Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I am sceptical too.
Just saying, Arabs wont do anything against Israel now as there is too much to loose because of Western backing of Israel.
But as always the geopolitical landscape is ever changing. If a opportunity would present itself, certainly Israel would be in trouble.
Has happened before, during the Outremer period when Salah Ad Din Ayuubi and Rukn Ad Din Baybars destroyed the Crusader States.
No, Hezbollah is a small non-state actor without a navy, without an air-force, without billions of dollars of military aid and political support from a superpower, etc ...now what will Hezbollah do next? this is a very serious escalation up the ladder
can the resistance not assassinate the israeli leaders like this? surely they have some intelligence ?
It is incredible that the Israeli Embassy in Jordan is still standing, especially considering 50% of people in Jordan are Palestinians ... If Palestinians themselves can't remove an Israeli Embassy in their heartland which they control, then there is no hope of wider Arab or Islamic solidarity and nor should they be able to expect such a thing.Absolutely. What should really be happening is that Arab masses should be inundating the streets in their respective countries. Irrespective of strict protest rules in those countries. Instead what we are seeing is a very soft response. People should be defying their leaders and holding them responsible. What we are witnessing is clearly insufficient and frankly pathetic.
I have mentioned this a couple of times already but the Zionist occupation of Palestine was created and sustained through western dominance. First UK and then the USA.
Zionists are nothing more or less than modern day colonial settlers and once the balance of power on the planet changes within a generation , then the narrative that they are an anomaly in the ME will become mainstream around the world.
No, Hezbollah is a small non-state actor without a navy, without an air-force, without billions of dollars of military aid and political support from a superpower, etc ...
There is a huge power asymmetry between Hezbollah (and Hamas etc) and Israel/USA. The way to offset that is via asymmetric and guerrilla warfare, but they cannot respond to targeted assassinations / drone strikes in the same way, it's simply not possible.
It is indeed a huge escalation, though, and Seyed Nasrallah previously promised a strong response to any Israeli assassinations in Lebanon, so we will for sure see a strong response by Hezbollah. Although to go to full war over this would be very stupid, and Hezbollah are not stupid like others, so they will try to respond in a calculated way that restores deterrence without escalating to a full war (which would entirely obliterate large parts of Lebanon, like we see Gaza being turned to dust, a fate no Lebanese wants).
Another constraining factor is the fact that so many Lebanese Christians celebrated this attack and they support Israel due to their hatred of Hezbollah.
Turkey = NATO member with full economic and diplomatic relations with IsraelWith Israel seemingly to no longer be able to win wars, and with its declining relative power against power center of Turkey, Gulf, Egypt and Iran. It may well be that Israel willbe history in mere 50 years into the future.
It's very difficult for a guerrilla movement to restore deterrence against a much stronger power. Especially since Hezbollah usually tries to avoid targeting civilians or resorting to illegal means of warfare that the Zionists use (e.g. cluster munitions in HUGE numbers, white phosphorus, etc). Their best hope is to extract a clear cost from Israel. Intelligently to prevent major escalation, perhaps by targeting Israel's offshore gas facilities - extract a cost without a big loss of life which would tip them into full war.I totally agree with your post.
What do you think a proportionate response could be that would restore deterrence?
They obviously cannot assasinate any top Zionist leaders and are already engaged in small scale skirmishes on the border.
Even if someone words were definitive, that means nothing without a right trusted source and it's pure speculation, no need to say.
I'm not sure, he went to school in Iran. Iran likes him. Otherwise he doesn't stand out.I dont know why that guy is a leader.
What are his merits to say something and people following him?
I understand Soleimani was a cool guy, a action man who came from common people.
But what has done Nasrallah, besides talk?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.