The home front

The Wall Street Journal has a fascinating profile (subscription required) of an Israeli war protester turned hawk. A committed opponent of Israel's first war in Lebanon, she has no qualms about this one: Seven years later, Ms. Anteby finds herself living through a new Lebanon war. But she backs this one to the hilt. "This time we're fighting for our ...

By , a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies.

The Wall Street Journal has a fascinating profile (subscription required) of an Israeli war protester turned hawk. A committed opponent of Israel's first war in Lebanon, she has no qualms about this one:

The Wall Street Journal has a fascinating profile (subscription required) of an Israeli war protester turned hawk. A committed opponent of Israel's first war in Lebanon, she has no qualms about this one:

Seven years later, Ms. Anteby finds herself living through a new Lebanon war. But she backs this one to the hilt. "This time we're fighting for our survival," she says in her home here, a village overlooking the Sea of Galilee. Any Israeli who opposes the military campaign is just a "bleeding heart," she says."

Indeed, Israeli public opinion appears to be solidly behind the military campaign, and the government is getting more flak for being restrained than it is for being overly aggressive. So far, the civilian casualties in Lebanon don't appear to have changed that view. If the Bush administration pressures Israel into what its public sees as a premature end to the conflict, get ready for a strong backlash in Israel against the U.S. role.   

David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist

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