PM Olmert and his whole government should resign

tnitsuj

Diamond Member
May 22, 2003
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0
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Looking at the events of the past month and the terms of this "cease fire" that was just passed..I have a hard time seeing how the Israelis came to this. They have gained absolutely nothing for all the blood sweat and tears, over 100 Israelis dead, 100's wounded, hundreds of millions of dollars expended, immense property damage...not to mention the over 1000 Lebanese dead and the post civil war Lebanon set back many years.

Hezbollah has just by surviving and forcing Israel to seek terms has beaten a modern western army. The entire Arab and Muslim world are looking at the frightening sight of an Arab military force directly confronting the vaunted Israeli military and holding its own. In fact Israel has had to make concessions on prisoners, territorry, minefields..etc. while Hezbollah has given up NOTHING. They aren't even going to get thier two POW's back!!???

The Israeli military underestimated the enemy and IAF general now chief of staff Halutz thought he could win this war by bombing Lebanons civillian infrastructure..as if that was going to work againts an dug in guerilla army. As rockets rained down on Israeli cities getting more and more intense as the days passed the IDF proved unable to defend the state of Israel from daily attacks. They didn't change strategy and instead of committing the huge number of reserves to go in on the ground and root out the enemy, occupy strategic territory, and force a favorable agreement sat on thier hands and did nothing.

So now we have the spectacle of Israel and the United States looking the fool in front of the entire world and right now around the world would be enemies are taking notes. Hezbollah are heroes and in some ways rightly so to the Arabs. The detterrent factor of the unstoppable Israeli military has been severely dilluted.

Lovely.
 

Screech

Golden Member
Oct 20, 2004
1,202
6
81
If the cease-fire includes a buffer zone controlled by UN soldieers with orders to attack hizbullah as necessary israel has not lost the war.

What it comes down to is whether or not hizbullah will be able to attack israel after this war, and that depends on the above. That is why you saw many arabs and hizbullah asking for a cease-fire that had no such buffer zone concept.
 

fallenangel99

Golden Member
Aug 8, 2001
1,721
1
81
I doubt Hezbollah is going to attack Israel when there are UN/NATO troops present in South Lebanon. It would not be in its best interest, plus the troops will probably destroy any and all Hezbollah structure in the south. Maybe Hezbollah has other plans, who knows.

I'm glad its over. It seems like both sides didn't gain a lot, and it looks like, honestly, Hezbollah came out the victor. The sole reason being it was able to survive the Israeli onslaught, despite the fact that Israel said that it would only take 2-3 weeks to destroy Hezbollah. Hezbollah offered to stop attacks a while back but Israel did not agree thinking that it would be able to destroy Hezbollah.. but nope, more civilians/Israeli soldiers had to die.

Also, according to the resolution that the Lebanese/Israel gov't and Hezbollah accepted, the 2 soldiers are to be returned, while Hezbollah will not be getting any prisoners in return (its initial demand for the release of the 2 soldiers).

The scary thought being, what if the Palestinians in the Gaza strip had the Katysusha rockets!?! They would easily be able to hit Tel Aviv.
 

Aisengard

Golden Member
Feb 25, 2005
1,558
0
76
The big losers in all of this is Lebanon. The Lebanese PM should resign for harboring terrorists in his country, causing all this to happen.

Israel just returns to status quo. But they didn't ask for this. They didn't ask to be continually attacked. Israel is interested in peace, that's why they signed a cease-fire. You seem to be under the impression that Israel was losing the war when they signed this deal. Nothing could be further from the truth. What were the Israeli casualties, under 100? Of 30,000+ troops? And you call that 'forced to sign a peace treaty'? And where do you get your information that Israel makes all these concessions? Where does it say Israel returns prisoners? Where does it say that Israel returns land? Last I knew, Israel was giving up nothing but Southern Lebanon, and they get their prisoners back unconditionally.

Don't spread your propaganda in here. Israel wanted one thing and one thing only, for Hezbollah to leave them alone. They're hoping the UN won't be completely inept this time, and the buffer zone and resolution will stop Hezbollah from firing one more rocket from Lebanon. They didn't sign the peace treaty because they were 'reeling'. They signed it because they want PEACE ABOVE ALL ELSE. And if this peace treaty will prevent loss of life, it should be seen as a victory.

Israel did not fail, they finally succeeded after years of failure to respond to the assaults on their country by terrorist groups. If the UN finally works like it's supposed to, it should be seen as a huge victory, not just for Israel, but for the entire Middle East.

The detterrent factor of the unstoppable Israeli military has been severely dilluted.

What? That makes the least sense out of anything you've written yet. Who defeated the Israeli military? Did Israel surrender? When did that happen? The IDF was and still is one of the most technologically advanced armies in the world. Fortunately, they spend enormous amounts of money to make sure they are accurate, and to prevent unintentional casualties. The HRW even commended the IDF for this.

Guerilla attacks in the Guerilla's own country are always going to be effective. I don't see how this diminishes anything.
 

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
Been watching this evolve. Hizbollah wins just by surviving and making a hard statement about Israel and it's association with the US.

Olmert assumed the control of Israel and it's proximate fate, and just by being new into the position he, as an untested 'rookie'
following in the footprints of Sharon, had to come on as an Ultra Hardliner just to appease the Hawk faction of the country,
and prove to it's citizens that he had what it took to face down the Arabs and their agressive behaivior.

There was every reason for Isreal to defend themselves against the cross border assult and kidnappings, as well as retaliation for
rocket artillary attacks on their homeland. However by bombing the cities of Tyre and Beruit back to the days of the Crusades and
warning the general population to evacuate, and then hitting hundreds as they complied with the order to leave, he overplayed his hand.

Hizbolah gains strength with the lebanese populous, as they made a statement in their political behalf, and fuels recruitment for the next
2 decades and at least the lifespan of all those from the ages of 5 to 30 - and we won't see their impact for anopther 15 years,
when the 5 yeare olds who remember loosing family members in this war become young vengful men in theit 20's led by
those 'war-hardened' vetrans with their hard fought experience having matured into their mid 40's.

Cyclic revenge as each succesive generaton collects the debts of their fathers, grandfathers, and previous forefathers.

Too much fun . . .

And the good old US of A - luckily, will always be remembered as the first act in response of rushing more weapons to the Israeli Army, i
n contrast with offering aid to the locals, responding promptly to evacuation of Americans working there, or even having Condumleeza Rice
rapidly get into the area for4 face to face negotions with Olmert and Lebanese Authorities.
We just lest the fledgling and fragile Democracy that we made such an effort to seed, get blown up and destroyed with out advice and consent.

Bad doggie.
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Israel lost? That's news to me...

Seems to me that they won. They have gotten the UN to do their dirty work and patrol Southern Lebanon for them...
 

Aisengard

Golden Member
Feb 25, 2005
1,558
0
76
The problem is it's lose-lose for Israel. They just chose the one that doesn't turn the world against them.

It's also all of you terrorist-appeasers and your ilk, condemning Israel if they defend themselves, and laughing at Israel if they do what you want - strive for peace. You are all pathetic sniveling hypocrites, and as you smirk in your armchairs at home, remember that people like you are the real reason why there will never be lasting peace in the Middle East.
 

tnitsuj

Diamond Member
May 22, 2003
5,446
0
76
You people are seeing this purely from the immediate problem of Hezbollah and cross border attacks from Southern Lebanon. This goes way beyond this.... Caroline Glick from the Jerusalem Post went into it far better than I could in the below article.

Comment: An unmitigated disaster
Caroline Glick, THE JERUSALEM POST Aug. 13, 2006

There is a good reason that Hizbullah chief Hassan Nasrallah has accepted UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which sets the terms for a cease-fire between his jihad army and the State of Israel.

The resolution represents a near-total victory for Hizbullah and its state sponsors Iran and Syria, and an unprecedented defeat for Israel and its ally the United States. This fact is evident both in the text of the resolution and in the very fact that the US decided to sponsor a cease-fire resolution before Israel had dismantled or seriously degraded Hizbullah's military capabilities.

While the resolution was not passed under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter and so does not have the authority of law, in practice it makes it all but impossible for Israel to defend itself against Hizbullah aggression without being exposed to international condemnation on an unprecedented scale.

This is the case first of all because the resolution places responsibility for determining compliance in the hands of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Annan has distinguished himself as a man capable only of condemning Israel for its acts of self-defense while ignoring the fact that in attacking Israel, its enemies are guilty of war crimes. By empowering Annan to evaluate compliance, the resolution all but ensures that Hizbullah will not be forced to disarm and that Israel will be forced to give up the right to defend itself.

The resolution makes absolutely no mention of either Syria or Iran, without whose support Hizbullah could neither exist nor wage an illegal war against Israel. In so ignoring Hizbullah's sponsors, it ignores the regional aspect of the current war and sends the message to these two states that they may continue to equip terrorist armies in Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority and Iraq with the latest weaponry without paying a price for their aggression.

The resolution presents Hizbullah with a clear diplomatic victory by placing their erroneous claim of Lebanese sovereignty over the Shaba Farms, or Mount Dov - a vast area on the Golan Heights that separates the Syrian Golan from the Upper Galilee and is disputed between Israel and Syria - on the negotiating table. In doing so, the resolution rewards Hizbullah's aggression by giving international legitimacy to its demand for territorial aggrandizement via acts of aggression, in contravention of the laws of nations.

Moreover, by allowing Lebanon to make territorial claims on Israel despite the fact that in 2000 the UN determined that Israel had withdrawn to the international border, the resolution sets a catastrophic precedent for the future. Because Lebanon is receiving international support for legally unsupportable territorial demands on Israel, in the future, the Palestinians, Syrians and indeed the Jordanians and Egyptians will feel empowered to employ aggression to gain territorial concessions from the Jewish state even if they previously signed treaties of peace with Israel. The message of the resolution's stand on Shaba Farms is that Israel can never expect for the world to recognize any of its borders as final.

By calling in the same paragraph for the "immediate cessation by Hizbullah of all attacks and the immediate cessation by Israel of all offensive military operations," the resolution treats as equivalent Hizbullah's illegal aggression against Israel and Israel's legitimate military actions taken in defense of its sovereign territory.

Operational Paragraph 7, which "affirms that all parties are responsible for ensuring that no action is taken contrary to paragraph 1 [which calls for a cessation of hostilities] that might adversely affect the search for a long-term solution, humanitarian access to civilian populations, including safe passage for humanitarian convoys, or the voluntary and safe return of displaced persons," all but bars Israel from taking military action to defend itself in the future. Any steps Israel takes will open it to accusations - by Annan - of breaching this paragraph.

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni had let it be known that Israel's conditions for a cease-fire included the institution of an arms embargo against Hizbullah. The government also insisted that the international force it wished to have deployed along the border would work to dismantle Hizbullah.

However, paragraph 8 puts both the question of an arms embargo and Hizbullah's dismantlement off to some future date when Israel and Lebanon agree to the terms of a "permanent cease-fire." In addition, it places the power to oversee an arms embargo against Hizbullah in the hands of the Lebanese government, of which Hizbullah is a member.

While the resolution bars Israel from taking measures necessary to defend its territory and citizens, by keeping UNIFIL in Lebanon it ensures that no other force will be empowered to take these necessary actions. Furthermore, paragraph 2 "calls upon the government of Israel, as that deployment [of the Lebanese military and UNIFIL] begins, to withdraw all of its forces from southern Lebanon in parallel. This means that Israel is expected to withdraw before a full deployment of Lebanese and UNIFIL forces is carried out. As a result, a vacuum will be created that will allow Hizbullah to reinforce its positions in south Lebanon.

Finally, the resolution makes no operative call for the release of IDF soldiers Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev now being held hostage by Hizbullah. By relegating their fate to a paragraph in the preamble, which then immediately turns to Hizbullah's demand for the release of Lebanese terrorists held in Israeli jails, the resolution all but eliminates any possibility of their returning home.

Aside from the resolution's egregious language, the very fact that the US has sponsored a resolution that leaves Hizbullah intact as a fighting force constitutes a devastating blow to the national security of both Israel and the US, for the following reasons:

# It grants the Lebanese government and military unwarranted legitimacy. The resolution treats the Lebanese government and military as credible bodies. However, the Lebanese government is currently under the de facto control of Hizbullah and Syria.
Moreover, the Lebanese army is paying pensions to the families of Hizbullah fighters killed in battle, and its forces have actively assisted Hizbullah in attacking Israel and Israeli military targets.

Indeed, the seven-point declaration issued by the Lebanese government, which the UN resolution applauds, was dictated by Hizbullah, as admitted by Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora and Nasrallah last week.

# It incites Shi'ite violence in Iraq. From a US perspective, the resolution drastically increases the threat of a radical Shi'ite revolt in Iraq. Hizbullah is intimately tied to Iraqi Shi'ite terrorist Muqtada al-Sadr.

In April 2003, Hizbullah opened offices in southern Iraq and was instrumental in training the Mahdi Army, which Sadr leads. During a demonstration in Baghdad last week, Sadr's followers demanded that he consider them an extension of Hizbullah, and expressed a genuine desire to participate in Hizbullah's war against the US and Israel.

It should be assumed that Hizbullah's presumptive victory in its war against Israel will act as a catalyst for violence by Sadr and his followers against the Iraqi government and coalition forces in the weeks to come. Indeed, the Hizbullah victory will severely weaken moderate Shi'ites in the Maliki government and among the followers of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

# It empowers Iran. Iran emerges as the main victor in the current war. Not only was it not condemned for its sponsorship of Hizbullah, it is being rewarded for that sponsorship because it is clear to all parties that Iran was the engine behind this war, and that its side has won.

The UN resolution does not strengthen the US hand in future Security Council deliberations regarding Iran's illicit nuclear weapons program because the states that object to any action against Iran - Russia and China - will continue with their refusal to sign on to any substantive action.

Indeed, Russia's behavior regarding the situation in Lebanon, including the fact that a large percentage of Hizbullah's arsenal of advanced anti-tank missiles was sold by Russia to Syria and Iran, exposes that Moscow's role in the current conflict has been similar to the position taken by the Soviet Union in earlier Middle East wars.

Furthermore, because the resolution strengthens the UN as the arbiter of peace and security in the region, the diplomatic price the US will be forced to pay if it decides to go outside the UN to contend with the Iranian threat has been vastly increased.

Many sources in Washington told this writer over the weekend that the US decision to seek a cease-fire was the result of Israel's amateurish bungling of the first three weeks of the war. The Bush administration, they argued, was being blamed for the Olmert government's incompetence and so preferred to cut its losses and sue for a cease-fire.

There is no doubt much truth to this assertion. The government's prosecution of this war has been unforgivably inept. At the same time it should be noted that the short-term political gain accrued by the US by forging the cease-fire agreement will come back to haunt the US, Israel and all forces fighting the forces of global jihad in the coming weeks and months.

By handing a victory to Hizbullah, the resolution strengthens the belief of millions of supporters of jihad throughout the world that their side is winning and that they should redouble efforts to achieve their objectives of destroying Israel and running the US out of the Middle East.

International legal scholar Prof. Anne Bayefsky assisted the author in analyzing the text of UN Security Council Resolution 1701.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
73,741
6,501
126
A few million people injected into the midst of millions of others without their consent should learn to settle their differences quickly and not drag them on and on for forty years and counting. Those millions and millions of will endlessly improve on their bargaining strategies and grow and grow in their power to get what they want. He who lives by the sword dies by the sword.
 

RichardE

Banned
Dec 31, 2005
10,246
2
0
This fight reminds me of the school play ground days. Where you would have that one snotty nose kid that always pushed the bigger kid, over and over and over. Finally the big kid beat the crap out of the smaller kid and than the teacher stepped between them. As the teacher was scolding the bigger kid, the lil snot nosed runt would smile and be like "see I won".

All Israel did was show they can kick people's asses, plain and simple. This war was just like that playground fight.
 

Jaskalas

Lifer
Jun 23, 2004
34,411
8,465
136
Originally posted by: fallenangel99
I doubt Hezbollah is going to attack Israel when there are UN/NATO troops present in South Lebanon. It would not be in its best interest, plus the troops will probably destroy any and all Hezbollah structure in the south. Maybe Hezbollah has other plans, who knows.

I'm glad its over.

This is FAR from over.

Hizbollah raided Israel for a reason, they will continue to wage war. The reason the UN wants its troops there is they will have orders to protect Lebanon and Hizbollah. You must remember the UNIFIL flag flew below the Hizbollah flag on their observation posts.

I would be greatly surprised if the UN forces had the courage to do what is required to stop Hizbollah. Israel was barely using enough force, and everyone called them murdering terrorists for it. Certainly those same people in command of the UN forces will not do the very thing they stopped Israel from doing.

Until I see action from UN troops against Hizbollah, I will consider this a victory for them and just another "Peace for our time" appeasement for an aggressive enemy.
 

ThePresence

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
27,727
16
81
I agree wholeheartedly with the OP. Olmert should immediately resign. As a matter of fact the whole Kadima should just close up shop.
 

RichardE

Banned
Dec 31, 2005
10,246
2
0
Originally posted by: ThePresence
I agree wholeheartedly with the OP. Olmert should immediately resign. As a matter of fact the whole Kadima should just close up shop.

:thumbsup:
 

BaliBabyDoc

Lifer
Jan 20, 2001
10,737
0
0
Originally posted by: ThePresence
I agree wholeheartedly with the OP. Olmert should immediately resign. As a matter of fact the whole Kadima should just close up shop.

Yeah but you're only saying that b/c they didn't get the 'total victory' or 'destruction of Hezbollah' that Olmert, IDF, and American neocon wanks fantasized about.

Olmert/Kadima screwed the pooch on this one but I seriously doubt Benji and Likud dropping cluster munitions into the Fall would have been any 'better' for Israel.
 

Doboji

Diamond Member
May 18, 2001
7,912
0
76
Originally posted by: ThePresence
I agree wholeheartedly with the OP. Olmert should immediately resign. As a matter of fact the whole Kadima should just close up shop.

Well if Israel gets a Hezbollah free southern Lebanon, and the unconditional release of the 2 soldiers.... I'd say it worked out ok.

Having said that...

I doubt this is really over.

-Max
 

Trente

Golden Member
Apr 19, 2003
1,750
0
0
Originally posted by: ThePresence
I agree wholeheartedly with the OP. Olmert should immediately resign. As a matter of fact the whole Kadima should just close up shop.

Damned be the day I voted for Olmert... I've actually seen him in person when he visited my workplace as the communication minister. He could be successful at such duties, but the position of a PM requires certain characters that he simply lacks. Add Peretz to that and an ex-pilot chief-of-staff and you got yourself a messy defense leadership right there.

I really hope I'm not misjudging this one, but the way I see it this war ended in a different manner than all previous Arab-Israeli conflicts.

I fear the days to come, when Iran and Syria get to rise their dirty heads after getting all fueled up from Hizbollah's new status as a result of this war. Believe me when I say, not only Israelis will feel the affect of it - as Jaskalas pointed, just as opportunist Hitler had a self confidence feeding itself thrusting his daring political moves during the 1930's, I see the Iranian president ("Hitler") and the Syrian president ("Mussolini") following footsteps similar to Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy respectively.
 

Kadarin

Lifer
Nov 23, 2001
44,296
16
81
I was hoping to see Hezbollah crushed, but instead it appears that we will get to see the spectacle of an ineffective UN force that essentially does nothing while Hezbollah and their Iranian masters scheme to rearm, refortify, and plot their next kidnappings and terrorist attacks.
 

magomago

Lifer
Sep 28, 2002
10,973
14
76
I think it was more of a tie. Isreal lost political power, but at the same time they disabled lebanon for a very long time...especially if you consider a lot of the civilian infrastructure that was destroyed. That sets back development of Lebanon atleat another 10 years.
 

Lemon law

Lifer
Nov 6, 2005
20,984
3
0
The fault is not in the Israelie leadership----the fault is in the strategy of collective punishment used by Israel for 58 years.

Get a clue---collective punishment no longer works---it now backfires and aids the terrorist. This is just round one in a new battle. The Israelies have now staved off the new immediate threat---soon the threat will be coming from new places.

Israel must now finally have to confront the right to return in a real way. Something collective punishment has allowed Israel to deny for 58 years.---and is now the defense that guarantees a terrorist victory long term.
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
70,416
5,962
126
Originally posted by: Lemon law
The fault is not in the Israelie leadership----the fault is in the strategy of collective punishment used by Israel for 58 years.

Get a clue---collective punishment no longer works---it now backfires and aids the terrorist. This is just round one in a new battle. The Israelies have now staved off the new immediate threat---soon the threat will be coming from new places.

Israel must now finally have to confront the right to return in a real way. Something collective punishment has allowed Israel to deny for 58 years.---and is now the defense that guarantees a terrorist victory long term.

Exactly.

Just some points:

1) Israel had the best opportunity in decades when Syria left Lebanon approx 1 year ago. They should have drawn close to the new Lebanese government and aided the Lebanese in getting Hezbollah out of the south. Opportunty lost.

2) Hezbollah is not the sort of organization that can be easily defeated. Military action alone is insufficient to destroy such an organization, you need to convince people not to support it. Israel's actions did just the opposite thus ensuring Hezbollahs survival.

3) This war definitely was politically motivated by a Noob trying to impress his electorate. The arguement can be made that Israel had legitimate reason to start the War the way it has, but it clearly was ill conceived and turned into a political fiasco for Israel.

4) If Hezbollah's ability to continue operations in the South of Lebanon is curtailed, then over time Israel wins. Hopefully the ceasefire and International force in the area assures that, but Hezbollah will probably find a way/place in which to continue carrying out actions against Israel.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
73,741
6,501
126
Israel has elections and the people can change leaders if they think the current one stinks.
 

SamurAchzar

Platinum Member
Feb 15, 2006
2,422
3
76
Israel just woke up from the peace illusions. Like Lebanon was sent 10 years back, Israel was sent 30 years back, to the days of Yum Kippur. Any de-militarzation of the state and politics is doomed now, and for a good reason. We all wanted to believe that peace could be achieved but it just isn't so.

 

Lemon law

Lifer
Nov 6, 2005
20,984
3
0
No Samur,

Israel just wanted to believe peace could be acheived while it kept what it stole---now they know it ain't gonna happen--- either Israel will get real and honestly confront the right to return---or they have to build a bigger army to retain what it stole.

The latter will just result in a bigger terrorist opposition---and faster than Israel can build a bigger army.---eventually Israel will lose all world support---its already happening.
Only the ever self-delusional Israelies don't see it coming.
 

Aisengard

Golden Member
Feb 25, 2005
1,558
0
76
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Lemon law
The fault is not in the Israelie leadership----the fault is in the strategy of collective punishment used by Israel for 58 years.

Get a clue---collective punishment no longer works---it now backfires and aids the terrorist. This is just round one in a new battle. The Israelies have now staved off the new immediate threat---soon the threat will be coming from new places.

Israel must now finally have to confront the right to return in a real way. Something collective punishment has allowed Israel to deny for 58 years.---and is now the defense that guarantees a terrorist victory long term.

Exactly.

Just some points:

1) Israel had the best opportunity in decades when Syria left Lebanon approx 1 year ago. They should have drawn close to the new Lebanese government and aided the Lebanese in getting Hezbollah out of the south. Opportunty lost.

2) Hezbollah is not the sort of organization that can be easily defeated. Military action alone is insufficient to destroy such an organization, you need to convince people not to support it. Israel's actions did just the opposite thus ensuring Hezbollahs survival.

3) This war definitely was politically motivated by a Noob trying to impress his electorate. The arguement can be made that Israel had legitimate reason to start the War the way it has, but it clearly was ill conceived and turned into a political fiasco for Israel.

4) If Hezbollah's ability to continue operations in the South of Lebanon is curtailed, then over time Israel wins. Hopefully the ceasefire and International force in the area assures that, but Hezbollah will probably find a way/place in which to continue carrying out actions against Israel.

Regarding #4...if this happens, why won't the world unite against Hezbollah, when it's obvious they are the ones who don't want peace?

I think this is a huge problem: Israel, in all its efforts, has little internationl support, and this is a large reason why many of their efforts fall short. It's very hard to achieve a goal when the world is, at worst, against that goal being achieved, and at best, criticizing your every move.

Israel would never convince Arab countries not to support Hezbollah. Their charter, their mission statement is the destruction - not only of Israel - but of all Jews worldwide. This is the major goal of many Middle Eastern clerics and fanatics, which control the Middle Eastern countries and direct their policies.

Israel has to convince the rest of the world that Hezbollah and their supporters are the root of the problem. The only way they can do this, unfortunately, is to rely on the UN to make decisions about their security for them. It's already been seen that Israel is not allowed to take care of itself, the world condemns them for it. The world will only support the victim, and international anti-semitic attitudes make it very hard for them to view Israel as the victim.

So, right now this would be my plan. Don't cross the blue line. Let the UN dictate your security for you. Even when Hezbollah violates the cease-fire, don't attack. PLEAD to the UN to do something about it. KEEP ON DEMANDING the world do something about these heinous attacks. BE VOCAL. For too long Israel accepted these terrorists silently. Then they had to do the inevitable, which turned out to gain not much of anything for them. Time for a new tactic. Try to show the world, as blind as they choose to be, that Hezbollah is not interested in peace. Show the world that Hezbollah must be destroyed.

The biggest part of that success is if the world takes off its anti-Semitic blinders and views the situation for what it really is. Then we can finally have a willing international force in there to decimate any terrorist group who tries to disrupt the peace. It has been shown Israel is not allowed to dictate their own security. The world will not allow peace on the Israeli's terms (which, unfortunately, means no peace ever, since Hezbollah is a group of terror and war), so there must be peace on the world's terms. Let them see how it really is.

This is frustrating, but Israel must live through it - they can - and overcome the most difficult obstacle for peace - the world surrounding it.