Kramer didn't do anything. Richard's is not Kramer!! It is dumb to keep saying "the Kramer Incident", as if it describes reality.

You mean Seinfeld wasn't a documentary?
I always wondered where those laughs came from.
Attack Hizbullah, not Lebanon in general, maybe? Attack military targets only, otherwise it is just doing what it accuses them of doing, attack civilian targets because it can't attack the military ones that are beyond it's reach.
Even if Mexico had terrorists launching rockets at our cities and even if Mexico wasn't cooperating, that doesn't give us the right to launch rockets at their cities killing their civilians. What we would have to do is simply invade Mexico and deal with the terrorists that way, without launching rockets into major Mexican metropolitan areas and killing civilians.
I would also like evidence that Lebanon was "able" to deal with Hezbollah but was unwilling to do so.

I assume you mean Europeans when you say that Zionism is a relatively new reason to hate Jews. Clearly there was a lot of resistance to Jewish immigration into the area that became Israel by the indigenous population well before Israel became a country .
I put it on the list based mostly on a discussion long ago between Capel Dodger and Cleopatra about whether Zionism had contributed to the antisemitism in Germany before WWII. Cleopatra argued that Zionism was not a factor at all and CD argued that it was a very significant factor. At the time I didn't know enough to judge between the two possibilities and I don't know more today about the issue. But it seems like it must have been more than zero so I put it on the list. From my perspective it seems likely that the notion that a citizen would have loyalties to another political entity would engender some resentment in the part of the population that considered themselves only German. It probably has that effect in the US today amongst the population that sees themselves as only American, but it doesn't seem to be that significant an issue with regard to cause of what antisemitism still exists in the US.
First of all ground invasion takes time, as opposed to an airstrike, mean while do you recommend to allow the terrorists to continue launching missiles at your innocent civilians and major metropolitan areas?
Secondly nice choice of argument, but that is not what I posted, Lebanon was unable or unwilling to deal with Hezbollah themselves. This equates to the same thing for Israel doesn't it. They are forced to respond to bring an end to the missile attacks and the did respond to end the missile attacks as quickly as possible as any other country would do. Mean while the international community sat back, the same community who refuse to follow through on their disarmament of Hezbollah, and complained abouts Israels needless destructive action. So as I said before, Hezbollah was successful in backing Israel into a no win situation, in which Israel's reaction was sure to be criticized no matter what they did to protect their citizens!![]()
Israel could have invaded Lebanon and offset the civilian casualties drastically, resorting to house to house raids where the specific missiles were launched from and arresting the people there.
Where did you get the idea that urban combat would produce fewer collateral casualties than precision bombing? I've never seen any evidence to that effect, and there's plenty of reason to think it's NOT true. How, for example, do you get a ground combat force to strike at Hezbollah assets in Beirut without a LOT of fighting, and a LOT of civilian casualties, just to get to the location of interest?
Now it might be true that an earlier, more agressive invasion into southern Lebanon would have been better at crippling Hezbollah, but that's not what you're claiming. And there were a number of reasons it didn't happen anyways. One is that the Israeli air force overestimated their capabilities, and another is that the Israeli army has gotten out of practice with conventional warfare because of their focus on antiterrorism operations. These were mistakes, but they're the sort of mistakes that countries make in good faith.
By the way, do you remember the faked Reuters photos from Lebanon? Did you see the pictures of the old ambulances with holes in the roof from missing ventilation domes which were claimed to be the targets of Israeli air strikes?
A ground invasion would involve going house to house and arresting the Hezbollah fighters after tracking the location of the launch sites.
Simple ground fighting doesn't necessarily equal civilian casualties.
Please explain how that would be the case.
How would house to house searches and arrests equal substantial civilian casualties?
I saw them, I've never seen evidence they were faked.
Where did you get the idea that urban combat would produce fewer collateral casualties than precision bombing? I've never seen any evidence to that effect, and there's plenty of reason to think it's NOT true. How, for example, do you get a ground combat force to strike at Hezbollah assets in Beirut without a LOT of fighting, and a LOT of civilian casualties, just to get to the location of interest?
Now it might be true that an earlier, more agressive invasion into southern Lebanon would have been better at crippling Hezbollah, but that's not what you're claiming. And there were a number of reasons it didn't happen anyways. One is that the Israeli air force overestimated their capabilities, and another is that the Israeli army has gotten out of practice with conventional warfare because of their focus on antiterrorism operations. These were mistakes, but they're the sort of mistakes that countries make in good faith.
If you read Haaretz, it's nothing to do with good faith. It's to do with hubris and incompetence.
The fuss made over that photo was unbelievable.
There were Australians stranded in a village that was bombed when no missiles were being fired from it, they were being fired from a heavily fortified mountain nearby that air strikes could not touch.
A ground invasion would be the only viable option. Launching missiles ourselves would be far too risky due to the very high potential for collateral damage. The fact that organizing a ground invasion might take a little time would not be worse than killing numerous innocent civilians caught in the crossfire between the two countries.
Israel could have invaded Lebanon and offset the civilian casualties drastically, resorting to house to house raids where the specific missiles were launched from and arresting the people there.
And they'd still be at those sites - why?
Easily: Hezbollah fighters take up positions in civilian-occupied houses. It's pathetically easy for them to guarantee civilian casualties in a ground fight.
You think you can just go in and arrest groups armed with anti-tank missiles, like this is an episode of COPS? Seriously, Dustin, how clueless are you?
Which ones did you not think were fake? The ones Reuters admited were photoshopped? Or the ones with the ambulances showing old rusted holes from missing ventilation domes which were claimed to be the result of missile strikes?
So Israel should let its own citizens die to protect the innocent citizens that Hezbollah is using as a shield.
I think you would be hard pressed to find any country that would make that decision.
Aren't the Israeli citizens also innocent?
Further more what is Hezbollah's responsibility in all of this, why must Israel be the only ones who are concerned with saving innocent life.
I find it most interesting that you would side with an terrorist organization than an country that was unprovokingly attacked and forced to defend itself.
The troops would be across the areas they were being launched from and could get to the launch sites quickly.
I must be pretty clueless. Terrorists are arrested in Iraq and Afghanistan all of the time.
The ambulance photographs.