While Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz were fantasizing about solving all of Israel’s problems by taking down every Arab and Persian leader, one by one, and installing some kind of pro-American, pro-Israel series of democratic republics in their place, something inconvenient happened. Israel discovered that it could not militarily dislodge Hizbollah from southern Lebanon, nor defeat Hamas in Gaza, and that it cannot protect itself against rocket attacks. And those rockets are only going to improve in range, payload, and accuracy. Right now, they only threaten some villages in the north and Sderot in the south, but the security threat will increase over time.
With both Hamas and Hezbollah gaining strength on Israel’s borders and developing rockets with longer ranges, Sderot, its advocates say, is a bitter sample of what more prosperous and distant parts of Israel may face if the threat here is ignored. And to a growing number across the political spectrum, it has inspired a collective rescue operation.
Israel faces more than a demographic time-bomb. They face a technological time-bomb as well. It isn’t necessarily a risk of a nuclear bomb going off in Tel Aviv that should be of foremost concern to the IDF. It’s reaching a point where Israel can be harassed out of existence by constant, lethal rocket attack, or by other similar means.
Anyone who is seriously thinking about a peace plan that will secure Israel’s place in the region, must take into account that Israel’s leverage grows weaker by the day. They are not as strong as they were three years ago, and they’re much weaker than they were eight years ago. If Israel’s advantage erodes beyond a certain point, there will be no peace at all, because the Arabs will know victory is possible again.
I think it is possible for Israel to get a deal, now, that will provide them security. But I don’t think that window will stay open for too much longer. These rocket attacks are a perfect example of why Israel doesn’t have any time to waste. They can’t stop the attacks, and they’ll never have a future free from these attacks unless they make a deal.
Even then, they may be harassed out of the region, but they’ll be in a much better position, morally and internationally, to defend themselves after an agreement is reached.
Take the wall and make it a mile tall. Then all the rockets will bounce off the wall and rebound to their origin point. They will blow up there and kill those nasty persons.
You heard it here first.
Maybe that’s what Bushco was intending with our own southwestern wall.
Unfortunately, this cunning plan is thwarted by suborbital Mexicans. It’s the newest technique – immigrants launched by ICBM!
Well, the wall is miles into Palestinian land. And the West Bank looks like swiss cheese….but hey…
Israel and the Green Zone have the same problem.
Time is running out on all fronts.
Saudi Arabia has called for international pressure to compel Israel to accept the international monitoring over its nuclear activities.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=50376§ionid=351020205
Actually, Israel can indeed protect itself from rocket attacks, but there will be a political fallout the likes of which haven’t been seen.
Will, not would…
There are counties in Nevada, Montana & Wyoming with roughly the same land area as “Israel” & fewer than 500 people to relocate.
If they could make THAT desert bloom, Israel County, NV wouldn’t have a rocket problem at all.
This idea that Israel is on its last ropes is just wishful thinking. Israel is quite strong, and is more than capable of standing up to Hezbollah, Hamas and the other groups that want to steal their land. The rockets are a problem, but nothing they can’t survive. They have plenty of military power, lots of money, and the strong support of virtually the entire international community (a small lunative fringe of anti-Semites excepted.) They’ve been on that land for three thousand years, have defended it all comers, and are more than capable of defending it against the current group, who are arguably the weakest group, militarily at least, they’ve ever encountered.
It’s the Palestinians who need to accept defeat and perhaps begin to look for some other place to live. One person suggested the Nevada desert. That might be good. With their bigotry, contempt for the rule of law and obsession with violence they’d make ideal Americans. In any case, unless they change their behavior and learn to accept international law and respect the Israelis, they’re going to be in big trouble. And, unlike the Jews, it doesn’t look as though they have any real support anywhere. Time’s running out for them, hope they wake up soon.
The Israelis should hold tight and refuse to enter any negotiations until the Palestinians formally recognize Israel, renounce their idiotic and long-lost war and accept Israel’s conditions. They have time and history on their side, definitely possess the moral high ground, and just need to stick to their position. The Palestinians couldn’t fight their way out of a wet paper bag, and the Israelis don’t have to worry about any serious military threat from them. Just hold tight.
In the reality-based community, advocacy for transfer:
sweeping generalizations about ethnic or national groups:
and inability to grasp the relative credibility of respective adversaries in regards to international law
not to mention the total lack of legitimate sources for such allegations mark a poster as a troll.
In a similar vein, this old but well worth a read 3-part series from the a-times raises some of the problems Israel now faces and higlights the Lebanon war as a more critical event than say Iraq. As they put it the Arab people saw the armies of Jordan, Egypt and Syria fight for 6 days in 1967 and lose: today they saw Hezbollah fight for 34 days and win:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/others/hezbollah.html