J
jollyjacktar
Guest
Well hello yourself Chanman. I do prefer a Canadian site, and find this more to my liking. I honestly have not gone back to the other once I came here.
Brad Sallows said:>Now those of you who doubt the need for Israel to continue its present course need to remember,
I doubt the utility of Israel continuing its present course unless it intends to make a serious effort to remove Hezbollah from Lebanon.
you missed my point entirely. The Israelis are whacking civilians as collateral damage. Their enemies do it AS POLICY.Koenigsegg said:I concur.
But doing a lot better then them is not exactly something to be proud of...
Just like having 100 people killed in a terrorist attack is nothing to look down on, or belittle compared to 9/11.
tomahawk6 said:I have not read about a single Hezbollah member being killed in the air strikes. Yet the media trumpets all the civilian dead. My guess is that most of the dead are Hezbollah followers. The US released info on the 25,000 US "nationals" in Lebanon and many are Hezbollah sympathizers.
To the suffering people of Lebanon - you reap what you sow - you elected Hezbollah - they acted as they always have. Lay your blame where it lies - your choices at the ballot box. You chose this war with Israel at election time.
The Lebanese, unlike the Palestinians, can at least clearly blame Hizbullah for lighting the fuse after several years of relative calm. But Israel is treading a fine line between alienating the Lebanese from Hizbullah and uniting them against their outside aggressor. And if Israel cannot achieve a decisive victory against Hizbullah with air power, and has to add ground forces, it risks getting bogged down in southern Lebanon once again.
On the other hand, the timing of Hizbullah’s kidnap may have been designed precisely to trigger an Israeli backlash: having gone in so heavy in Gaza in response to the first kidnapping, Israel could hardly stand by and watch as two more soldiers disappeared. Many suspect Hizbullah wants to drag Israel into a war on two fronts, perhaps with the backing of Syria and Iran. These two countries provide financial and material help to both Hamas and Hizbullah and they benefit from chaos and instability in the region. If the fighting prompts not Hizbullah’s capitulation but a breakdown in the fragile balance of power in Lebanon, triggering another of the country’s periodic civil wars, the conflict could spread wider.
bilton090 said:WTF, The Lebanese government hasn't done a thing for 20 yrs + about the Hezbollah
well, that doesn't invalidate the statement, though does it? Still holds true. ;Dchanman said:It hasn't even been 20 years since the normally accepted end-date for their civil war (1975-1990 or 1975-1991 depending on the source)
chanman said:It hasn't even been 20 years since the normally accepted end-date for their civil war (1975-1990 or 1975-1991 depending on the source)
GO!!! said:True, but there was a Lebanese authority in Lebanon when it was occupied by Syria - and they did'nt do anything about Hezbollah either. At best they were ineffective, at worst, complicit.
(from http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2006/07/18/lebanese-soldiers.htmlOn Tuesday, Livni said a ceasefire could happen if the two Israeli soldiers are released, Lebanese troops are deployed along the border and with a guarantee that the Hezbollah militia would be disarmed.
chanman said:Those second and third conditions seem like they would be harder to achieve if they weaken the Lebanese government (or at least the non-Hezbollah portions of it as someone will be bound to suggest). If anything, wouldn't they need a stronger government in power in Lebanon to be able to impose or forcibly disarm the Hezbolla militia?
bcbarman said:Israel has been ready for this since the end of the Yom Kippur war, they want a fight, and this nation is better prepared for a fight then anyone.