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Lebanon's Fate At The Hand Of Israel: The Obliteration Of A Country

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  • Lebanon's Fate At The Hand Of Israel: The Obliteration Of A Country

    LEBANON'S FATE AT THE HAND OF ISRAEL: THE OBLITERATION OF A COUNTRY
    Written by Armen Kouyoumdjian

    Newropeans Magazine, France
    Sept 5 2006

    Once again I have had to redirect my report towards a subject other
    than the one I had planned to cover this week-end. Israel's assault
    on the Lebanon cannot leave me silent. May I also declare that more
    than ever in this particular case, I shall not tolerate any critical
    reaction to what I am about to write, none whatsoever. This is not a
    moment for debating in the Agora, and if you (or your mother-in-law
    to whom you pass-on these papers) do not like it, do not read them.

    PROGRESSIVE TREND

    Believe it or not, I used to be quite a fan of Israel during my young
    days in Beirut. I do not think it has anything to do with the fact
    that we are of the same age (I am 12 days older than Israel and much,
    much wiser). It probably relates to my early interest in military
    affairs. I even applauded its victories in the 1967 war, though it
    fucked up my last summer in Beirut, before I left that city for good
    in September of that year. It probably had not much to do with the
    several Jewish classmates I had at both school and university there,
    many of whom ended up for a short while in Israel before leaving it
    in disgust. I myself avidly followed all the great military prowess
    with great admiration. I soon realised how wrong I was.

    My first inkling that this was not a show to be admired came on
    December 27, 1968. I myself was just recovering from the May student
    revolution at the Sorbonne where I was studying, when Israeli commandos
    flew into Beirut airport and blew up in cold blood the 13-strong
    fleet of its once proud Middle East Airlines. Hey, I thought, this
    is not war, this is vandalism.

    If that did not change my mind, the following four decades have
    given plenty more ammunition. The 1978 invasion of the South, the
    1982 occupation of half the country with the resulting destruction,
    and the Sabra and Chatila massacres. Any lingering doubts that may
    have remained within me would have been swept away when Menachem
    Beguin stopped Armenian scholars from attending seminars on Genocide
    in Israel, after which followed repeated denials of the Armenian
    Genocide by various top Israeli officials, finally culminating in an
    unholy alliance with Turkey. They even instructed Jewish organisations
    worldwide to shamefully collaborate in the negation campaign. Begin's
    real name was actually Wolfovitch (hey, just like that guy at the
    White House).

    THE TARGET

    The country which Israel has now decided to obliterate is not just any
    country. It is the cradle of the ancient Phoenician civilisation that
    gave the world its first modern alphabet, and pioneered international
    commerce. It has been the home of great artists and thinkers. It has
    given birth to some of the world's most brilliant business brains, and
    at least half a dozen countries in Latin America have had presidents
    from among the ranks of the large Lebanese Diaspora. In my Beirut
    school we spoke three languages during break, never discriminated
    in any way among the many communities which made up our classes,
    in an educational system the quality of which I never saw again in
    the three countries where I have subsequently lived. We followed the
    latest pop music and films from all around the world.

    Half a century ago there were two French-language weeklies dedicated
    to movies in Beirut. There is not a single one in Chile.

    Above all this was the most hospitable country and people to have ever
    roamed the earth. I cannot compare the slap-up banquets that hosts
    used to come up with whenever one visited, to the visits my own sons
    made to the houses of their Chilean classmates when, during a study
    session of several hours their mothers would not even serve them a
    glass of water. Though it does not apply to my own family history,
    when Armenian survivors of the 1915 Genocide arrived in the Lebanon,
    itself in the midst of a famine and other difficulties, the local
    authorities built an entire village (Anjar) to house as many as they
    could. The Armenians owe the Lebanese, and in fact Arabs in general,
    a debt which can never be repaid enough.

    This country, whose modern independence is recent, is built on a
    fragile equilibrium which cannot easily take traumas. It is not the
    solid balance of the cement-less vault of medieval cathedrals, but
    the delicate one of a pyramid of Chinese acrobats. Mess around with
    one and the whole thing collapses, as happened several times over the
    past half century. To expect its authorities and modest armed forces
    to do other people's dirty work in as unrealistic as it is unjust.

    If the genesis of the Hezbollah problem is Iran and Syria, supposedly
    card-carrying members of the Axis of Evil, how come their territory
    is not being attacked, whereas poor Lebanon is obliterated?

    THE PERPETRATOR AND HIS ACTS

    The answer is: the cowardly bully always targets the weak and
    defenceless. To call Israel a Terrorist State would be an undeserved
    compliment. Terrorists at least have an ulterior motive, however
    warped it may sometimes be. Israel is a Vandal State. Vandals just
    destroy for the sheer pleasure of causing harm. Within a few days,
    this trading country's transport and energy infrastructure is in ruins,
    and half a million of its population are refugees. Its painful recovery
    from a long and also foreign-induced internal conflict has been wiped
    out at a stroke.

    Its trading and tourist activities are dead. It will probably have
    to default on its large public debt, much of which is held by its own
    banking system which in turn might become insolvent. Customs revenues
    are one of the main sources of treasury income. The cosmopolitan
    fabric of its population will once again be ruined by the mass exodus,
    which will take years to reverse, if ever. Meanwhile, there is an
    immediate humanitarian problem of massive proportions, when medical
    help cannot even get to the victims, and the power shortage prevents
    even those getting to a hospital from getting proper treatment.

    TIRED ARGUMENTS

    The main argument presented by Israel to justify its actions is
    Self Defence. This does not stand any scrutiny. Both national and
    international laws restrict your field of action in this respect. If
    you are a private individual and someone throws stones at your house,
    you can try to stop them and nobody will blame you for it. However,
    you have no legal nor moral right to go to his house, kill his family,
    set fire to his possessions, and then go on to do the same with his
    neighbours, the whole town where he came from and the whole country
    it is situated in. Articles 33 and 147 of the Geneva Convention are
    very clear about banning collective punishment and destroying targets
    of no military relevance.

    It is amazing that a state with a secret service and armed forces
    that carry such a high reputation, could not seek out the Hezbollah
    culprits who "kidnapped" three of its soldiers (whatever happened
    to the concept of prisoners of war, aren't they part and parcel of
    a military conflict?). Instead, not just areas known to be used as
    Hezbollah hideouts, not just the country's entire infrastructure,
    but residential areas of both Muslims & Christians, not to mention
    United Nation posts and more have been struck.

    Now there is a land invasion developing. The refugees who cannot
    leave the country are clogging up the capital, causing an immediate
    refugee situation which will then turn into deep social tension.

    The territory of Lebanon will not only accumulate understandable
    additional hatred against Israel, but will become a place of unrest
    which cannot be of any comfort to its neighbour. Their old claim to
    annex Lebanon up to the Litani river may be fulfilled, but it will
    only increase the pressure in the overpopulated remainder of the
    country. Physics 101.

    Let me get on to a more controversial argument, that of Israel's
    Right to Exist. I think by its behaviour as a Rogue State, it has long
    lost this right. Having a right to a country is not divine, even for
    God's chosen people. It is a capricious gift of history. Some have
    it, others have it for a while, and others never get it. Nobody
    has the right to mess up the whole of humanity every few years,
    in order to "guarantee" their own geographical survival. The Kurds
    are a nation that never managed to have a country, but they are
    not responsible for the 1973 start of the long rise in oil prices,
    which were multiplied by 30x in the following 33 years. The Poles
    have been in and out of having a country for most of their history,
    and though France and Britain went to war for them in 1939, they were
    sold down the river as soon as WWII ended. The Kashmiri are fighting
    for a country. We Armenians were without one for the best part of a
    thousand years. Did we go out and steal anybody else's country as
    a result? Does Hillary Clinton say for us what she said last week
    ("We will stand with Israel because Israel is standing for American
    values as well as Israeli ones"). Those values appear closer these
    days to those of Corporal Schillgruber in the 1930's.

    THE CURSE

    If it is anything but a small consolation, everyone I have spoken to in
    recent days has been highly critical of Israel. It is understandable
    that the US administration has done nothing to prevent or stop this
    outrage, but the indifference of the Europeans is harder to fathom. In
    any case, the damage is done. A wonderful country has been willfully
    destroyed. It might recover, one day. There is a spot just north
    of Beirut, a gorge through which flows the Nahr el Kalb (the River
    of the Dog). From Antiquity, it became a tradition for conquerors
    passing through Lebanon to carve their names on the stony walls of
    the river bank. Assyrian kings, Egyptian Pharaohs, Greek and Roman
    generals and the more modern armies (such as the nostalgic Régiment
    de Marche du Tonkin of the French Army). Tourist guides loved to
    show them to visitors and say: "they all came, they all went, but
    we are still here"). Maybe, Insh'allah, they will still be there
    again. In the meantime, I am putting an old Armenian curse on the
    State of Israel and all those who sail in her, adding that if God
    elected that as the country of his chosen people, I do not know who
    is the schmuck who gave Him the voting bulletin. The Armenian Curse
    is very effective but secret, though I can tell you that compared to
    its consequences, the Seven Plagues of Egypt appear as harmless as
    an old ladies' bridge afternoon.

    The day before Yom Kippur, you have to seek forgiveness from all
    the people you have wronged. On the day of Yom Kippur, you have to
    seek forgiveness from God. There are things, however, which have
    no forgiveness.

    Thou shalt fall upon the mountains of Israel, thou, and all thy
    bands, and the people that is with thee: I will give thee unto the
    ravenous birds of every sort, and to the beasts of the field to be
    devoured. Thou shalt fall upon the open field: for I have spoken it,
    saith the Lord GOD." (Eze 39:4-5)

    Armen Kouyoumdjian Country Risk Strategist - Valparaiso(Chile)

    http://www.newropeans-magazine. org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&amp ;id=4522&Itemid=110

    --Boundary_(ID_pfD7HUmcb2 Bz570oIfMR4Q)--
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