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July 28, 2006
Snapshots from Israel - from the front lines
Remember Jerusalem Online streaming video daily news.
Yesterday Shlomi Bouskila and Maya Lougasi got married inside a bomb shelter where they've been living for over a week, in the town of Kiryat Shmona.
I wrote a few days ago that this war is not only the first blogged war, but the first YouTube War. If you click back to YouTube from any of the videos I've posted, and scroll through the other results for the search terms, you will recognize a familiar situation: the pro-jihadi forces are flooding the scene with propaganda, and the pro-Israel forces have barely gotten started.
Honest Reporting is doing its best to rectify that situation by videoing a trip to northern Israel - check it out. They ask you to bring these videos to the attention of your local news outlets.
An Israeli reporter visits a UN post in southern Lebanon, and finds some hapless Ghanians:
The small group of Ghanaian soldiers manning UNIFIL Position 6-52, to the west of the village of Maroun a-Ras, less than a kilometer from the border, hasn't left its base in the last two weeks. "Those are the orders of our superior officers," explains one of them who presents himself as commander of the post, but refuses to give his name. "We have been visited by our officers three times since the fighting began and a supply truck arrives here every three or four days."On the wall nearest to the gate of the white-washed building is an "Alert State" board with the arrow pointed to black. But none of their information on the current situation has come from their own sources. "We know what's going on from the television," says the commander. Even the deaths of four UNTSO members on Tuesday night in an IAF bombardment, at a base not so far away, wasn't communicated to them from headquarters. That, too, they learned from TV.
The current contingent from Ghana has been in Lebanon for three months. The soldiers at the post are charged with patrolling and monitoring, with their single jeep, the area where the heaviest fighting has been going on for the last 10 days. The fact that Hizbullah has been well entrenched in the area ever since Israel's withdrawal six years ago - with hundreds of fighters, well stocked ammunition depots and extensive fortifications - seemed to have escape the Ghanaians notice. "I have never seen one of them," says the soldier. "You cannot easily identify them in the population."
The UNIFIL soldiers have "zero contact" with the Lebanese living in the surrounding towns and villages. All their supplies are brought by UNIFIL, and they never go out for recreation, aside from periods of leave in Beirut.
. . . . Hizbullah has been banished from this small part of Lebanon. IDF Merkava tanks roar through a nearby opening in the border fence. There isn't even a guard at the border and Israeli and foreign journalists pass in and out unhindered. The Ghanaian soldiers weren't even aware of the breach in the fence they are supposed to monitor, by mandate of the United Nations.
Judith | 07/28/06 at 07:36 AM | Categories: - The War of Dire Straits
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Blogs which link to Snapshots from Israel - from the front lines:
» Haveil Havalim #80 from Soccer Dad
Welcome to Haveil Havalim edition #80. The purpose of Haveil Havalim is to feature the best Jewish and Israel related blog posts of the past week. Of course many Jewish and pro-Israel bloggers have been writing about the war. But there have been other ... [Read More]
Tracked on July 30, 2006 10:38 AM
Comments
Yeah, well, they may be (IMHO) the good guys, but that doesn't mean they're good at being good guys.
Actually, when you mentioned the breach in the fence they were unaware of, it reminded me of the unaccountable myopia of the IDF observation post which failed to notice massive movements of Christian militiamen into Sabra and Chatila all those years ago. Maybe they, too, just got cut out of the loop by their commander (one A Sharon) and told to stay where they were and keep quiet.
I wonder how best to combine SNAFU and UNIFIL?
If I remember correctly, the IDF knew they were there, but they told the IDF they were just going in to kill specific Palestinian terrorists, and the IDF said okay. Then when they started massacring people either the IDF couldn't tell or decided not to intervene. I don't think it was ever clear what Sharon actually knew of the details at ground level, but he bore responsiblity for his commanders and their decisions, so he was properly held responsible for the overall result.
But these poor schlubs aren't given the tools or command to be responsible for anything, they are just supposed to be sitting ducks. Which makes Kofi even more responsible for them.
Judith | July 28, 2006 07:19 PM


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