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IDF Chief of Staff Dan Halutz
Israel's defense industry reaches record sales
PM to Halutz: I stand behind you
Furious Brig. Gen. Hirsch resigns after being singled out for war failures
Israeli army: Lebanon overflights are pressure tactic on international community
Military appointment crisis -- Senior officers likely to resign
Southern Command Chief says Hamas setting up missile division in Gaza
German defense minister to visit Israel and Lebanon
Adam resigns from Northern Command - says war failures due to moral failures
Maj. Gen. Yiftah Ron-Tal fired over Lebanon war criticism

 
Halutz admits war failure but refuses to take responsibility
By Associated Press  January 3, 2007
 
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Israel failed to achieve all its objectives in its summer war against Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon, the Israeli army chief admitted Tuesday, but he rejected calls to resign as a result.

Summing up internal army inquiries into the war, which ended inconclusively in a cease-fire after 34 days of fighting, the army chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, said Israeli forces caused considerable damage to Hezbollah and killed "hundreds of terrorists."

But he added, "We were not successful in reducing the short-range rocket fire on Israel's north until the cease-fire." Hezbollah fired about 4,000 rockets at Israel during the fighting.

Israel pounded Lebanon with airstrikes at Hezbollah targets and infrastructure, and ground forces swept through south Lebanon. "We attacked the Katyushas (rockets), but unsuccessfully," he said.

"There were cases in which officers did not carry out their assignments, and cases in which officers objected on moral grounds to their orders," Halutz said, an apparent reference to resistance against attacking south Lebanese towns and villages.

He said these instances of refusal "ran counter to the army's basic values." He said a senior officer was suspended as a result.

Halutz said it would be a mistake to declare a military goal of freeing the two Israeli soldiers captured in a cross-border Hezbollah raid, which set off the fighting -- though that was one of the goals stated at the outset of the conflict.

Halutz, who is under pressure to stop down because of the shortcomings of the war, said he decided to stay on and "correct what can be corrected." He said resignation now would be "running away," adding, "I have not heard my superiors calling on me to resign. If they do, I will respond."

He noted conclusions of an inquiry by a former chief of staff that included vague definitions of goals and faulty work in command centers.

Halutz indicated that reserve soldiers would be called up for longer annual service to undergo better training, and said a plan to shorten the length of regular service, now set at three years, would be delayed.

A committee appointed by the government is in the midst of its investigation of the war and its outcome. The internal army inquiries did not call for resignations, but the government committee has the power to do so. Halutz said if that committee called for his resignation, "of course" he would comply. Defense Minister Amir Peretz has made the same pledge.

The conflict ended Aug. 14 with a U.N. Security Council resolution that posted a reinforced peacekeeping force in south Lebanon with a mandate to keep the area clear of armed forces.

The fighting left more than 1,000 people dead on both sides, according to the U.N. and Israeli and Lebanese officials. Lebanon's Higher Relief Council, a government group, says the majority of those were Lebanese civilians. UNICEF also says most of those killed were civilians, and that about a third of them were children.

Of the total deaths, 159 were in Israel, including 39 civilians who were killed in rocket attacks.
Israel claimed 600 Hezbollah fighters were killed but that figure was not substantiated, with the group acknowledging only 250 of its fighters killed.


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