While the pro-war faction in the U.S. continues to demonize the Arab oil producers, few people dare mention that America’s chief military ally in the Middle East, Israel, is now using the energy weapon more brazenly than any country in recent memory. Proof of that can be found by looking at the aftermath in Gaza and Lebanon. Consider the following:
?On June 28, Israeli aircraft launched at least nine missiles at the
transformers at the Gaza City power plant, the only one in Palestine.
Two days later, they bombed all four roads leading to the plant so as
to prevent any repair work on it. The attacks cut off power to roughly
65 percent of the Gaza Strip and quickly created water shortages. By
the way, the 140 megawatt power plant was insured by the Overseas
Private Investment Corporation, an arm of the U.S. government.
?On July 13 and again on July 15, Israeli aircraft bombed the oldest
and largest power plant in Lebanon, the 346 megawatt plant at Jiyyeh.
Several fuel storage tanks were hit, which resulted in a spill that
sent some 10,000 to 15,000 tons (2.8 million to 4.2 million gallons) of
heavy fuel oil into the Mediterranean Sea. The oil slick has polluted
150 kilometers of the Lebanese coast and has spread north into Syrian
waters. According to the United Nations Environment Program, the
spill’s pollution could rival that from the Exxon Valdez, which in 1989
polluted the Alaskan waters in Prince William Sound. Already, more oil
has leaked from the Jiyyeh tanks than from the large 1999 Erika oil
tanker spill in the Atlantic. Beirut’s Daily Star newspaper calls the
Jiyyeh spill “the worst marine crisis to ever hit the east
Mediterranean.”
?In early August, Agence France Presse reported that Israel was
blocking two fuel tankers from entering Lebanese waters. The tankers
were prevented from delivering their cargoes to two power stations, one
at Biddawi in northern Lebanon and the other in Zouk, just outside of
Beirut.
In all, the infrastructure damage in Lebanon may total more than $3.6 billion. But it’s not just the loss of infrastructure that counts, it’s the loss of energy and access to energy. The fight between Israel and its neighbors is not just about land. It’s also about who gets electricity and motor fuel. And for its entire history, Israel has succeeded because it has had plenty of both.