Lessons Learned?
Ralph Peters’s NY Post column has a checklist of things that should’ve been learned from Israel’s tepid war with Hezbollah. I wonder if they’ve truly been learned. Let’s take a look at his list of lessons:
- Lesson 1: You can win every tactical engagement and still lose at the strategic level.
- Lesson 2: The global media can overturn the verdict of the battlefield.
- Lesson 3: If you start off on the wrong foot in war, you may never recover your balance.
- Lesson 4: Technology alone can’t win 21st-century wars.
- Lesson 5: Never underestimate your enemy.
- Lesson 6: In war, take the pain up front, and the overall suffering will be far less.
- Lesson 7: Terrorism is no longer a limited, diffuse, disorganized threat.
Lesson 2 is a lesson that should anger every American. How dare the Agenda Media, with their moral relativism fully deployed, turn a military victory into a PR defeat. This serves a reminder that if you aren’t getting your Middle East news from the milbloggers, you aren’t getting the real picture of what’s happening over there.
Lesson 3 shouldn’t have to be re-learned after the Powell Plan’s annihilation in Operation Desert Storm. Going in with overwhelming force is the only way to destroy the enemy. Olmert’s tepid approach to the war was doomed to failure before it started.
That ties into Lesson 4. Because Olmert didn’t grasp Hezbollah’s willpower. The US wanted him to clean house on Hezbollah. That’s why they kept pushing for “a sustainable ceasefire.” When Olmert didn’t go for Hezbollah’s throat, the Bush administration rightly pulled its support for Israel and shifted into full diplomacy mode. Why should the US put itself in that position if Israel won’t take advantage of the opportunity?
Can we win “Eastern” wars with Western values? I doubt it. This question is going to eat at our consciences for years to come, even as we learn to do what must be done.
Despite media lies about Israeli “atrocities,” the IDF has been doing all it can to spare civilians. For example, the Israelis repeatedly risked commando teams deep in hostile territory to take out Hezbollah command-and-control cells, instead of just leveling the crowded apartment buildings where the terrorists were hiding. But, ultimately, all of the special operations in the world will fall far short of delivering decisive, crushing victories. We are going to have to learn to fight by the enemy’s rules. And we aren’t going to like it.
Exactly right, Col. Peters. I’ve long thought that the best way to defeat an opponent is to defeat the enemy’s strength. That was Vince Lombardi’s tactic when he was winning championships in Green Bay. Bear with me on this because it applies here. Lombardi knew that if you could defeat the other side’s strength, it put a stamp of dominance and authority on the fight. That often led to the demoralization and the disorganization of his opponents.
Had Israel fought a less civil war, Hezbollah would’ve noticed. That would’ve pushed them to either change tactics or get killed sticking with the status quo. For Israel, that would’ve been a ‘Heads, I win, tails you lose’ proposition.
I’d recommend a couple things going forward.
1. Ignore the media’s coverage when in war, with the exception of the embeds’ reporting. Today’s media plays up the ‘blood angle’ so it’s impossible to fight wars without taking a major media hit.
2. Don’t pussyfoot around when fighting a war where we endanger our troops in trying to limit collateral damage. It’s time that we accepted the fact that innocent people die in war. Col. Peters is right that we won’t like it but it’ll produce sharper victories and more fear of our military.
3. We should outlaw air-only wars. They’re useless against a dug-in opponent. You need tanks and boots on the ground to show the enemy that your only intent is on killing him. Killing people and breaking things is the only way to tell the enemy that you’re serious about winning.
Another thing that’s apparent is that Olmert’s cobbled-together ‘government’ is about to fall apart. Good riddance. That party wasn’t equipped to handle security matters, which is Israel’s biggest need in these times.
Haaretz is calling for Olmert’s ousting:
If Olmert runs away now from the war he initiated, he will not be able to remain prime minister for even one more day. Chutzpah has its limits. You cannot lead an entire nation to war promising victory, produce humiliating defeat and remain in power. You cannot bury 120 Israelis in cemeteries, keep a million Israelis in shelters for a month, wear down deterrent power, bring the next war very close, and then say oops, I made a mistake.
Bill Kristol and Charles Krauthammer agreed on FNS’s Roundtable that Olmert’s government would soon collapse for the ineptitude that he showed in prosecuting this war. That isn’t acceptable to Israelis.
There is no mistake Ehud Olmert did not make this past month. He went to war hastily, without properly gauging the outcome. He blindly followed the military without asking the necessary questions. He mistakenly gambled on air operations, was strangely late with the ground operation, and failed to implement the army’s original plan, much more daring and sophisticated than that which was implemented.
That’s no way to fight a war. It’s time for him to go.
Technorati Tags: Olmert, Israel, Hezbollah, Middle East, Military
Cross-post at LetFreedomRingBlog
August 14th, 2006 at 2:29 am
Israel’s reaction was too extreme. They started bombing everything in sight in order to take on a handful of guerillas who were safely dug in before Israel had a clue as to where they were. Taking a flame thrower into the kitchen to kill a fly? With 25,000 Americans that had to be rescued from Israel’s aggression along with all the citizens from other countries, this was a bad PR nightmare for Israel right from the start. Bombing escape routes in and out and still having no clue as to where the enemy was. A ground invasion should have been the first step instead of destroying Beirut so the Lebanese office of the Bin Laden Group can make more millions rebuilding it (again).
There will be major shifts in power for Israel since now these Israelis have to accept that Middle Eastern countries that were their allies before are no longer their allies now. This was a victory for Hezbollah from beginning to end simply because Israel now has to save face over their impulsive and blatantly stupid aggression. Taking a shotgun to a pinata. Hezbollah started it undeniably but Israel’s response was impulsive at best. There will be major shifts of power within Islamic countries as well since Israel has shown a week and vulnerable side. ie: The people of Iran voted for their current leader for a reason. Anti-Israel and anti-American rhetoric happens to be a powerful election option that comfortably helps candidates win elections.
Listening to Krauthammer and Kristol would be Israel’s biggest mistake. Neo-conservatives heavily criticized Condi Rice and labeled her “weak” and “ineffective” and claimed she “wasn’t doing enough to support the Neo-conservative agenda.” What did GW do? Gave Rice full diplomatic power and authority and while sitting at the UN making her speech, who was sitting behind her acting quiet and obedient with his hands in his lap? Neo-conservative half-wit himself, John Bolton. It would appear that Bush has finally gotten the point when it comes to the Neo-cons. “Sit down and shut the hell up!!!” There may be hope for him yet.
August 14th, 2006 at 7:14 am
Here’s another set of lessons you should be reminding Israel of:
http://www.richardsilverstein.com/tikun_olam/2006/08/13/gideon-levy-thank-god-we-lost/
Your recommendations are based on the assumption that war is inevitable. That may explain why your lessons are only related to how a war should be fought, not to whether war is necessary - or advisable.
August 14th, 2006 at 12:04 pm
“handful of guerillas” ???
You mean like ‘all of southern Lebanon’ right?
Sounds like there are more than a few lessons in there for our leaders as well. Too bad they don’t seem to be learning them.
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