Bending the Third Rail
Because We Should, We Can, We Do
Friday, July 28, 2006
CW Disputed
There is a piece of conventional wisdom out there about Hezbollah fighters intermixing with civilians. It turns out to be likely false:
Throughout this now 16-day-old war, Israeli planes high above civilian areas make decisions on what to bomb. They send huge bombs capable of killing things for hundreds of meters around their targets, and then blame the inevitable civilian deaths -- the Lebanese government says 600 civilians have been killed so far -- on "terrorists" who callously use the civilian infrastructure for protection.

But this claim is almost always false. My own reporting and that of other journalists reveals that in fact Hezbollah fighters -- as opposed to the much more numerous Hezbollah political members, and the vastly more numerous Hezbollah sympathizers -- avoid civilians. Much smarter and better trained than the PLO and Hamas fighters, they know that if they mingle with civilians, they will sooner or later be betrayed by collaborators -- as so many Palestinian militants have been.

For their part, the Israelis seem to think that if they keep pounding civilians, they'll get some fighters, too. The almost nightly airstrikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut could be seen as making some sense, as the Israelis appear convinced there are command and control bunkers underneath the continually smoldering rubble. There were some civilian casualties the first few nights in places like Haret Hreik, but people quickly left the area to the Hezbollah fighters with their radios and motorbikes.
This is from an article by Mitch Prothero, a U.S. News and World Report journalist reporting from Lebannon writing in Salon.

If this is known on the ground, you have to ask yourself why Israel continues to target civilians? Surely their intelligence is telling them the same things that an ordinary journalist can easily find out. It could only be that they see some political advantage to their strategy of wholesale bombing, whatever that may be.