|
Security and Defense: Udi
Adam's war
Aluf Ehud "Udi" Adam
(in Hebrew: אהוד ("אודי") אדם) is a general in the Israel Defense
Forces and currently the head of Israeli Northern Command. Adam has
received a B.A. in Psychology and Sociology from Bar Ilan University
and later studied at the School for War Studies in Paris, where he
received a M.A. in Strategic Studies. His military career began in
1976 when he joined the Israeli Armor Corps. Before his current
posting he was the commander of the Israeli Technological and
Logistics Directorate.His father was General Yekutiel Adam, former
Deputy Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defence Forces, who was killed
during the Lebanon War on June 10, 1982.
Last month, the Northern Command conducted a
massive exercise to practice war with Hizbullah. At the time, senior
officers claimed that the IDF's working assumption was that the
border could flare up at any moment, although it's doubtful anyone
believed then that the situation would evolve into an all-out war.
The exercise was considered a groundbreaking
success in that it simulated a new concept in the art of warfare
under consideration by the General Staff. Dubbed "Integration of
Branches," the concept essentially takes the chief of staff out of
the operational picture and sets the regional commander, in this
case OC Northern Command Maj.-Gen. Udi Adam, in charge of what the
IDF is now calling the "operation zone."
In the past, the regional commander was only
in charge of his own ground forces plus a restricted section of the
battle zone. Air and navy forces were under the command of the chief
of staff, as were decisions about incursions into enemy territory.
This new concept, Adam's brainchild, was
implemented last week for the first time in Operation Change of
Direction against Hizbullah. In contrast to previous wars, Adam is
running the show. He is in charge of ground forces operating in
Lebanon, navy missile ships and IAF fighter jets, all out of the
underground bunker at command headquarters in Safed. IDF Chief of
Staff Lt.-Gen. Dan Halutz is still in the picture, but more on the
level of setting policy, dealing with the diplomatic echelon and
overseeing Israel's other fronts - in the Gaza Strip and the West
Bank.
But for Adam, his officers say, Operation
Change of Direction is more than just another war. He is the first
son of an IDF general to also become a member of the General Staff.
His father was Maj.-Gen. (res.) Yekutiel Adam, the former IDF deputy
chief of staff, killed in June 1982 during Operation Peace for
Galilee in Lebanon, the same country where his son is currently
pursuing the war against Hizbullah.
Kuti, as he was called, had been appointed
head of the Mossad by Menachem Begin but was killed before he could
take up the post by a Lebanese gunman at the age of 54, becoming the
highest-ranking officer in IDF history to be killed in action. He
was the mastermind behind the famous Entebbe raid as well as the
bombing of the Osirak nuclear reactor in Iraq.
When Adam speaks of his father the emotion
is noticeable in his voice. "I think and don't think about him,"
Adam told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday. "He accompanies me
throughout the fighting. Once this is all over I will have time to
sit and think things through."
The impact the slain general had on his son
is evident. Adam is one of those tough and strict commanders who
keeps a safe distance from the public eye, just like his father, his
officers say.
The Northern Command post is Adam's second
position as an IDF major general, an appointment he received last
year after he already had one foot out the door following the
completion of his tenure as OC Logistics Directorate, in which he
oversaw the smooth military implementation of the disengagement. He
is a rare bird within the General Staff, avoiding politicians, and
has very few confidants, those who serve with him say. He is far
from arrogant and weighs every word before speaking.
Adam, his officers said, took the news of
the kidnapping of two soldiers in the North last week by Hizbullah
very hard. "He recognizes that there was an operational failure
there," one officer explained. "But at the moment there is a war and
we try not to focus on it." Brig.-Gen. Avi Ashkenazi, brother of
Maj.-Gen. (res.) Gabi Ashkenazi, a former deputy chief of staff and
the newly-appointed director-general of the Defense Ministry, has
been appointed to head an investigative committee into the incident.
But with time running out for Israel's
operation in the North, Adam is under pressure to step up the
offensive so the operation can be declared a victory for Israel,
with Hizbullah dealt a severe enough blow to prevent it from even
thinking about launching any such future attack.
That offensive is currently focused on how
to stop the Katyusha rocket launchings. The stated goal of the
mission is to "significantly hurt" Hizbullah, but even though
several members of the General Staff said this week that 40-50
percent of the group's military capabilities had been destroyed, it
still succeeded in firing between 100-150 rockets a day at Israel.
Officers also speak about "high-ranking" Hizbullah operatives killed
in the action. But ask them for the names of the bad guys killed and
they suddenly turn quiet.
So where has the damage been done? Israel
has been laying siege to Lebanon, has bombed the Beirut Airport as
well as highway bridges and entire neighborhoods, but Hizbullah
remains as stubborn an enemy as it was before the operation was
launched. Until now, the majority of Israel's offensive has been by
air and last week's assault on central Lebanon appears to have also
proven effective in destroying some of the terrorist organization's
long-range missiles.
But to get to the Katyusha launchers in the
south, the IDF has decided to deploy elite units inside Lebanon in
pinpoint operations similar to the one during which two Maglan
soldiers were killed on Wednesday. The IDF has been holding back
from recommending a massive ground incursion although the Northern
Command, Adam insists, is ready for the possibility.
The thing about the air campaign, a
high-ranking IAF officer explained this week, is that it was based
on intelligence and since Israel is not on the ground in Lebanon,
the intelligence is difficult to come by. The IDF, however, does not
want to have to send troops into Lebanon, officers said. The loss of
lives there would be unbearable, they explained, referring to a list
of surprises in store for them should ground forces enter - ranging
from Hizbullah covert cells to hundreds if not thousands of mines
and explosive devices planted along the border.
But Adam, the man at the forefront of the
campaign, says that damage has been caused to the Hizbullah.
Yes, he admits, it is still firing rockets at Israel but it is also
simultaneously suffering loses. Time is of the essence here, he
says, and while some generals have spoken of the need for another
week, Adam seeks more than that. "This won't take months or a year
but we do need several more weeks," he says.
Adam, however, is not fooling himself into
believing that a military operation will solve the Hizbullah
problem. He believes the violence will ultimately only cease via a
diplomatic solution, one that sees Lebanon fully implement UN
Resolution 1559 calling for the disarmament of Hizbullah as well as
the deployment of Lebanese soldiers along the border with Israel.
"There is nothing that can be solved just by
the military," he says. "There is a need for a diplomatic solution
and that is what we are doing - trying to create the optimal
conditions for a diplomatic solution."
|