On
Wednesday, January 30, 2013, Israel
attacked an armed convoy close to the Lebanese-Syrian border, which might have been
carrying SA-17 missiles to Hezbollah. The next day, Syria
admitted that Israel
attacked a Syrian military research facility that might have produced chemical
weapons. The week before these strikes, Lebanon
filed several complaints to the U.N. claiming that Israel violated its air space
numerous times.
This post was originally intended to address
the ongoing crisis in Syria ,
the issue of the Syrian chemical weapons arsenal, and most importantly -
whether Hezbollah will try seize that arsenal if President Bashar al-Assad steps
down from office. It was supposed to examine the political, military, and
financial implications on the domestic, regional, and global stage of Hezbollah’s
possession of a chemical weapons arsenal.
However, in the last few days I realized
that though this issue is important to discuss, there is a far more important
issue that has not yet been discussed - an everyday issue that could lead to
another war in the Levant region. It is the fear factor, i.e. how the regional
and domestic leaders are playing with our minds for their own interests.
One might say that it is inevitable that the
citizens of Israel ,
surrounded with enemies, will feel threatened. Since the State of Israel was
founded in 1948, it has had to fight for its continued survival against its
neighbors and terrorist organizations that did and do not accept the legitimacy
of its existence. Some of the wars can be defined as “do or die” for Israel and some
are for the purpose of deterrence – I will leave it to my readers to decide
which is which.
On the other hand, the reality has changed over
the years. The State of Israel has changed from a new and weak state to become
one of the strongest players in the region, and its conflicts have become asymmetric
wars against hybrid organizations, and not against states. The 2006 elections
in Gaza and the ‘Arab Spring’ have led to
seismic shifts in leadership of Israel ’s
neighbors.
Yet, one thing has remained the same in every
entity in the region - the psychological warfare against its own citizens and its
enemies. The hatred and fear in the militaristic societies are powerful and
guide the governments and hybrid organizations (Hezbollah, Hamas) in every aspect
of everyday life.
Thus, if one listens to the Israeli Prime
Minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, it seems that Israel
is on the edge of a regional war with Iran ,
Syria , Hezbollah, Hamas and Egypt . The national
media in the Levant countries adds to the fear atmosphere by either showing
Hassan Nasrallah’s hate speeches to the public (Israel ,
Lebanon ) or producing
hateful programs (Syria , Lebanon , Egypt ,
Gaza ) that
serve to brainwash the public.
In Gaze, the young generation is educated in
this legacy in summer terror camps of Hamas, taught how to use guns and brainwashed
with hatred of the Zionist state. Hezbollah educates its youth in the same method.
Israel
does it in a more subtle way, and invites families to visit military museums
and bases. Since every person in Israel is required to serve the military,
everything surrounds military life – slang, customs, work and many more.
The fear factor - we are ready for a war in any given time - government, Hezbollah and Hamas will tell their people, maybe hoping to deter the other side, but mostly
affecting the public. And I ask – let us rest a little. The public is tired of the
war games they are playing. I am not asking for peace, or even a peace process,
because peace cannot be achieved in the Levant
in the next few years, and definitely not with the current rulers. But some
rest from the war games, and more importantly – the mind games. That, they can
give.
They say 'talk is cheap' and it is certainly the case that the propagating fear among a population is the most cost-effective weapon in a leaders arsenal. It will take time, considerable effort and communal will to re-configure a social identity that has been forged over many decades.
ReplyDeleteCouldn't agree with you more. Thank you.
DeleteDear Tal Shalev, I agree with you what you wrote but i have one concerns that how long more this will go on and for how many years people in both sides will live in fear of war and how many generations will still take arms and train arms? this should be end in both sides.
ReplyDeletewhy both sides leaders/politicians will play with innocent public on the name of war or fear?
Regards
Noor
Thank you Noor. I hope someone would end this war at some point. However, I believe no one would have the courage to do so, or wants to put an end to it. This is the region we live in.
ReplyDelete