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Extraction Summary

7
People
5
Organizations
4
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book excerpt / memoir page (evidentiary production)
File Size:
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a memoir by Ehud Barak (indicated by the header) included in a House Oversight Committee production. The text details Barak's advice to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert during the 2006 Lebanon War, warning against mission creep and urging a quick conclusion. It retrospectively critiques the war's management, the lack of clear objectives, and the heavy cost in lives despite the UN cease-fire negotiated by Tzipi Livni.

People (7)

Name Role Context
Ehud Barak Narrator / Former Prime Minister
Author of the text (indicated by header '/ BARAK /'), advising the current government.
Ehud Olmert Prime Minister of Israel
Received advice from Barak; criticized for handling of the war.
Shimon Peres Senior Politician (Former PM/President)
Referred to as 'Shimon'; consulted with Barak.
Dan Halutz IDF Chief of Staff
Mentioned as being caught up in operational details.
George W. Bush US President
Supported Israel's position regarding the start of the war.
Tony Blair British Prime Minister
Supported Israel's position regarding the start of the war.
Tzipi Livni Foreign Minister of Israel
Negotiated the UN cease-fire resolution.

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
Israeli Government
Cabinet responsible for war decisions.
IDF
Israeli Defense Forces (implied through 'Israeli troops', 'generals', 'air force').
Hizbollah
Opposing militant group in Lebanon.
United Nations (UN)
Issued cease-fire resolution.
House Oversight Committee
Source of the document production (Bates stamp).

Timeline (2 events)

August 2006
UN Cease-fire resolution negotiation
UN
July-August 2006
2006 Lebanon War (Second Lebanon War)
Israel/Lebanon border region

Locations (4)

Location Context
Country under attack by rockets.
Location of war/Hizbollah.
City in Israel reached by rockets.
City in Israel reached by rockets.

Relationships (2)

Ehud Barak Political Advisor / Predecessor Ehud Olmert
Olmert called Barak for advice on the war strategy.
Ehud Barak Political Colleague Shimon Peres
Referenced familiarly as 'Shimon' who also asked Barak for thoughts.

Key Quotes (4)

"Do your best to bring things to an end as soon as you can."
Source
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Quote #1
"Resist that temptation, I told him. I said there was a danger that, before they knew it, he and the other minister would be in way over their heads."
Source
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Quote #2
"The result was an operation that lasted 34 days, nearly twice the length of the Yom Kippur War."
Source
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Quote #3
"And for what, many Israelis were soon asking themselves."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,808 characters)

/ BARAK / 115
Minister, I felt it was not my place to criticize Olmert publicly when Israeli troops
were in action. Two days in, in fact, I told a television interviewer that the
government had every right to respond and was doing so effectively. Olmert
phoned to thank me. When he, like Shimon, asked what I thought the government
should do next, I was straightforward: “Do your best to bring things to an end as
soon as you can.” I said that Halutz and the other generals would be caught up in
the operational details, which made his role and that of the cabinet even more
critical. “In any operation, you’ll have an idea about what represents a satisfactory
exit point. But there will be a temptation, when you get close to that point, to take
just one more step, to keep going until you’re absolutely sure you’ve reached it.”
Resist that temptation, I told him. I said there was a danger that, before they knew
it, he and the other minister would be in way over their heads.
In pure military terms, there were just two realistic choices in responding the
Hibzollah attack: a deliberately limited and fairly brief operation, or a full-scale
war. We ended up doing neither. The result was an operation that lasted 34 days,
nearly twice the length of the Yom Kippur War. Our air force flew 12,000
missions, more than in 1973 and nearly twice as many as in the 1982 Lebanon
War. Hizbollah fired about 4,000 rockets into Israel – from a stockpile we
estimated to number nearly 20,000 – and not just at the border settlements but as
far south as Hadera and Haifa, keeping hundreds of thousands of Israelis under
effective siege. More than 120 Israeli soldiers and 44 civilians were killed. So were
hundreds of Hizbollah fighters and, inevitably, many Lebanese civilians as well,
with a predictable surge of criticism from much of the outside world. Only
President Bush and Britain’s Tony Blair steadfastly reminded the critics of how the
war had actually begun.
The one putative victory for Israel was the UN cease-fire resolution that Tzipi
Livni helped to negotiate in August. At least on paper, it contained a commitment
to a “long-term solution” including the disarmament of Hizbollah and the
“unconditional release of the abducted Israeli soldiers, which has given rise to the
current crisis.” But as Israeli newspapers began speaking to the returning soldiers
and officers, a picture emerged not just of a long and difficult war, but a lack of
clearly communicated military objectives, and an often-chaotic chain of command,
which ended up costing Israeli lives. Our final advance, alone, shortly before the
cease-fire, claimed the lives of some 30 soldiers. And for what, many Israelis were
soon asking themselves. One of the newspapers most supportive of the operation at
401
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028249

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