Aug. 4, 2006
COMMENTARY: Hezbollah Plays Europeans, Media, Very Well Indeed in Psych Ops
Campaign
By Clifford D. May
Scripps Howard News Service
Hezbollah and its foreign sponsors deserve credit: They understand the
perverse psychology of the Middle East. They knew they could launch a war
against Israel and then have Israel get the blame for the devastation that
inevitably would follow.
They knew also that if Israel failed to respond forcefully to their ground
and missile attacks, they could say Israel was cowardly. And if Israel did
respond forcefully, they could say Israel was a bully, its response
"disproportionate" -- even while insisting that Israel was doing them no
serious damage.
They knew they could target Israeli civilians and hide combatants and
weapons behind Lebanese civilians -- in homes, hospitals, schools and
mosques. Even so, whenever Lebanese women and children were killed, they
could accuse Israel of "war crimes."
Give Hezbollah, Syria and Iran credit for this, too: They understand the
equally perverse psychology of Europe, the U.N. and the "international
community." Two years ago, U.N. Security Council Resolution 1559 demanded
that Hezbollah disarm. Hezbollah refused to comply. In response, the
international community shrugged its collective shoulders.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah has been taking delivery of increasingly advanced
weaponry from Syria and Iran -- while U.N "peacekeepers" in southern Lebanon
avert their gaze.
These peacekeepers remain silent even as Hezbollah fires those missiles at
Haifa, the one city in the Middle East where Jews, Christians and Muslims
most successfully coexist. And when Hezbollah uses the otherwise useless
U.N. peacekeepers as human shields and some are killed, the U.N. and Europe
are outraged -- not at Hezbollah for this blatant violation of international
law but, again, at Israel.
Hezbollah's leaders figured correctly that it would not be long before
Europeans would be calling for a ceasefire -- one that would reward
Hezbollah by allowing it to remain armed, effectively repealing U.N.
Resolution 1559, and to acquire new and better weapons for future use.
Many Europeans and some Americans also are calling for Syria and Iran to be
offered "incentives" in exchange for helping to end the conflict they
started. What if Syria and Iran accept such tributes, promise to rein in
Hezbollah and then don't? That's the nice thing about appeasement: The
appeasers always have something more they are eager to give and the appeased
always have something more they are eager to receive.
Give credit where it is due: Hezbollah propagandists understand how to
manipulate the Western media. They show reporters bombed buildings and dead
bodies. They say: "These were innocent civilians. No fighters or weapons
here." The news crews report what they are told and shown without
verification -- out of ignorance or fear or both. Hezbollah exaggerates its
battlefield successes and understates its losses and, with too few
exceptions, the media take it in and spew it back out.
If progress is to be made in the Middle East, it must begin with an
understanding of the psychology of Hezbollah and its supporters. Hezbollah's
immediate goal is not to drive Israelis into sea -- that's for later -- but
only to establish itself as the dominant force in Lebanon, politically as
well as militarily. If that happens, the dream of Lebanese democracy would
again be deferred. Anyone who wants to live in Lebanon -- "live" in the
existential sense -- would have to cut a deal with Hezbollah.
Syria's goal is obvious: It wants to again be the colossus of the Levant.
With a war-hardened Hezbollah at its side, Syria would "restore stability"
to Lebanon, perhaps by returning as the occupying power, carrying out
assassinations of Lebanese patriots with impunity as it has in the past.
Finally, Iran's ambitions: nothing less than to be recognized as the leader
of the global jihad against the West. Al Qaeda would have to accept the
status of junior partner in the Holy War against the Great Satan and the
Little Satan and all the other sundry Satans.
If Iran can successfully project power against Israel using its Lebanese
proxy what would stop it from utilizing other branches of Hezbollah in other
corners of the world to achieve similar results? What could stop Iran from
acquiring nuclear weapons and using those weapons to impose its will
wherever and whenever it chooses? A U.N. resolution? One like 1559 perhaps?
Clearly, for these goals to be achieved would not be in the Lebanese,
Israeli, American or European interest -- nor would the vast majority of the
world's Arabs and Muslims benefit from such an outcome.
But give Hezbollah, Syria, Iran and other Islamic extremists credit: They
understand the perverse psychology of their enemies, the infidels. They know
how to confuse us, how to divide us and, in time, they are confident they
will do much more to us than that.
Clifford D. May is president of the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies, a policy institute focusing on terrorism. Web site:
www.defenddemocracy.org