webfusion
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2004
- Messages
- 9,795
It's negotiable...
All of the Golan Heights, including the Shebaa Farms salient, was captured in the Six Day War 1967, and not in the Lebanon War of 1982. It was captured from Syria, not Lebanon. That bulge is a small, but vital, sector in the fortifications along the line which Israeli Defense Forces hold, and have held, since June 1967. It is likely negotiable, should the Syrians wish to enter negotiations, face-to-face, in order to end their official state of hostilites and I would venture the Lebanese could also sit at the table and put their claim forward with the Israeli government (after this election concludes, it will be Arik Sharon, again).
Other than a negotiated outcome, the Hexbollah can pound sand.
Their use of force of arms to "reclaim" the sector is merely an extension of the state of war, and can only be met with Israeli force in retaliation, in spades. To tell the truth, it is entirely possible, the next time those terrorist maniacs try to do what they did against the IDF, Arik Sharon might well order the IAF to fly right into the heart of Damascus and respond to the source. Or even manage a sortie to Natanz, Iran, and send a little message to those chief supporters of terror, and end their nuclear-reprocessing capabilities in the bargian.
Next case.
All of the Golan Heights, including the Shebaa Farms salient, was captured in the Six Day War 1967, and not in the Lebanon War of 1982. It was captured from Syria, not Lebanon. That bulge is a small, but vital, sector in the fortifications along the line which Israeli Defense Forces hold, and have held, since June 1967. It is likely negotiable, should the Syrians wish to enter negotiations, face-to-face, in order to end their official state of hostilites and I would venture the Lebanese could also sit at the table and put their claim forward with the Israeli government (after this election concludes, it will be Arik Sharon, again).
Other than a negotiated outcome, the Hexbollah can pound sand.
Their use of force of arms to "reclaim" the sector is merely an extension of the state of war, and can only be met with Israeli force in retaliation, in spades. To tell the truth, it is entirely possible, the next time those terrorist maniacs try to do what they did against the IDF, Arik Sharon might well order the IAF to fly right into the heart of Damascus and respond to the source. Or even manage a sortie to Natanz, Iran, and send a little message to those chief supporters of terror, and end their nuclear-reprocessing capabilities in the bargian.
Next case.
