webfusion
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2004
- Messages
- 9,795
You don't justify Israel's expansion outside its borders.
Not only is it justifiable, it is amazing that you can sit there and tell me definitively where Israel's "borders" were ----- There were no "borders" in May of 1967. There were only Armistice (cease-fire) Lines, which had been negotiated on the Isle of Rhodes in 1949, and those lines had been routinely violated by terrorists (fedayyin) to kill jews across the lines for years.
By June 5th, 1967, those arbitrary lines seemed to provide little in the way of security to Israel, as the combined Military Forces of the surrounding States went on the alert for attack. With a mere 9-miles at the "waist" (Netanya-to-Tulkarm), the Israelis were not interested in sitting behind those fragile demarcations of the Green Lines and waiting for the massive assault to commence.
So, the "expansion" outside the "borders" was
a) not a violation of borders
b) not illegal
c) justified by any standard of international morality
Are you one of those, Ion, who thinks that jews should not be allowed to live in certain areas? Are you one of those, Ion, who believes in the concept of "judenrein" ?