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The Lesson of Suez Has Not Yet Been Learned

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  • The Lesson of Suez Has Not Yet Been Learned

    The lesson of Suez has not yet been learned

    The Scotsman - United Kingdom; Jul 27, 2006
    George Kerevan

    THIS week, 50 years ago, the Egyptian leader Gamal Nasser announced
    to cheering crowds that he was nationalising the Suez Canal. This
    sparked off a chain of events that led inexorably to Britain, France
    and Israel invading Egypt. There are good reasons why the anniversary
    of this extraordinary little war is being underplayed half a century
    on, except of course in Egypt.

    For one, having invaded Egypt and captured the canal, the Brits were
    forced into instantaneous and ignominious retreat after America's
    President Eisenhower threatened to sink the pound. The British prime
    minister, Anthony Eden, whose idea the whole adventure had been,
    was humiliated and soon driven from office.

    The Israelis drew the sensible conclusion that they could only rely
    on themselves for security. Meanwhile, Nasser, whose utter military
    incompetence had just lost him the first of many wars, turned defeat
    into political victory and became the hero of the Arab masses.

    Now that British troops are back in the business of invading Arab
    states, and Israel is slugging it out with Hezbollah in Leb-anon, are
    there any lessons we can still learn from the Suez debacle? The main
    one is that the use of force has to be very well judged, otherwise
    you end up in a bigger mess than when you started.

    Looking back on Suez in 1956, it is obvious that the British hadn't
    a clue what their own end game was. Having captured the canal,
    it suddenly became blindingly obvious that there was no neat exit -
    except the first boat home. Were we hoping somebody nicer than Nasser
    would just pop out of the woodwork, or were we going to bring back
    King Farouk from exile?

    That's not to say we should romanticise Gamal Nasser, who happily
    recruited ex-Nazis - actually, they were anything but ex - to help
    run his military, in the hope of throwing the Jews into the sea. And
    Nasser's pan-Arab nationalism was premised on ignoring the rights
    of the ancient ethnic minorities of the Middle East - Jews, Assyrian
    Christians, Armenians, Druze and Copts.

    But in retrospect, Nasser seems to have been more bluff than
    action. Without Suez, we might have turned Egypt into another India -
    wary of the West, non-aligned but not a threat. Especially if we'd
    accepted Egyptian ownership of the canal and funded the Aswan Dam. As
    it was, when Nasser died in 1970, Egypt quietly slipped back into
    the western orbit.

    Here's my worry about what's happening in Lebanon today: like Suez,
    we don't have a political end game for when the shooting stops. Britain
    waded into Egypt in 1956 with no idea how to get out. Lebanon in 2006
    is different in that Israel did not start the fight. But I fear the
    Israelis are making it up as they go along, which is just as risky.

    Hezbollah is the armed proxy for the Iranians, who now dominate
    politically the crescent running from south Lebanon through Syria to
    Shiite Iraq. The Israelis, whether you like it or not, are trying to
    give Hezbollah and the Iranians a bloody nose before they get too
    bumptious and start making use of their strategic hold over a big
    chunk of the world's oil.

    It was inevitable that Hezbollah would eventually provoke the Israelis
    into defending themselves. Once the die was cast two weeks ago,
    when Hezbollah unilaterally started firing rockets and kidnapping
    Israeli hostages, the Israelis had little choice but to go in and
    do something about it. The problem, as I see it, lies in the tactics
    the Israelis have been forced to employ.

    WITH aid from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Hezbollah has turned
    south Lebanon into a series of minefields and fortifications, forcing
    the Israelis to resort to air strikes to wear the enemy down rather
    than embark on a costly frontal assault. Unfortunately, even with
    precision-guided bombs, this is next to impossible to achieve, never
    mind the fact that the Israelis lack the local intelligence to know
    where Hezbollah elements are hiding. As a result, we have seen a lot
    of buildings blown up, and hundreds of thousands of people fleeing as
    refugees. But, as of yesterday, Hezbollah's capacity to fire rockets
    seemed unimpaired.

    Hezbollah cannot be let off the hook through an unconditional
    ceasefire. That would hand it a victory we will live to regret in
    Iraq as well as Israel. But equally, Israel cannot have extended time
    merely to drop more bombs in the hope that they hit something.

    Israel has not grasped the significance of the changes in the Middle
    and Near East brought about by the rise of Iran. The game is no
    longer one of Israel using its military strength against a divided
    and incompetent Arab world. It is now facing a new Persian Empire,
    which is an altogether more dangerous foe, especially if Tehran
    acquires nuclear weapons. Israel cannot win that fight alone.

    Which is why there has to be a political solution to the Lebanese
    crisis as soon as possible, and that has to come from America. It
    should be the most important thing on President Bush's agenda. I fear
    it is not.

    The Lebanese state has to be persuaded to disarm Hezbollah. Syria has
    to be pressured into breaking with Iran (in return for discussions
    over the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights). The Arab world - which is
    no friend of Hezbollah or Iran - needs to be convinced that if it
    supports Hezbollah being neutralised, America and Britain will put
    a Palestinian state at the top of their agenda.

    Suez in 1956 was a military success and a political failure. Lebanon
    2006 is running the risk of being both a military failure and a
    political one.
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