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The UN is dangerously naïve

The UN are looking for a “quick fix” to the conflict between Hezbollah (a terrorist organisation committed destroying Jews and the Jewish state) and Israel. This is ridiculous. The problem throughout the last few years, indeed the last few decades, is that a series of quick fixes have stopped or averted conflict at the expense of addressing the root causes. Do the UN want to solve this problem, or do they just want to hide it?

The UN has condemned Israel’s response to Hezbollah’s attacks as “disproportionate”. Since when has proportionate force resolved a conflict? Disproportionate force, by definition, means one side wins and hence the conflict ends. Proportionate force means that violence is perpetual, a zero sum game, extending misery and suffering as far as possible, which is what the Hezbollah would-be martyrs want. Is the UN knowingly delivering Hezbollah strategy?

It’s at times like this that I really struggle to see any value in the UN. It should be the world authority that everyone looks to and respects, it isn’t and that’s because when it comes down to it it’s staffed by idiots, led by idiots and seems to develop and deliver policies dreamed up by naive idiots in a university debating society.


Interestingly, the French have already vetoed a NATO peacekeeping force post-conflict...


I don't know where to begin so I'll try to stick to one point.

The overt objectives of israels bombing and invasion of lebenon are the retrieval of two captured soldiers and the destruction of Hizbullah or at least its military capability.

If we accept that concept alone we must surely question the bombing of Beirut, the deliberate crippling of the Lebanese ecomomy and government, and the disregard for civilian life. Also creating half a million refugees and destroying 50 thousand homes, some schools, a hospital, lots of bridges, airports..... none of which could be regarded as legitimate targets in line with the above goals.

I don't think any thinking person could believe that direct military action will result in the completion of either of those goals.

Firstly the ease with which shia militants in Lebanon can get small and medium sized arms on the international market or smuggled from Iran or Syria is not going to change, so any disarmorment is temporary.

Secondly Shia Muslims, and indeed, other Lebanese citizens will not be de-radicalised by pictures of exploded children. By the reality of exploded children. Israels enemy to the north will not be removed through violence.

Thirdly Lebenon has been greatly destabelised. The worse economic and social conditions get, the more likely it is that Israel will be blamed at a popular level. This will be bad.

Finally I believe it is unlikely that the two soldiers remain alive.

The invasion then has no purpose, or a sinister purpose.

If you accept this position, then you can add other, shorter words to disproportionate.


Its a side point so I wanted to put it seperately.

John Bolton US Ambassador to UN "Still no-one has explained how you conduct a ceasefire with a group of terrorists".

Well with different levels of success try:

Ireland, were thing are much much better thanks to long and difficult negotiations.
Spain, were Zapatero's government has achieved a permanant ceasefire with ETA.
Nepal, were the forces demandind democracy made deals with Maoist rebels to stabalise the country.

That's just three off the top of my head. I guess they don't teach diplomats this stuff any more.


This morning the BBC asked the question 'What can Iran do to help Hezbollah?'. Is the BBC in favour of Hezbollah being helped? A question like 'What can X do to help Lebanon strikes me as ok, to be encouraged in fact, as they're still being knocked to shit for reasons that are beyond their control (or at least, the media coverage I've seen has never suggested that the Lebanese Government are in a position to stop Hezbollah). Did the BBC ever ask what Afghanistan could do to help Al-Qaeda?

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