Matthew 24:6-8 And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows.
Mark 13:7-8 And when ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars, be ye not troubled: for such things must needs be; but the end shall not be yet. For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows.
War Rumours Threats: HEZBOLLAH AND LEBANESE ALLIES ARE BUILDING A CASE FOR WAR
BY SETH J. FRANTZMAN AUGUST 27, 2019. JERUSALEM POST.
Hezbollah and its allies are building
a case for war and Lebanon’s media and other officials are fueling the tensions
with assertions that drones that crashed in Beirut carried bombs. Whether or
not the drones carried C4 explosives or that their aim was to carry out a
bombing or target an individual is not particularly important because what
matters is the calculations going on beneath the surface in Lebanon.
Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun by
inferring that the incident marks a kind of “declaration of war” ups the
rhetoric and the chances that a green light has been given to Hezbollah to
retaliate. The main issue Hezbollah has faced in the past, since Israel’s
withdrawal in 2000, is to try to create a legitimate reason for maintaining a
massive armed group within a functioning state. It has been able to keep its
arsenal, not only because no one can disarm it, but also through claiming it is
part of a “resistance” that “defends” Lebanon. As such it claimed after 2000
that it must recover the “Sheba
farms” or “Mount Dov” area on the border, a disputed territory with
Israel and Syria. Suddenly, a tiny area
became the reason for Hezbollah’s existence. This was all a veneer for the real
reason of Hezbollah’s existence, which is that as an Iranian proxy and ally
which wants the group to continue stockpiling its weapons and building up its
infrastructure along Israel’s border to threaten Israel.
Hezbollah
doesn’t keep secret its regional ambitions. It fought in the Syrian civil war,
it has contact with Shi’ite militias in Iraq, it talks about the Houthis in
Yemen as if they are a part of its strategy. It shows images of Al-Aqsa as if
it is the main champion of the Palestinian case against US President Donald
Trump’s Deal of the Century. At every juncture its role is regional and global.
Two small drones, one of which apparently caught on video was far from
clandestine, sounding more like a flying washing machine on spin cycle, are
merely Hezbollah’s icing on the cake justifying its “right” to respond. This is
lip service because Israel uncovered Hezbollah tunnels in December 2018 which
showed Hezbollah as having violated the 2006 UN Resolution 1701. So, Aoun says
that the drone incident also violates the resolution. This is to create a legal
pretext and cover should hostilities begin. Hezbollah and its allies in
Lebanon, including President Aoun, are thus already creating the context for
the post-war scenario.
Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, whose father Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri was murdered in an assassination likely carried
out with Hezbollah’s aid, has seemingly forgotten about the 2005 tragedy. He,
too, has condemned Israel but hedged his bets by arguing that it is not in the
interest of Lebanon to spiral into a dangerous escalation. He hopes that
friends in Washington, or Riyadh, can calm things down. The Lebanese Parliament
speaker Nabih Berri, has also spoken with the Kuwaitis and condemned the
“Israeli aggression.” Berri is a Shi’ite from the Amal movement.
Is this just a lot of posturing designed by Hezbollah to test the Israeli
alertness? Hassan Nasralla recalls the last war and he knows what Hezbollah
will face. He also knows his forces lost many casualties in Syria but, they
also gained experience there. Unsurprisingly, rhetoric leads the way with talk
of “opening the gates of hell” now that the “investigation” has found that the
drones were allegedly armed.
Nasrallah has a problematic calculation to make. His allies in Iran are not
entirely clear on what the best response is and Hassan Rouhani is discussing a
possible meeting with the US under some conditions. Meanwhile, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commander Qasem
Soleimani and Iran’s allies in Iraq have also appeared to green light a kind of
“declaration of war.” Yet none of them seem to want to fight the war they have
declared, despite their assertions that Israel and the US are behind attacks
across the region. Nasrallah’s movement is not the movement of 2006, it is
more closely linked to issues in Syria and Iraq today than in the past. It
understands this linkage and has to weigh it against its desire to react with a
response in the wake of the drone incident.
Categories: Rumors and Threats of Wars
