Iran’s economy, Hamas and Hezbollah will be able to rebuild forever and we are in a Groundhog Day scenario. Indeed, this exchange of airstrikes between Israel and Iran this month sure resembles the US-managed tit for tat strikes between Iran and Israel in April.

I beg to differ. In April, Israel responded to Iran’s 300-missile-and-drone attack by sending only a handful of planes to hit exactly one air defense system in Isfahan. This October 19, as a delayed response to the barrage of 180 ballistic missiles Iran launched against Israel on October 1, Israel sent a massive force — more than 100 planes — to attack and destroy Iran’s entire ballistic missile program, including its store of solid fuels, as well as much of its air defense systems, including the four S-300 batteries that had been deployet to protect Tehran. In its severity, the IDF’s attack on October 16 was many times more powerful than the IDF attack on April 19.

Israel now needs to explain to the Americans that its promise not to attack nuclear or oil installations should not be understood as valid for all time; it applied, rather, only to the latest attack, not to all attacks that may subsequently take place. If Iran makes the fatal mistake of attacking Israel yet again — no matter how unsuccessful such an attack may be — Israel believes its promise to the Americans not to hit oil and nuclear installations will have expired, and it has every right to now launch an attack, this time, on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program (the oil installations do not nearly pose the same kind of threat). And it should then do so.

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Hezbollah Names Naim Qassem as New Leader,

Replacing Slain Nasrallah


Hezbollah said on Tuesday through a post the Public Telegram Board that it had appointed its deputy leader Naim Qassem as its new leader.

Lloyds of London announced on Wednesday that Qassem's Life Insurance policy has been cancelled. (OK, not really. I'm just kidding).



In a written statement, Hezbollah announced that its Shura Council had elected 71-year-old Qassem as secretary-general, following the group's established selection process.

Qassem is now the successor to secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed over a month ago in an Israeli airstrike on Beirut's southern suburb.

What Did Hezbollah Say?
The post from Hezbollah stated: "Based on faith in God Almighty, commitment to the authentic Muhammadan Islam, adherence to the principles and goals of Hezbollah."

It continued "In accordance with the approved mechanism for electing the Secretary-General, the Hezbollah Shura Council agreed to elect His Eminence Sheikh Naim Qassem as Secretary-General of Hezbollah."

Who Is Naim Qassem?
The Sheikh has served as Hezbollah's deputy chief since 1991, appointed by then-Secretary General Abbas al-Musawi, who was killed in an Israeli helicopter strike the following year.

Qassem continued as deputy when Nasrallah assumed leadership and has long served as one of Hezbollah's prominent spokesmen, frequently engaging with foreign media, even as cross-border hostilities with Israel intensified over the past year.

Nasrallah was killed on Sept. 27, followed by senior Hezbollah figure Hashem Safieddine—widely seen as the most likely successor—who was killed in Israeli strikes a week later.

According to Reuters since Nasrallah's death, Qassem has delivered three televised addresses, including one on Oct. 8, where he expressed the group's support for efforts toward achieving a ceasefire for Lebanon.

Hezbollah vowed in its Telegram post to continue with Nasrallah's policies "until victory is achieved."

Why Are Israel and Hezbollah Fighting?
On Oct. 7 last year Iran-backed Hamas launched a surprise attack from Gaza, killing 1,200 Israelis and capturing around 250, an action which triggered the ongoing conflict.

Hezbollah, also backed by Iran, began firing rockets into Israel, prompting retaliatory strikes. Iran has also exchanged fire with Israel on two separate occasions.

So far Israel's operation in Gaza has killed over 43,000 people according to the Health Ministry and the U.N. warns of an ongoing humanitarian crisis in the territory.

That is the Hamas Health Ministry. Hamas lies about absolutely everything, to you can be sure that number is grossly inflated.

Tensions with Hezbollah escalated dramatically last month when Israel launched a series of intense airstrikes, resulting in the death of Nasrallah and most of his senior commanders.

In early October, Israel followed up with a ground invasion into Lebanon.

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600 Hamas terrorists surrender in northern Gaza


Among those who surrendered are terrorists who participated in the October 7 massacres.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

Six hundred terrorists have surrendered and been captured so far in Jabalia after the IDF cut off the northern Gazan region several weeks ago where the so-called refugee camp is located.

Some 120 were taken in a raid over the weekend of the local hospital that Hamas was using as a primary command-and-control center.

About 20 terrorists were killed and 60 captured in the IDF foray into the Kamal Adwan Hospital. Another 60 were found hiding among the patients, along with cash, documents and weaponry that had been stashed throughout the medical complex.

The IDF publicized clips from an interrogation of a paramedic from the hospital, who said that Hamas fighters were everywhere in what was legally a protected space for civilians.

“Hamas military operatives are present. They are in the courtyards, at the gates of the buildings, in the offices,” he said.

“They operate ambulances to transport their wounded military operatives and to transport them for their missions,” he continued. “This is instead of using the ambulances for the benefit of civilians.”

Some of those seized had been among the forces that invaded Israel last October in the surprise attack in which mainly Hamas terrorists massacred 1,200 people, the vast majority of them civilians.

“The surprise for Hamas was complete,” the IDF said regarding the operation. “We trapped hundreds of terrorists inside the camp, including senior operatives.”

Prior to the raid, as the hospital was also acting as a treatment center, the IDF had allowed it to continue its emergency care of civilians and helped supply the emergency systems as well.

Three IDF brigades, including armored brigades, had essentially cut off the northern Gaza Strip in recent weeks after finding out that those Hamas operatives who remained in the area were regrouping, for the most part in Jabalia .

The army ordered residents to evacuate to the south, and some 50,000 fled through humanitarian corridors the army set up. Soldiers looked for and arrested suspected Hamas fighters among the refugees.

The terrorists attempted to stop civilians from fleeing, army sources said, even shooting some people in the legs to deter their human shields from leaving.

“In the last week,” they said, “the fear barrier of Hamas was broken.” Most of the residents, they added, went no further south than Gaza City.

While one brigade has now been transferred elsewhere, two remain for mop-up operations, as there are still an estimated several hundred Hamas fighters left in the camp.

The army said that their enemy’s tactics have devolved into guerilla warfare, with the terrorists making more use of IEDs rather than fighting IDF troops head-on.

“These are not the battalions and companies we saw at the beginning of the fighting a year ago. They are on the verge of breaking. Their combat capability is significantly lower. In the first round, we didn’t see 600 terrorists surrendering,” the IDF stated.

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