sam04u
Comrades, Comrades!
- Joined
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- 2006
Slidey, had Israel never agreed to the recent prisoner exchange you may have been making a point with your argument. Lets take a look at the most recent clashes between Hezbollah, a so-called terrorist agency, and Israel, laughably called a beacon of democracy and freedom.Slidey said:Nothing of the sort. I'm aware Israel has made some fuck-ups, some of them pretty bad. At the end of the day however, it's Hezbollah that's antagonising as a terrorist agency, and Israel that's responding to its threats. It's a war of sorts, and no side can really claim moral high-ground if people are dying by their actions.
In July of 2006, Hezbollah engaged (attacked) Israeli forces on the Lebanese and Israeli border, and they captured two of these Israeli soldiers and held them captive. They demanded only one thing, and it was "release all Lebanese captives held in Israeli dungeons".
Israel vehemently opposed those demands and instead pledged to disarm Hezbollah, assassinate Nasrallah, reclaim the captured soldiers, and create a buffer zone (occupy) the southern Lebanese town Bint-Jbeil to the border of Lebanon. In every one of their objectives they failed. At the end of the conflict, Hezbollah remained armed, and came out of the conflict stronger and with more support. At the end of the conflict, Nasrallah was alive and well and made a victory speech, saddended by the loss of civilians on both sides of the conflict. At the end of the conflict, the two captives remained captive in Lebanon. At the end of the conflict, Bint-Jbeil was dubbed the "town of resistance" by Lebanese and the broader arab world.
In ALL of Israel's objectives they failed. And more remarkably, was that 2 years after the war, Israel agreed to Hezbollah's initial agreements. They released many of the Lebanese captives held in Israeli prisons. Conceding that they were held captive, not independantly from the conflict, and abiding by the terms set forth by Hezbollah. If that doesn't legitimise Hezbollah, if that concession doesn't clearly highlight who the original antagonists are what will? Israel has been an antagonist in the region since the inception of the state, but that isn't to say Israel shouldn't exist. Israel however shouldn't assassinate the political leaders of it's neighbouring countries, it shouldn't meddle with their ecosystems, or ciphen their ever decreasing water supplies. Israel shouldn't illegally occupy land captured in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, it shouldn't impose, or influence economic sanctions on it's neighbours. Israel shouldn't restrict humanitarian aid, as a form of collective punishment, from entering the Gaza strip, when the Palestinian occupants resist an illegal occupation, recognised by international law.
If that isn't antagonism, there is no antagonism.
If you support the co-existance of Israel and Palestine, it should be the international consensus' version of an Israeli and Palestinian existance. That is to say, it should be based on the legal borders, the 1948 borders. Israel should not be allowed to illegally occupy and settle in the occupied land. That does not entail a peaceful co-existance. Infact if you wanted to find something to label as an disruptive factor in achieving this co-existance, it's Israel's unwaivering stance to not follow international law.However, as I support the co-existence of Israel and Palestine, I clearly cannot support something which seeks to disrupt that, namely Hezbollah.
They are not willing to accept the 'right of return', the right of Palestinians to return to their homes, or be offered proper compensation in the cases where Palestinians were driven out of their homes.
They are not willing to accept the internationally recognised, and world court ordered, 1948 borders.
They are not willing to accept the internationally accepted and recognised capital of the future Palestinian state being East Jerusalem, and Israel's capital rightly being Tel Aviv.
On ALL these key issues, Israel refuses to do what is expected of them by international law. Why is that?
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