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Edited by Noah Shachtman | Contact

Lebanon War Lessons Learned

Predicting an imminent resumption of fighting with Hezbollah, the Israeli military is quickly studying the results of round one, Aviation Week reports:

While the [Israeli Air Force] contends it did its mission, others are putting some of the blame for the offensive's mixed results on Israel Defense Forces (IDF) chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, the first air force officer to serve in that post. Critics contend that his expectations for the IAF were too high. As a result, along with continued fighting against Hamas in Gaza and the looming roles-and-missions battle between the services, there are strong signals the Israeli defense establishment is headed for a shake-up. Additionally, a heated debate over future defense spending priorities is expected in the coming months.

Meanwhile, The Nation is calling for a renewed look at Israel's justification for the invasion:

We were saturated with the message that Hezbollah is a shadowy terrorist organization that has spent years showering northern Israel with rockets -- and that Israel had both the right and the duty to protect itself from such attacks once and for all. Thus was history instantaneously rewritten to Israel's own specifications.

In fact, from the moment that Israel ended its last military occupation of Lebanon in 2000 until the explosion of the current war on July 12, UN observers report that there was not a single casualty as a result of a confirmed rocket attack by Hezbollah on civilian targets in northern Israel.

Results on the political front are less ambiguous: Israelis are hopping mad, according to The New York Times:

Israel is politically roiled by public dissatisfaction with the monthlong Lebanon war. The public has been surprised by the inconclusive outcome of the campaign, frightened by unintended consequences like the surging popularity of Hezbollah, and angry that Israel's vaunted military has been shown to be less than all-powerful.

Perhaps the most comprehensive "lessons-learned" report can be found here, courtesy of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (warning: PDF!).

--David Axe

Latest Comments

"Best advice to Israel, you lost, you gave South Lebanon to Hezbollah. Don't embarrass yourselves again."

...by fighting Byron's friends as they plot the destruction of Israel and her Jewish inhabitants. It will be much more convenient for Byron and his allies that way, and the world will be a much better place once you disappear as you should.

The left's slide toward fascism picks up speed by the day.

Posted by: Joe Katzman at August 28, 2006 10:55 AM


Evidence that everyones vote today counts and thier is consequences.

Why LLL's make great social workers but they cant make the hard decisions that have to be made on the spot with heavy consequences in blood. Sometimes a sacrifice today is required to lessen a sacrifice tommorow.

Posted by: C-Low at August 22, 2006 9:03 AM


-Hizb-e-allah and her iranian instructors have found new and intriguing roles for wire guided atgms. That the iranians would have had , what's the word?, the chutz-pah, to make seemingly obselete atgms in such large numbers, thus reducing their unit costs, and then deploying them against exposed infantry and fortifications as guided man-portable artillery. An 82mm mortar and several rounds, enough to bracket a target versus a single anti-personnel Ra'ad 2 atgm with launcher a high probablity of a kill, which would you want to lug around the battlefield?
WE may have just seen the light machine gun displaced as the principle crew-served weapon of the infantry. My goodness a flying guided claymore , what other surprises do you think the iranians have come up with in their isolation? I know every u.s. commander who might have been tasked with changing iran's thought's about mastering the nuclear fuel cycle on the field of battle, is thanking every god man has ever imagined for the glimpse of the future that israeli cannon fodder have provided. Thank you olmert for being such a predictable tool. Future generations, if they even give any thought to the prime minister who pissed away israel's aura of invinciblity in south lebanon, will sing limmericks about you.

Posted by: Azrael at August 21, 2006 9:50 PM


On the anti-semitism note, it looks like Mr. Jansenson beat me to the punch.

Noah - German peacekeepers near Israel sounds like a National Lampoon's site-gag gone horribly wrong. Regardless of nationality, I am concerned about how an expanded UNIFIL mission in Southern Lebanon will execute its mandate to:

"...to take all necessary action in areas of deployment of its forces and as it deems within its capabilities, to ensure that its area of operations is not utilized for hostile activities of any kind, to resist attempts by forceful means
to prevent it from discharging its duties under the mandate of the Security Council..." (UNSC RES 1701)

Not counting today's incursion by the IDF, I wonder what will happen first, a returned Israeli offensive or Hezbollah militants turning against the blue helmets?

Posted by: Robot Economist at August 21, 2006 7:28 PM


Imagine being a German NATO peacekeeper in Lebanon and having to repel an Israeli incursion ...

Posted by: Noah at August 21, 2006 1:58 PM


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