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Arms stopped for Isreal


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7 hours ago, Longcol said:

 

Can't see anything happening until Netanyahu loses power in Israel. Current situation seems to be more about his desire to cling to power than any realistic long term strategy.

 

 

That's exactly what he's been doing- his days were numbered until (conveniently) the 'Hamas attacks' happened. 

 

Most leaders have said he is the problem, standing in way of negotiations.

 

He'll be finished sooner or later, then hopefully quickly be forgotten and suffer a dog's death like Ariel Sharon.

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8 minutes ago, Baz1 said:

That's exactly what he's been doing- his days were numbered until (conveniently) the 'Hamas attacks' happened. 

 

Most leaders have said he is the problem, standing in way of negotiations.

 

He'll be finished sooner or later, then hopefully quickly be forgotten and suffer a dog's death like Ariel Sharon.

Didn't he have the main hamas negotiator killed?  That's one way to break down any negotiations 

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4 hours ago, banjodeano said:

Didn't he have the main hamas negotiator killed?  That's one way to break down any negotiations 

It seems not for the first time; it should go without saying that I'm not supporting Hamas, and never have done.
All the Times Israel Has Rejected Peace With Palestinians
In the U.S., Hamas is considered anathema, for understandable reasons. Its original 1988 charter is explicitly antisemitic and calls for the obliteration of Israel.

(A new Hamas charter was issued in 2017 and states that “Hamas affirms that its conflict is with the Zionist project not with the Jews because of their religion.”)

However, there have long been clear signs that factions within Hamas were moderating and open to long-term agreements with Israel.

In 1997, Khaled Mashal, then the top Hamas leader, offered a 30-year ceasefire to Israel. Israel did not respond — but did immediately try to assassinate Mashal in Jordan.

In 2004, Sheik Ahmed Yassin, Hamas’s chief religious leader, called for a 10-year truce with Israel if it returned to its pre-1967 borders. Israel assassinated him two months later.

There are many more examples of this, along with Israeli disinterest demonstrated in the most extreme ways possible.

In 2012, according to an Israeli peace activist, the head of Hamas’s military wing had become convinced that Palestinians should negotiate a long-term truce with Israel.

On the same day Ahmed Jabari, Hamas’s military chief, was reviewing a draft proposal for such a truce, Israel assassinated him.

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6 hours ago, banjodeano said:

Didn't he have the main hamas negotiator killed?  That's one way to break down any negotiations 

Yes, and any new Hamas leader would also probably be murdered.

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