MISLATAMAN: ORANGE POWER

jueves, 10 de agosto de 2006

Lo sé, lo sé

El post de Angola se retrasa, pero es que algún que otro bujarra no me envía las fotos.

Mientras, un editorial cojonudo del Jeruslem Post que pone en su contexto lo que va a pasar en unos días, la invasión masiva de Israel el dur del Líbano. Para que a nadie le pille de sropresa.

Jajajaja, el foro de becariosicex.com se prevee calentito.A más de uno la cara se le va a quedar de limón, por lo agrio del fruto, digo.


The right decision




Yesterday the cabinet made the most wrenching decision a government ever has to make: to send thousands of ground troops into harm's way, into the teeth of a trained and deadly force armed with mines and missiles that has been preparing for this moment for six years. It was a difficult decision, but it was the right decision, indeed the only one that Israel could have taken under the circumstances.

About 40,000 Israeli troops are now expected to join the 7,000 soldiers already in Lebanon. The IDF says it will take about a week for these additional forces to reach the Litani River, and in some places beyond it; and a month or two to take control of the territory behind that line.

The objectives of the operation are clear. Most of the short-range rockets that Hizbullah has used to sow indiscriminate death and destruction in our cities and villages for an entire intolerable month come from the area that the IDF will seek to capture. Most of Hizbullah's forces and bunkers are also in this area. Only by taking this area can Israel substantially degrade Hizbullah's ability to terrorize the country and its ability to emerge politically strengthened from the war.

Though there is much criticism regarding the delay in launching this expansion of the operation, the time has not been completely lost. Israel's soldiers have had more time to train, and more time to learn lessons that could only have been learned by the battles of the first month of the war. We hope that this knowledge will save lives, but no one should have illusions: the cost of this war will likely become even more dear.

In this context, our soldiers should know that almost the entire nation is behind them, and in debt to them for carrying the weight of its future on their shoulders. They should know that they are not just fighting for themselves, their units, their families and their country, but for the free world, too, though much of that free world fails to appreciate the fact.

This is so because Israel is not fighting an isolated militia but, as Defense Minister Amir Peretz told the visiting German foreign minister on Wednesday, "We are fighting against the Iranian commando, which is armed with sophisticated, modern weaponry. This includes Russian-made anti-tank missiles, which in the past it was promised would not fall into the hands of Hizbullah. This weapon is being used today against IDF soldiers in Lebanon."

The IDF is fighting the terrorist arm of the megalomaniacal regime in Iran, which has openly proclaimed its ambition to commit genocide against the Jewish nation. If this were not enough, the same regime wants to dominate the Muslim world, and from that base, subdue the entire West.

Israel is fighting for its own future, but it is hard to think of another time in history when so small a nation has done such a favor for the rest of the world. And the nation, ironically, that should be most grateful is Lebanon.

As the brave Michael Behe wrote on July 30 from Beirut, "Before the Israeli attack, Lebanon no longer existed, it was no more than a hologram... Each Irano-Syrian fort that Jerusalem destroys, each Islamic fighter they eliminate, and Lebanon proportionally starts to live again!"

Hizbullah's parasitical relationship to Lebanon had become so advanced that even now the Lebanese government seems unable to separate its own interests from those of the Iranian proxy force that plunged Lebanon's people involuntarily into war. Even now the Lebanese seem powerless to free themselves of Hizbullah's yoke, but a deliberate aim of this extended operation is to change this balance of power, to give Lebanese independence a new lease on life.

Ultimately, diplomacy must concretize what the IDF achieves militarily. But the more success the IDF attains, the more straightforward the task of the diplomatic guarantors and the robust force they must coalesce. The UN and other self-declared champions of Lebanon have every interest in ensuring that diplomacy complements rather than thwarts Israel's military efforts - the very tasks that they have long since resolved must be done, and that all admit Lebanon has been unwilling or unable to do for itself.

If free nations cannot bring themselves to show gratitude or even openly acknowledge what is at stake here, as they know they should, the least they can do is to avoid making Israel's job more difficult.



Impecable

Comentarios

Añadir un comentario
  • Fecha: jueves, 10 de agosto de 2006
  •  | 
  • Hora: 23:22

Autor: Gulliver2005

“Hizbullah has used to sow indiscriminate death and destruction in our cities and villages for an entire intolerable month”

¿Y que esperaban? Si uno mete la mano en un avispero, lo normal es que le piquen las avispas.

“hey should know that they are not just fighting for themselves, their units, their families and their country, but for the free world, too, though much of that free world fails to appreciate the fact.”

Pues no les doy la razón. Derrotar a Hezbolá será bueno para Israel (si tal cosa fuese posible), pero eso no va a debilitar al terrorismo internacional. Al contrario, si los amigos de los americanos dejan arrasado el Líbano, radicalizará a los musulmanes contra Occidente y multiplicará los adeptos a la causa.

  • Fecha: jueves, 10 de agosto de 2006
  •  | 
  • Hora: 23:24

Autor: Gulliver2005

“Each Irano-Syrian fort that Jerusalem destroys, each Islamic fighter they eliminate, and Lebanon proportionally starts to live again!"

Una guerra que arrase Líbano no es un método efectivo para dar fuerza a un Estado, sino más bien para reducirlo a la inoperancia.

Un ejemplo rutinario de propaganda de guerra. En tiempos difíciles supongo que tienen que animarse a sí mismos y convencerse de que están haciendo lo correcto para no que no baje la moral.

Van a derramar sangre y lágrimas israelíes y libanesas para empujar a los del Partido de Dios unos kilómetros hacia el norte y mucho me temo que no podrán reducirlos a la inoperancia, ni certificar su derrota. Las guerrillas son duras de roer y la experiencia previa de Israel en el Líbano no invita al optimismo.

  • Fecha: jueves, 10 de agosto de 2006
  •  | 
  • Hora: 23:25

Autor: Gulliver2005

El remate diplomático tampoco es claro. No veo a fuerzas libanesas o internacionales haciendo de policía frente a lo que quede de Hezbolá, así que los israelíes tendrán que hacer el trabajo por sí mismos. O ocupan de nuevo el sur del Líbano, o verán como Hezbolá vuelve a sus posiciones y a rearmarse con cohetes iraníes.

No veo un final feliz. Israel no estará más cerca de encontrar una solución que le traiga paz y seguridad y en cuanto a nosotros, nos odiarán más y nuestros enemigos no verán mermada su operatividad.

Y bueno, supongo que a estas alturas del partido ya no les queda más remedio que meterse a fondo en la guerra. Pero que no esperen que los occidentales les tengamos que estar agradecidos. Las probabilidades de cagarla son espantosamente altas.

  • Fecha: jueves, 10 de agosto de 2006
  •  | 
  • Hora: 23:26

Autor: Gulliver2005

El momento de pensarlo mejor era el día cero. Ese día creo que no tenían claros unos objetivos viables para la operación, y a falta de objetivos factibles la guerra se les ha ido de las manos. Primero operaciones aéreas y de artillería, luego lo ven insuficiente y hacen incursiones terrestres puntuales, luego lo ven insuficiente y deciden (hace dos días) una operación terrestre a gran escala. Se ve a las claras que están improvisando conforme avanza la guerra y no ven un modo claro de terminarla.

En fin, deseo que acaben con Hezbolá, pero no lo veo nada probable. Al igual que en Iraq, la cirugía, que a primera vista podría parecer aconsejable, suele traer unos efectos secundarios desagradables que a veces son mucho peores que la propia enfermedad.

  • Fecha: viernes, 11 de agosto de 2006
  •  | 
  • Hora: 7:19

Autor: Mislata1

Coño Gulliver, cuanto tiempo.

Lamento no entrar en harina porque el tema Libano lo tengo mas que vapuleado en otro foro, como dije y no me gusta reptirme.

El tiempo dirá como acaba todo, a lo mejor tus deseos se cumplen.Deseos que son los mios.

Abrazo