Duke of Marmalade
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Speaking for myself, though I suspect @Purple is not a million miles away, I am totally against indiscriminate revenge against civilians or any violation of international law. I also accept that the Hamas barbaric massacre has a context; though not sure about the 56 years of "suffocating" occupation.You and the Duke however take issue with anyone who shows concern for the imprisoned innocent.
Hey, no need to have a go at him because of his size...As for Mickey D, he is just a high school socialist who never grew up.
Don't worry, it all goes over his head.Hey, no need to have a go at him because of his size...
There is nothing funny about it. Republicans consistently siding with the oppressed.
Its just in the last 75 years Israel has gone from oppressed to oppressor.
Some around here just haven't kept up with the evolving situation.
I presume the other boards are overwhelmingly pro Palestinian.This thread is perhaps the most reasonable debate on this topic anywhere.
I would like to apologise for the tone of my below post, which was uncalled for.
The term ‘illegally occupied’ used inter alia by the Irish media and the UN Secretary General gives the impression that Israel launched an attack on the West Bank. It didn’t; it was the victim of aggression in the Six-Day War, when Israel was invaded by the Kingdom of Transjordan. If there was any illegal occupation here it was Jordan’s occupation and annexation of the West Bank in 1948, a maneuver carried out to prevent an independent Arab state being established there in line with the League of Nations / United Nations mandate for Palestine. It’s just wrong and biased to give the impression that Israel’s presence is somehow equivalent to e.g. Russia’s invasion of the Crimea.I presume the other boards are overwhelmingly pro Palestinian.
What occurs to me is that almost every point made in this thread, including the ones in the above post (doesn't need an apology), are of themselves valid. Gutteres point is a keen example. "The Hamas barbaric attacks did not occur in a vacuum. They should be seen in the context of 56 years of suffocating occupation". Yes, valid point, but for me absolutely despicable that the sec gen of the UN should make it.
That all sounds very plausible and almost depicts Israel as 99% in the right. I presume Gutteres has some sort of point in his "suffocating occupation" but are you arguing this was necessary to try and prevent October 7th? Of course one can try counterfactuals - like what if Israel had responded differently to Hamas taking control with a mission to wipe them off the map.The term ‘illegally occupied’ used inter alia by the Irish media and the UN Secretary General gives the impression that Israel launched an attack on the West Bank. It didn’t; it was the victim of aggression in the Six-Day War, when Israel was invaded by the Kingdom of Transjordan. If there was any illegal occupation here it was Jordan’s occupation and annexation of the West Bank in 1948, a maneuver carried out to prevent an independent Arab state being established there in line with the League of Nations / United Nations mandate for Palestine. It’s just wrong and biased to give the impression that Israel’s presence is somehow equivalent to e.g. Russia’s invasion of the Crimea.
After WW2 the Allies / USA occupied Germany and Japan. No one says this was an 'illegal occupation'. They remained there until 1949/1952, i.e. until the new FRG, GDR and reconstituted Japan no longer represented a threat. But the West Bank / Gaza clearly represent a threat, not only to Israel but in the wider Middle East. If not anti-Semitic it’s biased and unacceptable to lecture Israel, a democracy that is under threat, for doing what the West did in a similar situation. There is no ‘illegal occupation’, Israel did not aggressively invade these territories – it responded to armed agression, and it is unlikely the situation will change until relations between the West Bank/Gaza are normalized.
There is a lack of humanity in most of the rhetoric coming from the Israeli government. They will do nothing to help find a peaceful political solution to the current problem because they, like Egypt and Jordan and most of the Arab countries in the region, do not want a functioning Palestinian country.Israel has the right under international law to engage Hamas and when Hamas acts like that, Israel has considerable leeway under international law to attack those targets.
Yet that is exactly what is happening.Speaking for myself, though I suspect @Purple is not a million miles away, I am totally against indiscriminate revenge against civilians or any violation of international law.
You have lost me here. 'the Haamas barbaric massacre has a context'. I agree.I also accept that the Hamas barbaric massacre has a context; though not sure about the 56 years of "suffocating" occupation.
The issue for me is about the pronouncements of our leaders. It is not enough that what they say is correct. Thankfully our leaders stopped short of putting the Hamas butchery in context
I don’t know whether it is that they don’t want or don’t care.They will do nothing to help find a peaceful political solution to the current problem because they, like Egypt and Jordan and most of the Arab countries in the region, do not want a functioning Palestinian country.
People say that truth is the first casualty of war, but it may equally be humanity.There is a lack of humanity in most of the rhetoric coming from the Israeli government.
No it's not. If that was what was happening there would be tens or hundreds of thousands of dead Palestinians. If Hamas fire a rocket as Israel the IFD fire at the launch position. Hamas are choosing to maximise the casualties amongst the civilian population because that makes for bad Press for Israel. They care not a whit about their own people.Yet that is exactly what is happening.
Because it would take hours to put it in context and whataboutery in the face of evil just sounds like a justification for that evil.You have lost me here. 'the Haamas barbaric massacre has a context'. I agree.
'Thankfully our leaders stopped short of putting the Hamas butchery in context' If you think that why should our leaders not say so. Understandably not in the immediate aftermath of the Hamas attack,
That's complete and utter nonsense and the sort of hyperbole I'd expect from the anti Semitic hacks in RTE, not from you. You can argue that Israel's response is disproportionate (whatever that actually means) or that it's counter productive or that it is knowingly putting civilian lives at risk because of the blood lust of Hamas but you know well that Israel are not carpet bombing anywhere.but now 3 weeks later when Israel has responded by carpet bombing areas full of civilians including children.
I agree.I think that the wider picture very much has to be seen.
I agree with your post but I'm firmly of the opinion that they don't want it. Imagine it's 1985 and the IRA of the was running Northern Ireland after winning an election and murdering the main SDLP and Unionist politicians. Imagine of they had destroyed the economy, enriched themselves, controlled the media and were still committed to the destruction of this State, viewed members of out Police, Parliament, armed forces and judiciary as legitimate targets and were actively trying to kill them. They had also openly stated that they regarded anyone who supported any of those institutions of even the existence of this State as worthy of death. Imagine that they still wanted to take us out of the EU (EEC), were isolationist and ethno-nationalist... In that circumstance would you support them and want them running this country?I don’t know whether it is that they don’t want or don’t care.
It's the total absence of a strategic response that I find striking. There is certainly a tactical military response but there is no response that leads me to think that there is an end goal in mind. When planning it's a good idea to ask the "and then what?" question three times. I don't think the Israelis have asked it once.What is a proportionate response? It's certainly not a numbers game as many examples, of which Hiroshima is probably the starkest example, show.
Agree with that. There is no good ending in this for Israel, no matter which course they follow. No good for Gaza either. Everything is going to plan for Hamas.It's the total absence of a strategic response that I find striking. There is certainly a tactical military response but there is no response that leads me to think that there is an end goal in mind. When planning it's a good idea to ask the "and then what?" question three times. I don't think the Israelis have asked it once.
Yep, death, destruction, radicalisation and the reduction in the chances of the peaceful coexistence of Israel and a Palestinian State. That was Hamas's objective and the fundamentalists running Israel are knowingly playing into their hands.Agree with that. There is no good ending in this for Israel, no matter which course they follow. No good for Gaza either. Everything is going to plan for Hamas.
There are thousands of dead Palestinians up to half of them children. https://apnews.com/article/israel-hamas-war-gaza-health-ministry-health-death-toll-59470820308b31f1faf73c703400b033No it's not. If that was what was happening there would be tens or hundreds of thousands of dead Palestinians.
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