By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, September 28, 2024
President Biden has seen enough. On September 26, the
United States joined nine other countries and the European Union to demand a
three-week cease-fire across the Lebanon-Israel border. “It is time,” the group
said in a statement, “to conclude a diplomatic settlement that enables
civilians on both sides of the border to return to their homes in safety.”
I’ve consumed a lot of multilateral mush during the Biden
years. Never have I encountered a statement as disingenuous, deluded, and
feckless as this.
Notice who signed it: the United States, Australia,
Canada, the EU, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates, and Qatar. Not Israel. Not Lebanon. And, most significantly, neither
Hezbollah nor Iran. The terrorist army and its patron aren’t mentioned. How do
you negotiate a cease-fire without naming the belligerents?
Israel isn’t fighting Lebanon. Israel wants nothing to do
with Lebanon. The IDF left there 24 years ago. Israel is attempting to restore
deterrence against Hezbollah, the Shiite militia that functions like a
state-within-a-state inside its Lebanese host.
Since the atrocities of October 7, 2023, Hezbollah has
used its safe harbor to fire rockets into Israel’s north. The shelling has
forced some 60,000 Israelis from their homes. In July, a Hezbollah rocket
killed twelve Druze children playing soccer. Hezbollah’s onslaught is
unprovoked, indiscriminate, illegal.
Why? In 2006, Israel, Lebanon, and Hezbollah agreed to
U.N. Resolution 1701. It said that Hezbollah would move its forces north of the
Litani River, creating a buffer zone between Iran’s proxy and Israel’s north.
Hezbollah never complied. And the multinational U.N. force that operates in
southern Lebanon never bothered to enforce the agreement.
For 17 years, Hezbollah restocked its arsenal of rockets
and ballistic missiles, waiting for orders from the terror masters in Tehran.
The green light arrived on October 7. Now, rather than a security buffer in
Lebanon, there is one in Israel — a ghost zone of abandoned communities and
uprooted lives.
The situation is intolerable. No nation would stand for
it. No democracy would countenance it. That Israelis have put up with such
disruption for so long is a reminder of their fortitude and clarity of purpose.
Destroying Hamas and freeing the hostages came first. Hezbollah could wait.
But the wait is over. Hamas is devastated. The Egypt-Gaza
border is secure. The IDF has control of the Gaza Strip above ground, as its
forces methodically explore and collapse Hamas’s tunnel network below. The
search for the remaining hostages goes on. Hamas won’t free them. They must be
rescued. It’s slow, tough, grueling work under extraordinary conditions and
relentless pressure. Work that requires fewer resources than before.
Which allows Israel to turn to Hezbollah. Last week’s
remarkable device attack wreaked havoc on the militia’s operatives and
communications. Sophisticated airstrikes took out the leadership of Hezbollah’s
special forces and damaged its weapon stockpiles.
Preparations for a ground incursion have begun. No one
wants it to happen. But it might have to. If Hezbollah doesn’t stand down,
there is no other way to diminish the threat. No other way to make good on the
promise of Israel to provide security for the Jewish people.
Diplomacy hasn’t worked. Biden’s joint statement reads as
if negotiations haven’t been tried. On the contrary: U.S. special envoy Amos
Hochstein has been traversing the region for months. He’s been as ineffective
as Secretary of State Antony Blinken in the quest for a Gaza truce. It’s not
Israel that has made Hochstein and Blinken look like fools. It’s the terrorist
psychopaths they treat as good-faith interlocutors who won’t take yes for an
answer.
In Hezbollah’s case, a deal has been on the table since
2006. Move your forces back. Stop trying to kill Israelis. Peace is elusive
because Hezbollah’s not interested. Hezbollah doesn’t exist to make friends. It
exists to destroy Israel and America. It’s an Iranian asset in a strategic
location meant to deter Israel from attacking Iran’s nuclear program. Lebanon’s
central government is either uninterested or incapable of challenging Syria and
Iran. And the U.N. is worse than useless.
Israelis understand. Prime Minister Netanyahu has seen
support for his party rise since Israel began taking the fight to its enemies in
unorthodox ways. The division over hostage negotiations with Hamas is absent in
conversations about the north. Hezbollah prevents Israelis from living in
safety. It must be stopped.
Rather than building sandcastles with his friends in the
U.N., President Biden could try applying to our besieged ally in the Middle
East the same rhetorical and material support he bestows on Ukraine. But that
is not the president we have. Biden’s policy of escalation management has
produced expanding circles of ruin from Kyiv to the Gulf of Aden. His Defense
Department’s statement that it’s not providing intelligence to Israel in Lebanon is
disgraceful. Israel would be right to ignore him — and to do what’s necessary
to restore balance to the region and Israelis to their homes.
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