"Early on, officials estimated that cluster munitions littered 400 sites, anywhere from a house to an entire village. The number now stands at 590, and U.N. officials said they are dumbfounded by the intensity of the firing in the war's last days, when it was clear a cease-fire was approaching.'It's impossible for me to work out what the logic was," said David Shearer, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Lebanon. "To me, it just seems outrageous that it would happen as it did.'"
Well, one person certainly doesn't seem outraged. What did President Bush have to say in recent days? (See: "Bush encourages U.S. investment in Lebanon, Washington Post, 9/25/06):
"Our goal, and our mission, is to help Lebanese citizens and Lebanese businesses not only recover, but to flourish, because we believe strongly in the concept of a democracy in Lebanon."
That prioritization was not clear when it was exactly one month after Fouad Siniora pleaded with Bush to accelerate the implementation of a cease-fire (at which point Bush pledged he was doing everything he could to press Israel to "contain the damage" and limit civilian casualties) that the cessation of hostilities finally took effect. That is why in the last 72 hours of the conflict, as we all watched the New Year's Eve-style countdown until the cease-fire on CNN, Israel pounded the South with cluster munitions with methodical, insane repitition - in a manner "tantamount to shooting a dead body 20 times," according to Chris Clark, the program manager for the U.N. Mine Action Coordination Center, as quoted in the Post.
So...the State Deparment is still "investigating" Israel's use of these weapons and whether they violated previous agreements - don't expect any harsh condemnations soon. These probes apparently don't make it very far:
"During President Bush's first term, the State Department investigated whether Israel misused U.S.-made Apache helicopters in its assassinations of Palestinian leaders. State Department officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose internal debates, said that lower-level officials had determined that Israel had violated its agreements with the United States, but, the officials said, the finding was quashed at a more senior level,"
("State Dept. Probes Use of Bombs," Washington Post, 8/26/06).
In the meantime, keep investing! Let's be honest: with 8 percent of Lebanese believing that the U.S. supported their country when polled in the end of July, the situation can really only stand to improve. At least we are on the right track - yesterday, President Bush thanked the delegation he sent to Lebanon to address the country's reconstruction:
"I appreciate you all taking time to go over to Lebanon and show the face of America," he said, "we're a compassionate people, we care when people suffer."