More innocent civilians killed and more idiots shouting Anti-Semite!
A big step backward on all fronts!
Well done Israel!![]()
What will be accomplished from the Israeli strikes on Gaza?
Approximately 15,000 armed Palestinians. That's the size of the military force the Israel Defense Forces will face if a major operation in the Gaza Strip goes forward. These militants, from various Hamas factions, will presumably be aided by a few thousand militants from other Palestinian groups.
Training camps of the Izz-al Din al-Qassam and interrogation and detention centers were deserted when they were bombed. But police centers in the Strip, which give services to people, were teeming. No one believed that they would be bombed.
What about Hamas breaking the cease-fire to begin with?
Oh right, we have to be tolerant towards them, breaking cease-fire is part of their "nature". It's a cultural thing. Racist me...
Israel was supposed to allow all neccessary food, water, and supplies into Gaza. They failed to do this. So in their own way, they also broke the cease-fire.
Denying food, water, and supplies is a passive act of violence.
Israel broke the ceasefire back in November 4th by shooting 6 Palestinians militants and rocekts were fired at Israel in response
This isn't a video game. Pure attrition isn't the only way for an army to disintegrate. Sometimes, morale breaks and they quit. (Not seeing it for Hamas, however.)Moreover, Israel hasn't hit the core of Hamas' military strength, the al-Qassam brigades, but the police-like forces. Let's hear Amira Hass:
Senseless or not, I agree with the bolded part: more grist for the Hamas recruiting mill.So, no, it won't significantly weaken Hamas, I think. In the end, it's another round of senseless bloodletting that makes peace a rather more distant than a closer prospect.
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Denying food, water, and supplies is a passive act of violence.
A very short-sighted poll
I regard the current violence as another nail in the coffin of the two-state solution. It will soon be too late to resurrect that idea.
The region is on the path to a one-state solution.
What about Hamas breaking the cease-fire to begin with?
Well, if you want to play that game, Hamas broke the ceasefire a mere 5 days after it went into effect.
They fired off a few Qassams on June 24. Quite a bit of restraint from Hamas, considering they had agreed to a ceasefire that began on June 19.
Well if you want to play that game then the Zionist Movement spent 50 years planning and implementing the creation of Israel on a land where other people lived and without regard for those people. Since it's creation Israel has spent 60 years persecuting those people in order to drive them off the land they once owned and had their livelihoods.
It seems that Hamas and Gaza are in deed at war with Israel, if I wish to play dictionary definition lotto today.Don't you read the news? When Palestinians bombard Israel with rockets, they are "threatening the cease-fire" but the cease fire is not actually broken until Israel launches rockets.
Lots of examples:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article4224397.ece
"Gaza Rockets threaten ceasefire.."
Same rules hold for peace treaties and negotiations.
One can argue that there had to be a war before they could agree a ceasefire. One could.wikipedia said:A ceasefire (or truce) is a temporary stoppage of any armed conflict, where each side of the conflict agrees with the other to suspend aggressive actions. Ceasefires may be declared as part of a formal treaty, but they have also been called as part of an informal understanding between opposing forces.
Don't you read the news? When Palestinians bombard Israel with rockets, they are "threatening the cease-fire" but the cease fire is not actually broken until Israel launches rockets.
Lots of examples:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article4224397.ece
"Gaza Rockets threaten ceasefire.."
Same rules hold for peace treaties and negotiations.
The ceasefire was between Hamas and Israel.Today's rocket-attacks have been claimed by the al-Asqa Martyrs Brigades, a military splinter group of Fatah.
In terms of breaking Hamas' strength? Not much. The first day, yesterday, had some 250 Gazans killed. Let's be generous and say they're all Hamas militants.
Now look at this analysis in Haaretz:
Do the math. That's 60 days, or 2 month, with the same amount of success. Provided, of course, that all those casualties are indeed militants. They're not, it'll be more like the roughly 50% success rate Israel had in previous actions, so multiply by 2.
Moreover, Israel hasn't hit the core of Hamas' military strength, the al-Qassam brigades, but the police-like forces. Let's hear Amira Hass:
So, no, it won't significantly weaken Hamas, I think. In the end, it's another round of senseless bloodletting that makes peace a rather more distant than a closer prospect.