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Tamir fought in Lebanon from 1985
until the Israeli withdrawal in 2000.
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CAIRO — The humiliating performance of the elite
Golani Brigades in die-hard battles against Hizbullah resistance
fighters in southern Lebanon has cost its commander his prestigious
post, Israeli media reported on Monday, August 7.
The Israeli Chief-of-Staff has decided to reassign
several top army leaders over failure to achieve a military victory
against Hizbullah over the past four weeks, according to Israel's
daily Yediot Ahronot.
Among the first to loose his job was Brigadier
General Moshe Tamir who has been commanding the elite Golani Brigades
since 2001,
said the Hebrew-speaking daily.
Tamir fought in Lebanon from 1985 until the Israeli
withdrawal in 2000, first as a soldier and an officer in the Golani
Brigade, and eventually as its commander.
Thirteen Golani troopers were killed and 12 others
wounded in clashes with Hizbullah fighters in the Bint Jbeil town,
four km (2,5 miles) on Wednesday, July 26.
The Golani is an infantry brigade that was formed
in 1948 and is one of the most highly decorated units in the Israeli
army.
It has earned a reputation for its die-hard
soldiers, esprit de corps, and initiative; elements of the Golani
brigade are frequently employed for particularly difficult tasks
requiring highly-skilled infantry.
Far From Defeated
Speculations are rife that Israel might go as far
as replacing its incumbent chief-of-staff Lieutenant General Dan
Halutz.
Halutz, who has been hospitalized at least three
times since the Lebanon war began on July 12, is blamed by many
Israeli politicians and citizens for the failure to defeat Hizbullah.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert held
consultations with army commanders Monday on the fighting in Lebanon,
rocket fire against Israel and future developments.
An Israeli soldier was killed and four others were
wounded in fierce fighting with Hizbullah fighters Monday morning in
Bint Jbail.
The Israeli army also acknowledged on Monday that
Hizbullah was far from defeated despite nearly a month of fierce
Israeli air, sea and ground assaults.
"Crushing Hizbullah is not like ordering
pizza. It takes time," Brigadier General Yossi Kuperwasser told a
news conference a day after Hizbullah rockets killed 15 Israelis,
including 12 soldiers, in the deadliest day of the war for Israel.
In a wide-ranging assessment, he claimed Israel had
inflicted serious damage on Hizbullah but the group still possessed
thousands of short-range rockets and hundreds of longer-range weapons.
Kuperwasser, until recently head of the army's
intelligence research department, conceded there was little chance of
completely eliminating Hizbullah's rocket-launching capability any
time soon.
"They still have rockets and they're going to
use them," he said.
Israeli military planners had envisioned a swift
victory without a large ground invasion.
That strategy failed with about 10,000 Israeli
troops embroiled in fierce fighting with Hizbullah, which reportedly
has an estimated 2,000-3,000 well-armed and trained fighters.
Jane's World Insurgency & Terrorism says
Hizbullah is considered the region's most capable non-state armed
group.
"Islamic Resistance guerrillas are reckoned to
be amongst the most dedicated, motivated and highly trained of their
kind," it said in a recent report, referring to Hizbullah's armed
wing.
"The increasingly sophisticated methods used
by Islamic Resistance members indicate that they are trained using
Israeli and US military manuals; the emphasis of this training is on
the tactics of attrition, mobility, intelligence gathering and
night-time maneuvers."