Originally posted by Lonestar
*wanders in two days later*
Not really; I think Hezbollah's strategic goals are to maximise civilian casualties, both Israeli and Lebanese.
*wanders in two days later*
Not really; I think Hezbollah's strategic goals are to maximise civilian casualties, both Israeli and Lebanese.
It's a good thing I was talking about Hezbollah's proven ability to launch cross-border raids on IDF sites rather than troops in Lebanon, which, as you pointed out, were only in Lebanon intermittantly.
They launched one raid, and captured a few soldiers. Once they had captives, there would be no further point of Hizbullah raids, and that one raid they did carry took months to plan. Fruther corss border raids would serve no political or military purpose. And of course, all it took was one raid for Israel to launch its attack, making this point moot.
Hmmm...I disagree. If Israel had kept airstikes limited to Southern Lebanon (Ignoring the rest of the country, which had failed in it's responsibilities as a nation-state.) Hexbollah would have still gone after as many soft targets as possible, especially as it became apperently that the IDF was either hunkering down or prepareing to invade.
Again, very simply, I think you are wrong. Saying something does not make it true, and I have seen you make no real arguement as to why you think so, only make the claims that this must be what Hizbullah wants, without muct knowledge of what HIzbullah is, does, who supports it, whatever.
EDIT: I would add that Hezbollah's purpose (resisting the IDF component in Lebanon) had been resolved. Hezbollah started this round of fightng, not Israel. Lebanon added to the problem by not doing anything to rein in an armed militia that has a habit of attacking a militarily superior neighbor that's also unpredictable.
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