pbel
Gold Member
- Feb 26, 2012
- 5,653
- 449
- 130
The Israelis are in a no-win, no-win situation, the more it Bombs from the sky the more hated she becomes World-Wide... She has the technology and American Bombs to kill without her-own casualties but she fears sending troops because the right wing ZioNut's greater fear is the Israeli backlash at the polls, hence no boots on the ground which have cost more IDF soldiers lives than the last incursion...
A no-win in the War or Politics as World-Wide criticism as the cowards bomb from the sky killing civilians like Dresden and Guernica...
Is Hamas winning the Gaza war James Dorsey
By James M. Dorsey
Israeli destruction of Gazan infrastructure has turned the strip into a modern day Dresden. But returning Gaza to the Stone Age has not stopped Hamas, the Islamist militia in control of the territory, from inflicting significant political and psychological damage on Israel. Israeli military and intelligence sources fear that fundamental Israeli intelligence failures have put Hamas in a position to increase Israel's political cost and determine when Israel's longest war against the Palestinians will end.
Already, Israel's almost two-month old war against Hamas has shifted from a sledgehammer approach intended to shock the Islamist militia into accepting Israeli demands for demilitarization into the one thing Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu had wanted to avoid: a war of attrition that would strengthen his right-wing critics at home and risk Israel losing control of ceasefire negotiations in which Egypt did Israel's bidding.
A no-win in the War or Politics as World-Wide criticism as the cowards bomb from the sky killing civilians like Dresden and Guernica...
Is Hamas winning the Gaza war James Dorsey
By James M. Dorsey
Israeli destruction of Gazan infrastructure has turned the strip into a modern day Dresden. But returning Gaza to the Stone Age has not stopped Hamas, the Islamist militia in control of the territory, from inflicting significant political and psychological damage on Israel. Israeli military and intelligence sources fear that fundamental Israeli intelligence failures have put Hamas in a position to increase Israel's political cost and determine when Israel's longest war against the Palestinians will end.
Already, Israel's almost two-month old war against Hamas has shifted from a sledgehammer approach intended to shock the Islamist militia into accepting Israeli demands for demilitarization into the one thing Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu had wanted to avoid: a war of attrition that would strengthen his right-wing critics at home and risk Israel losing control of ceasefire negotiations in which Egypt did Israel's bidding.