|
For Israel,
2006 Lessons but Old Pitfalls
|
|
 |
|
Gaza militants have fired
more than 360 rockets into Israel, killing four people
and wounding dozens more over the last week. A view
shows a smoke trail and a rocket being launched from the
Gaza Strip towards southern Israel on January 2, 2009 as
seem from the Israeli-Gaza border. The Israeli military
pounded the densely populated territory for a seventh
day in an operation that has claimed at least 420
Palestinian lives and wounded over 2000. The Islamist
movement tried to retaliate for the massive bombardment,
sending a handful of rockets slamming into Israeli
territory. |
 |
|
A column of
Israeli armor heads to join the fighting against Hamas
militants January 7, 2009 as they advance on Israel's
border with the Palestinian territory. Israel is
intensifying its wide-scale ground assault against the
Gaza Strip in an effort to put an end to Hamas rocket
attacks against the Jewish State. |
 |
 |
|
Barack Obama
listens as Israel's Defense Minister Ehud Barak speaks
and Foreign Minister Tzip Livni looks on during a
helicopter flight between Jerusalem and the southern
Israeli town of Sderot. |
|
|
JERUSALEM (By
Steven Erlanger, NYTimes) January 7, 2009 — This time, Israeli military
commanders are leading from the front, not trying to direct the infantry from
television screens. This time, the military has clear plans, in stages, drawn up
with a year’s preparation. This time, there is no illusion about winning a war
only from the air. This time, the military chief of staff has kept his silence
in public, all cellphones have been confiscated from Israeli soldiers, and the
international press has been kept out of the battlefield.
In these and many other ways, Israel is applying the lessons it learned from its
failed 2006 war against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon to its current war against
Hamas in Gaza. But Israel’s failure in Lebanon also stemmed from a political and
diplomatic inability to decide on clear objectives for the outcome of the war,
and here the lessons of Lebanon have been not so well applied, according to
senior Israeli military officials and political analysts.
And then there are the sudden events that can throw off so many careful
calculations and come to symbolize the horrors of war — like the deaths of
civilians from Israeli munitions in Qana, Lebanon, both in 1996 and 2006, and
the reports on Tuesday evening of as many as 40 people, including children,
killed as they sought shelter in a United Nations school in northern Gaza.
While accounts of exactly what happened were unclear on Tuesday night, with
Israeli officials suggesting that the school compound was used to fire mortars,
the deaths will inevitably turn stomachs all over the world and increase
pressure on Israel for an early cease-fire.
“Everyone is very conscious of doing things differently from 2006,” said Mark
Heller, director of research at the Institute for National Security Studies at
Tel Aviv University, citing the postwar investigations carried out by the
military itself and by the Winograd Commission, which harshly criticized both
the political and military leaders of the time for poor preparation and
performance.
After the war against Hezbollah, both the chief of staff, Gen. Dan Halutz, a
former air force commander, and the defense minister, Amir Peretz, a former
labor union leader, resigned. Their replacements — Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi, an
infantryman, and Ehud Barak, a former chief of staff and combat hero — have done
much to improve the Israeli military and restore public confidence in its
skills.
On the political side, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert ensured that the cabinet had a
much fuller discussion of the proposed campaign in Gaza, with alternatives at
least explored in some detail, before being asked to vote for war. “They did
more systematic staff work, of alternatives and implications, and tried to do
some diplomatic groundwork,” Mr. Heller said.
And Mr. Olmert has been far more careful this time to state ambiguous and modest
goals for the war, unlike his extravagant pledge two years ago to destroy
Hezbollah.
But the ambiguity is also a function of political disagreement and confusion
among Israeli leaders, many argue, which promotes poor coordination of military
action and diplomatic aims. And it remains far from clear how to decide when to
end the war, and what would constitute victory.
Israel has so far failed to decide what its ultimate goals are for this
conflict, said Giora Eiland, a former army general and a former head of Israel’s
weak National Security Council. “Either we want to achieve a sustainable
arrangement, with a lasting cease-fire and a stop to arms smuggling from Egypt,
or we want to bring about a collapse of the Hamas government,” he said. “These
lead to very different actions on all fronts, but the answer is not very clear.
There is disagreement at the moment in the troika” — Mr. Olmert, Mr. Barak and
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni.
Both Ms. Livni and Mr. Barak want to succeed Mr. Olmert, who is stepping down,
in elections scheduled for next month. The Likud leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, who
has limited himself to general statements of support for the war, is leading in
opinion polls.
“There is a leadership issue,” said Yossi Alpher, a co-editor of
bitterlemons.org, a Web-based Israeli-Palestinian dialogue. “Olmert is
discredited. Barak is considered a strategic genius but makes simple, fatal
mistakes, and Livni is untried. And they quite openly don’t get along.”
Mr. Eiland said that there had been many improvements since 2006, especially on
the military side, “but the linkage between the political level and the military
level is less improved.”
“There is no political system to make strategic assessments and provide
alternative options and implement them,” he added. “And because we can’t decide
on the right package of means and goals, there’s a certain confusion about our
message to others.”
A senior Israeli military officer, now in the reserves, said that on the
political level, “the changes are not so impressive.” The military, he said, “is
still the center of strategic thinking.”
On the military side, however, he said, there has been a big improvement in the
coordination of ground and air forces, in clearer instructions to military units
and in the way fresh intelligence is communicated to soldiers. The reserves have
had far more training in combat tactics aimed at Gaza, have better equipment and
were called up early.
“Commanders have not had their instructions changed seven times a day,” the
military officer said. Further, the “home front” defense against rockets has
been improved and there has been a much stronger effort to control the message
and mask Israeli intentions.
To that end, the cellphones of soldiers were confiscated; commanders were banned
from talking to reporters, even their friends; the international press corps has
been kept out of Gaza; and even the close circle of senior Israeli political and
defense correspondents have been getting far less access than before to decision
makers, said Aluf Benn, a senior correspondent with the daily Haaretz.
“We get briefings, but they’re more like talking points,” Mr. Benn said.
The senior military officer said, “The chief of staff is not talking in public,
and the special press know what they need to know, but the army is not
speaking.”
Most important, the army knew a nasty war in Gaza was likely to come, unlike the
surprise of the war with Hezbollah. Yaakov Amidror, an Israeli major general,
now in the reserves, who ran the research and assessment branch of Israeli
military intelligence, said that Israeli intelligence had never lost its
contacts in Gaza, as it had in southern Lebanon.
“To leave Gaza you have to go through Israel,” he said, and numerous Gazans were
recruited as intelligence sources. Gaza uses the Israeli shekel, and nearly all
imports and exports go through Israel, too. “All this helps keep the network
alive in Gaza,” he said, which helped the accuracy of the early air campaign.
What matters most, General Amidror said, are three changes: coordination between
the infantry and the air force; having commanders on the ground with a clear
mission and flexibility to achieve it; and methods to keep Hamas in the fog of
war, which includes disinformation and impediments to real-time press coverage
on the ground.
“The less Hamas understands, the better,” he said.
The army and government have also made it clear that Palestinian civilians will
die in this war, because of the way Hamas has chosen to fight it from within the
densely populated urban centers of Gaza. But events like the deaths of
schoolchildren are harder to swallow.
“It was clear from the start in this operation that there could be a Qana, given
how Hamas has chosen to fight, and it could seriously derail Israeli operational
plans,” Mr. Alpher said. “A Qana is not just a function of the numbers of
civilians killed, but also a function of how the Israeli population reacts, how
the Israeli leadership deals with it and how the international community
responds, and it’s too early to say.”
| |
|