"By admitting to a miscalculationĀ©, Nasrallah is perhaps giving some
indication of how dearly the blunder has cost Hezbollah in personnel, power,
and prestige in the country"
 
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/012/630afjys.a
sp
The Real Losers
by Lee Smith  in Jerusalem , The Daily Standard,  28 August 2006 11:50:00 AM
        
Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah admits that the war was a mistake.
 
 
WHEN GEORGE W. BUSH SAID that the world would eventually come to realize
that Hezbollah lost its month-long war with Israel, he probably had no idea
that this realization would come so quickly--or that it would come directly
from the mouth of Hezbollah General Secretary Hassan Nasrallah.
 
Nasrallah told a Lebanese TV audience last night  that had he had known that
the operation to take two Israeli soldiers would end as it did,  then he not
have taken that course of action.
 
"If there was a one percent possibility," he said. "We would not have done
that. We would not have done any capturing."
 
By admitting to a miscalculation  that has cost Lebanon billions of dollars
and many hundred civilian lives, Nasrallah is perhaps giving some indication
of how dearly the blunder has cost Hezbollah in personnel,  power, and
prestige in the country.  It seems now as though the author of The Divine
Victory  won the hearts and minds of Arabs across the region  --except for
in Lebanon, where the "Underground Mullah" actually lives.
 
Owning the "Arab street" doesn't often translate into real world power,
especially in a region where popular opinion trembles before the iron will
of authoritarian regimes and their security apparatuses. Consider the
careers of other recent pretenders to the throne of Salah al-Din:
 
* Saddam Hussein mocked the United States  after surviving the first
U.S.-led Gulf War, only to see his regime fall a decade later.  He was
pulled out of a hole  by American troops  and is now on trial for crimes
against the Iraqi people.
 
* Osama Bin Laden "restored Arab dignity" when he attacked the United States
on September 11, 2001. He is now in hiding; many of his top aides have been
captured or killed.
 
* Gamal abd-el Nasser, the most charismatic Arab leader of the twentieth
century and to whom Nasrallah is most often compared, led the Arabs to a
disastrous defeat  in the 1967 war against Israel.
 
Yet if Nasrallah's fame  was nothing more than his allotted fifteen minutes,
his war did constitute small, but nonetheless real, victories  for his two
benefactors, Syria and Iran.
 
By hitching his wagon to the Islamic resistance,  Bashar al-Assad finally
managed to ingratiate his regime  with the Syrian public.  It turns out that
the Syrian public who had ostensibly looked to Bashar as a reform-minded
Westernizer prefers the man who is willing to gamble their own lives and
security  by transporting weapons for the sake of the Party of God's fight
with Israel.
 
And in driving a wedge  between the masses and their rulers, Tehran
pressured the Arab establishment  that it is fighting for control of the
Middle East.  Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia endured tremendous pressure
this month as a Persian Shiite regime out Sunni'd the Sunnis in its efforts
to liberate Jerusalem.
 
BUT EVEN THESE small victories  aren't final. While one Lebanese station was
interviewing Nasrallah last night, another was talking to former Syrian
Vice-President  Abd-el Halim Khaddam.  In December, the London exile spoke
out against the current Syrian leadership - until Saudi Arabia pulled the
plug on Khaddam  by forbidding Saudi-owned media  from interviewing him.
 
The Saudi kingdom owns most major Middle Eastern press outlets and,  as one
manager of a well-known Saudi-owned media concern told me at the time,
Riyadh is not in the business of bringing down other Arab regimes. Perhaps
that sentiment has changed - Khaddam appeared on a station  that represents
Saudi interests in Lebanon.
 
Khaddam spent much of his TV time  talking about the ongoing U.N.
investigation into the murder of former Lebanese Premier Rafiq al-Hariri.
Whether  Khaddam's report is accurate or not, the leader of what is
effectively the Damascus government-in-exile  says that the top regime
people are all implicated,  including the president.
 
The Hezbollah-Iran-Syria axis has had a much tougher month than most people
have been willing to let on.
 
 
Lee Smith, a Hudson Institute visiting fellow based in Beirut, is writing a
book on Arab culture.               
 


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