Thanks to Biden, Lebanon Is Burning
Posted on September 27, 2024
https://original.antiwar.com/Daniel_Larison/2024/09/26/thanks-to-biden-lebanon-is-burning/
The Biden administration claims to be pushing for a “temporary ceasefire” between Israel and
Hezbollah to avert a larger conflict, but this is very late in the day and it
is not a serious effort to prevent a new war in Lebanon. It is at best a
desperate, last-minute exercise in going through the motions of diplomacy. The
administration would like to pretend that it is a passive bystander pleading
from the sidelines instead of the chief patron and arms supplier of the main
belligerent in the conflict, and it designs its entreaties to be toothless so
that Israel can safely ignore them.
The US has refused to exert any pressure on Benjamin
Netanyahu’s government for the last eleven months, and it has continued
supplying Israel with weapons no matter how those weapons have been used to
commit war crimes against Palestinians. Now US officials say that they don’t
want further escalation in Lebanon, but once again the administration won’t
back up those words with action. The US could use its leverage to rein Israel
in and insist on the de-escalation that the administration says that it wants,
but the president has shown that he has no interest in doing that.
The empty Gaza ceasefire negotiations prove as much.
The Gaza ceasefire talks have become an interminable process designed to lead
nowhere. The administration has catered to the Netanyahu government’s
preferences at every turn. Each time that Netanyahu adds new deal-breakers or
otherwise seeks to derail negotiations with new attacks, the administration has
dutifully taken his side and pretended that Hamas is the sole obstacle to
securing an agreement. The US cannot be a credible diplomatic actor in the region
when its primary role is acting as Netanyahu’s PR agent.
The Israeli government assumes that the US won’t
withhold weapons, diplomatic support, or military protection under any
circumstances, and that has encouraged Netanyahu to pursue increasingly
aggressive goals. Because the US shields Israel from military reprisals, as it
did earlier this year during Iran’s missile and drone strikes, it has given
Netanyahu free rein to lash out whenever and wherever he wants. The
administration has dressed all of this up as preventing a wider regional war,
but the reality is that they have simply delayed the conflagration while making
it more likely that it will be even more destructive when it occurs.
The total failure of the administration’s policy is
there for all to see. The region is likely facing a new Israeli invasion of
Lebanon, and that invasion will have serious destabilizing effects on the wider
region. This is the disaster that the US has claimed to oppose all along, but
in practice it has done nothing to stop it. Had the US truly wanted the war in
Gaza not to spread, it would have demanded a lasting ceasefire months ago. Had
the US wanted to prevent escalation in Lebanon, it would be cutting off arms
transfers and pulling back its forces from the region rather than rushing more troops to the Middle East. Instead the US has done
everything that one would expect it to do if it wished to set the region
ablaze.
The US is at great risk of being ensnared in this
larger war. It is imperative that the US avoid direct involvement in Israel’s
conflicts. The US has no vital interests at stake in these fights. The
president has no authority to involve US forces directly. It is not the
responsibility of the United States to bail out a reckless client state when it
gets in over its head. The quickest way to force the Israeli government to
deescalate is to deprive it of the support and protection that it takes for
granted.
Once the current crisis is over, US foreign policy in
the region has to be radically overhauled. To avoid future entanglements in the
wars of client states, the US should downgrade its relationships with the
Middle Eastern governments that rely heavily on US weapons supplies and
protection. The US has no formal commitments to defend these states, and it
should not extend security guarantees to any of them. The US also needs to
reduce its military presence in the region to the bare minimum required to secure
our embassies. Decades of extensive US military involvement in this part of the
world have been ruinous for the countries of the region and for American
interests, and it is in the best interests of all concerned for the US to get
out.
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