Max Boot
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com
A lot has been written in recent years about stateless terrorism. The
events of the last few weeks show, to the contrary, that some of the
world's most malignant terrorist groups continue to rely on state
support. Hamas runs its own quasi-state — the Palestinian Authority.
Hezbollah is a state-within-a-state in Lebanon. And lurking behind both
are the real troublemakers: Iran and Syria.
The current crisis exposes the inadequacy of American policy toward
this new axis of evil. The problem is not, as so many have it, that
President Bush's "cowboy diplomacy" has unsettled the region's vaunted
stability. It is that Bush hasn't been enough of a cowboy.
Working with France, the U.S. succeeded last year in forcing Syrian
troops out of Lebanon, thus allowing free elections to be held. But
Lebanese democracy will remain hollow until Hezbollah disarms in
accordance with U.N. Security Council Resolution 1559, something that
no one has been willing to enforce — until now.
The U.S. should have done more to stop Syria from supporting not only
the terrorists targeting Israel but those targeting U.S. troops in
Iraq. Syrian strongman Bashar Assad appeared to be down for the count
when a U.N. investigation found evidence linking his regime to the
murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. But Bush let him
get up off the mat. Senior U.S. officials keep proclaiming that Syria's
support for terrorism is unacceptable, but by not doing more to stop
it, they have tacitly accepted it.
The same is true of Iran. The mullahs continue to develop nuclear
weapons and smuggle explosives into Iraq, and our only response has
been talk and more talk. Perhaps this is a prelude to eventual military
action, but in the meantime the administration should have done more to
aid internal foes of the mullahocracy. It has taken until now — five
years into the Bush presidency — for the U.S. to commit any serious
money ($66 million) for Iranian democracy promotion, and the State
Department has blocked efforts on Capitol Hill to spend even more.
The Jewish state is now paying the price for American inaction. The
Katyusha, Kassam and Fajr rockets raining down on Israel are either
made by Iran or with Iranian assistance. The same is true of the C-802
cruise missile that hit an Israeli warship. Syria facilitates the
delivery of these weapons and provides a haven for Hamas political head
Khaled Meshaal. The Iranians and Syrians are as culpable for the
aggression against Israel as if they had been pulling the triggers
themselves — which, for all we know, they may have been.
And world leaders such as Vladimir V. Putin (he of the scorched-earth
policy in Chechnya) have the chutzpah to criticize Israel for its
"disproportionate" response? What would a proportionate Israeli
response to the snatching of its soldiers and the bombardment of its
soil look like? Should Israel kidnap low-level Hamas and Hezbollah
operatives? Those organizations wouldn't mind in the slightest; they
want as many martyrs as possible.
The real problem is that Israel's response has been all too
proportional. So far it has only gone after Hamas and Hezbollah. (Some
collateral damage is inevitable because these groups hide among
civilians.) Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is showing superhuman
restraint by not, at the very least, "accidentally" bombing the Syrian
and Iranian embassies in Beirut, which serve as Hezbollah liaison
offices.
It's hard to know what accounts for this Israeli restraint, for which,
of course, it gets no thanks. It may just be a matter of time before
the gloves come off. Or Olmert may be afraid of upsetting the regional
status quo. The American neocon agenda of regime change is not one that
finds favor with most Israelis (ironic, considering how often the rest
of the world has denounced neocons as Mossad agents). The Israeli
attitude toward neighboring dictators is "better the devil you know."
That may make sense with Jordan and Egypt, which have made peace with
Israel, but not with Syria, which serves as a vital conduit between
Tehran and Hamas and Hezbollah.
Iran may be too far away for much Israeli retaliation beyond a single
strike on its nuclear weapons complex. (Now wouldn't be a bad time.)
But Syria is weak and next door. To secure its borders, Israel needs to
hit the Assad regime. Hard. If it does, it will be doing Washington's
dirty work. Our best response is exactly what Bush has done so far —
reject premature calls for a cease-fire and let Israel finish the job.