Posted on 07/31/2006 9:43:50 AM PDT by areafiftyone
QANA, Lebanon - Israeli warplanes carried out strikes in southern Lebanon on Monday, hours after agreeing to temporarily halt air raids while investigating a bombing that killed at least 56 Lebanese civilians, mostly women and children seeking shelter. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said there will be no cease-fire, adding that "Israel is continuing to fight."
utter nonsense.
Inquiry complete. The finding is we blew the place up. Now looking for more terrorist hideouts and launching pads.
Well, at least you're consistent with others on this board...I'm constantly being compared to liberals because I believe Bush to be less than my ideal president (Reagan). So be it. But you should know that I actually voted for him twice (after all, look whom (Gore and Kerry) were running against him. That doesn't mean I don't find him lacking in presidential medle(so far he's right up there with Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison and James Garfield, IMHO--a lot lower than Lincoln, Washington, et al great ones, but certainly higher than Carter and Clinton). And my fear is that his lasting legacy will take the Republican party with it, and that we will again be stuck with 50 years of libertine Democrats.
A birdie tells me that this is a head-fake. We know that the UN takes weeks to do anything and that either the US or France/Russia/China will block any resolution. So nothing gets done. This gives Israel the additional time it needs to do the job the right way: with the IDF.
This diplomatic "strategery" is becoming so obvious that the media is now blurting it out openly in news reports. And you know what? I bet most other countries privately approve, while making various contrary public statements for domestic consumption. No one really wants Hezbollah around for much longer except Syria and Iran.
Please go back and read what Bush has said since this thing started.
1) He regrets the loss of innocent life
2) Israel has every right to defend itself
3) Israel should be careful to avoid civilian casualties
4) Hezbollah is responsible, not Israel for the current conflict
5) A ceasefire will only be of value if the threat to israel from lebanese territory is removed
6) Any ceasefire must include the dismantling of Hezbollah and Syrian and Iranian support for it.
7) He does not want an agreement that returns things to the status quo.
That support of Israel is only coming from one gov't on this planet. Ours.
Good.
No ceasefire until they are destroyed.
Well, since we have chatted little, I could only go on your statements I have read.
My favorite president of the last 100 years is Reagan as well. And I consider him an icon, who pulled us out of economic malaise and foreign policy defeatism. That said, the ME was not one of his great success stories. He was too busy with the Soviet Bear, but nonetheless, his inattention (and pullout from Lebanon) only emboldened the islamofacists who were brewing their hatred long before slick Willie came into office. So Bush has been dealt the hand to stomp out the islamo scum. It is an ideology that will fight everybit as hard as the communists, maybe harder, to hold onto whatever power they have. And though I disagree with GWB on a host of issues, his handling of the ME is not one. It is ONLY because of him that Afghanistan and Iraq, two of the 6 major players in the terror-sponsoring state cadre, are toast. And Libya threw in the towel because it saw the writing on the wall.
He has a spine of steel, which only a handful of presidents before him have had.
I agree with this post.
I do think that President Bush has been trying to redefine an appropriate response to terrorist attacks that come from within the midst of civilian populations, and he has been giving Israel plenty of time to fight vigorously.
At the same time, he does get spooked by alleged civilian casualties, and the short-lived cease-fire announced yesterday was a prime example of it.
In short, Israel's mandate seems to be, "Beat Hezbollah to a pulp, but don't hurt anyone else. No collateral damage. Oh, and do it fast."
Nevertheless, I was stunned to see that the very next day after the 48-hour halt on air attacks was announced, President Bush restated his overarching strategic objectives and Olmert felt free to resume air attacks.
I don't think that in the history of the US we have had a president who is more on Israel's side than George W. Bush, and that includes Richard Nixon in the 1973 war.
I don't have a military background, and I can't say whether Israel is using enough force to do the job quickly. I am quite concerned, though, that both Olmert and Peretz, his defense minister, come from the peace camp (Peretz overtly, Olmert in that he advocated Israel's surrender of its Gaza communities and has said -- as recently as last week -- that he intends to do the same in the West Bank). I hope that their heavy reliance on an air campaign is sound military strategy and not because they are afraid to acknowledge the failure of their ideology.
I agree 100% with everything you said. If I was running this show, I would not negotiate at all. We don't negotiate with Al Queada, either -- for the same reasons. When it comes to Hezbollah, nothing less than 100% unconditional surrender will do.
I understand why we are going through this diplomatic Kabuki dance. But that's different from saying that I agree with it.
Israel announced a cessation of air strikes to allow civilians an opportunity to flee the strike zones.
The "cease fire" announcement was either a misquote or brain fart from the State Dept (= Condi Rice).
How can it be worth nothing if it is giving Israel the cover it needs to get the job done? I ask, who else in the world is giving cover for Israel to avoid a ceasefire? There is only one man, and he sits in the oval office.
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