Limiting the Coming War


by Dr. Earl Tilford


"War is the realm of the unexpected." — B. H. Liddell Hart, 1950

Early 19th century Prussian general and philosopher Carl von Clausewitz identified "Der Schlag," or "the punch," as the vital opening gambit in war. Success depends on military superiority combined with surprise and velocity to assure immediate, overwhelming, and decisive dominance.

The brief military eruption between Israel and Syria from February 8-10 received little notice amid Washington's political maneuvering attendant to budgets, immigration reform, and investigations. The incident began when Iranian Republican Guards stationed in Syria launched a drone that the Israelis shot down 90 seconds after it penetrated their air space. Israeli retaliation involved F-16I ("I" for Israeli variant) fighters bombing Syrian surface-to-air missile sites and Iranian Republican Guard units supporting Bashar al-Assad's regime while also backing Hezbollah forces fighting anti-Assad rebels. Iranian units are also entrenching themselves near the Golan Heights, directly threatening Israel. Meanwhile, a limited number of American forces in Syria continue to target ISIS and support anti-Assad rebels. Russian combat aircraft and surface-to-air missile units are in Syria to back Assad. In northern Syria, Kurds battling ISIS raise the ire of NATO ally Turkey focused on minimizing Kurdish national aspirations.

Minimizing confusion is critical because a violent eruption looms. Israel soon will attack Hezbollah and Iranian forces and must do so with enough force to achieve rapid, decisive victory. This must happen before Iran attains nuclear missiles capable of obliterating Israel.

In June 1967, Israel coupled secrecy with speed to defeat a coalition of six Arab countries with Syria, Egypt, and Jordan rendered militarily ineffective within hours. In the October 1973 Yom Kippur War, Egypt and Syria used the same elements of secrecy and speed to come very close to overwhelming Israel. What's going to happen very soon in Syria and southern Lebanon will be larger, more violent, and dangerous given the presence of U.S. and Russian forces.

Israel will not rerun its mid-summer, month-long, 2006 conflict with Hezbollah in southern Lebanon where guerrillas used tunnels to attack Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers while luring others into house-to-house fighting fostering a bloody stalemate while also firing relatively short-range Katushya rockets into Haifa and settlements along the Lebanese border and Golan Heights. World opinion turned against Israel for the civilians killed while bombing Hezbollah units hiding in suburban Beirut. That war ended with the vaunted IDF thwarted and frustrated.

Today, Hezbollah units in Syria engage anti-Assad forces with conventional tactics, to include tanks, artillery, and rockets, the kind of war at which the IDF is unequaled. Iranian Republican Guards support Hezbollah while also ferrying longer-range rockets into southern Lebanon. Some estimate Hezbollah has 10 times as many rockets as in 2006, many capable of hitting Tel Aviv and targets farther south.

Israel must strike Syria hard to decisively destroy Hezbollah before its forces redeploy to southern Lebanon to revert to guerrilla warfare. The Israelis must also bloody the Iranians badly enough to compel Tehran to withdraw from Syria. The Israeli Air Force will attack Syrian SA-5 and SA-17/200 surface-to-air missile sites and hit air bases to thwart Syrian-and quite possibly-Russian combat-air responses. The attacks on Hezbollah and Iranian forces will undercut Assad and likely end his regime.

Ominously, March 2018 could turn into August 1914. Now is the time to prevent the United States, Russia, and NATO from being drawn into an inevitable, likely bloody war. President Vladimir Putin clearly views involvement in Syria as integral to recovering former Soviet strategic power. President Donald Trump avows U.S. support for Israel with clarity far preferable to the uncertainty of the Obama years. The danger is the proximity of Russian and American military personnel. In 1914, secret treaties coupled with alliance guarantees drew Europe into a suicidal conflict that finally ended when Soviet and American armies devoured the Third Reich in 1945. The post-Cold War period of strategic pause that began with the fall of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991 is over. Today, superpower strategic interests, not ideology, drive Washington and Moscow. The possible consequences, however, are no less awesome.

Russian and American military forces must withdraw from Syria. Moscow has air and naval units in its Crimean bases on the Black Sea to assure Russian interests. A U.S. carrier battle group in the eastern Mediterranean with air units in Italy and Turkey are close enough to balance Russian Black Sea forces without risking unintended conflict. Although American and Russian air, sea, and land force could become involved, that eventuality would be deliberative and far less likely than resulting from American and Russian units caught in between Israel in an existential struggle against Hezbollah, Iran Republican Guards, and the tottering Assad regime.

Dr. Earl Tilford is a military historian and fellow for the Middle East & terrorism with The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.

More Resources


04/28/2024
1968 Protests Should Serve as a Warning to Today's Democrats


more info


04/28/2024
Is the Worst Yet to Come?
By Steve Huntley April 28, 2024 This and that. Random thoughts and observations about current events. Trigger alert! What follows might harm the psyche of the woke. Perhaps those sensitive souls should retreat to a safe space, which I suspect will be Judenfrei. Peaceful protest is a hallowed right and tradition in America. These days, however, that right, which achieved ... Read More

more info


04/28/2024
Who's on Trial, a Former President or a Mob Boss?
It's downright disturbing to contemplate the similarities between the Donald's hush money trial and that of an organized crime don.

more info


04/28/2024
Public Worried Dems Engaging in Politicized Lawfare


more info


04/28/2024
Even Bill Barr Should Prefer Joe Biden
Even Bill Barr Should Prefer Joe Biden

more info


04/28/2024
The Economy: From Bad to Worse--Stagflation
Consumer spending has slowed, capital investment slowed, inventories slumped - and the trade deficit widened.

more info


04/28/2024
Biden's Dilemma: NC Voters Are Sour on Economy
All indicators are up, except the one that matters most to Biden's reelection

more info


04/28/2024
Campus Leaders Must Show Courage, Stand Up to Hatred
Signs at Columbia University read Go Back to Poland, calling for the Jewish community to return to the horrific death camps of the Holocaust.

more info


04/28/2024
The Campus-Left Occupation That Broke Higher Education
Elite colleges are now reaping the consequences of promoting a pedagogy that trashed the postwar ideal of the liberal university.

more info


04/28/2024
Education Apocalypse Now?
The Ivy League Hits An Iceberg.

more info


04/28/2024
The Strange Death of the Family
The world is sleepwalking towards a depopulation crisis.

more info


04/28/2024
Alvin Bragg and the Art of Not Taking the Law Too Seriously


more info


04/28/2024
Justice Alito Is Holding Trump to a Different Standard
I mentioned it in passing in my Friday column, but I was struck - disturbed, really - by one specific

more info


04/28/2024
Shock and Awe on the Campaign Trail


more info


04/28/2024
Disillusionment Plagues Young Latinos in Swing States


more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Rejecting the Cloudy Logic of EPA Ozone Rules


The Environmental Protection Agency just missed a court-ordered deadline to announce which regions of the country are complying with an Obama-era ozone rule. The agency says it needs more time to make that determination.

Hate and Humility in the Social Media


I was a late adopter of Facebook. I had a nagging fear that no one would befriend me, and that my Facebook experience would become a monologue. Of course that was irrational. I currently have 257 friends, representing my connections during the various decades of my life.

Limiting the Coming War


Early 19th century Prussian general and philosopher Carl von Clausewitz identified "Der Schlag," or "the punch," as the vital opening gambit in war. Success depends on military superiority combined with surprise and velocity to assure immediate, overwhelming, and decisive dominance.

President Trump Calls for Armed Teachers: Ohio Has Been Doing It for 5 Years


President Trump said his administration is considering the idea of arming and training teachers to help secure our schools. However, Ohio has been doing this for 5 years.

President Trump Plans To Make Drugs Affordable Again


During his State of the Union address, President Trump pledged to drive down drug prices.

Bipartisan Sense on Patent Office Bias


The Patent and Trademark Office, the federal agency charged with securing certain intellectual property, has become an enemy of America's inventors.

If You Quit


This column is about something I've thought about doing before and that's just saying the heck with it. Some of you might say it a bit differently.

Thailand's Watery Cave - Something We Can Learn


The world celebrated the rescue of 12 Thai soccer boys from a flooded cave in Mae Sai, Thailand. We grieved over the loss of one brave man, Saman Kunam who sacrificed his life to deliver supplies to the trapped boys. Many of us watched the media reports fearfully, prayed and hoped for a miracle.

FBI Agent Peter Strzok: I Checked My Beliefs at the Door


Peter Strzok, the former deputy assistant director of the Counterintelligence Division of the FBI, testified on July 12 before two House Committees. In his opening statement, he said: "Let me be clear, unequivocally and under oath: Not once in my 26 years of defending my nation did my personal opinions impact any official action I took."

It's Time for the FDA To Embrace Digital Technology


The FDA's drug regulators want to know everything. They require pharmaceutical companies to conduct years of testing to prove that experimental medicines are safe and effective.

A New Low in the Media's War on Fracking


Rolling Stone just dropped a bombshell -- or so it claims in its article, "'The Harms of Fracking': New Report Details Increased Risks of Asthma, Birth Defects and Cancer."

NAFTA Supplies America with Energy and Power


The Trump Administration unveiled an agenda for "energy dominance" shortly after taking office, promising to curb the global influence of countries like Russia and China with American energy exports.

Reducing Global Energy Turmoil with Fracking


When President Trump pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal, analysts warned that Iran's crude oil production and exports could decline, forcing crude oil prices up. Call it "turm-oil" in the energy markets.

Don't Gamble the Planet's Future on Unproven Technologies


A group of senators recently introduced a bill that aims to combat climate change by funding research into "negative emission technologies," which take greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere and store them underground.

Democrats' Immigration Dogma is Damaging African American Communities


If you're a Democrat and you question the party orthodoxy on immigration, prepare to be excommunicated.

Animal Research is Crucial for Pets — And Their Owners


A team of researchers is testing a groundbreaking vaccine that could prevent cancer in dogs.

Want To Save the Environment? Support Offshore Drilling


Several states are preparing to sue the federal government. They're trying to halt Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke's planned expansion of offshore oil and natural gas drilling. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, the most vocal opponent of Sec. Zinke's plan, claims the drilling "threatens our environment and our economy."

Trump Pushes the Ethanol Blend Wall


President Donald Trump intends to hand out $12 billion to various farmers to offset the financial losses they are facing due to his trade war. That's his attempt at directly padding his supporters' pockets.

America - Exceptional, not Nationalist


Some of the liberal criticism of President Donald Trump since his election stems from an intellectual tradition that gained tremendous influence in the West during the 1960s, especially in American universities. According to what historians have labeled the New Left, a more radical strain of the American left, America is just another example of a toxic nationalist state, not unlike certain imperial or even fascist states.

Both Parties Drug Pricing Plans Would Chill Innovation and Threaten American Lives


Since Nancy Pelosi became House Speaker in 2007, Republicans have spent an incredible amount of time and energy pushing back against her progressive policy proposals. That's why it's odd that the GOP's newest drug pricing bill is a watered-down copy of one of Pelosi's worst ideas.