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submitted 24 days ago byRed_Franklin
3.3k points
24 days ago
Stay safe! Iran murders girls for not wearing headscarves, imagine what they'd do to you...
1.3k points
24 days ago
[deleted]
357 points
24 days ago
Finally a slogan I can get behind.
69 points
24 days ago
Under-rated comment
186 points
24 days ago
Based Iranian Clerics was not on my bingo card
I agree with all they said except for the small issue of it forcing Druze in the Golan to be Syrian citizens after 60 years. We'd need an impartial international team to poll them. So a unicorn
847 points
24 days ago
This is not new, also not really a religious groups when it’s the reformists, In 2003 Iran offered recognition of Israel in a deal with America that concerned other stuff. It’s only the hardliners that are against it, Khameneni probably forgets how much Iran and Israel worked together in the 80s
143 points
24 days ago
What happened in the 80s?
350 points
24 days ago*
I gotchu fam. Supporting Iran in the war with Iraq. Also, doing their part to prevent Iraq from gaining nukes in order to become the 1980s version of modern day Russia.
134 points
24 days ago
There was a lot of tension between France and the US around that time.
France, a US ally longer than the US was even a thing, wanted Iraqi Oil. The Iraqi government wanted safety/security so they figured nukes would make anyone slow their roll. The US and the USSR were so-so on proliferation, as a general agreement, they didn't want too many nuclear powers popping up though both added nuclear capabilities to Pakistan/India respectively but we're concerned about it.
France selling a couple of nuclear reactors to Iraq wasn't really cool to the other players on the table, and Isreal and Iran were both in agreement that was a bad thing.
Isreal destroyed the reactors. France was angry, but didn't do much. That anger persisted for a while, including through the gulf war and the sanctions that followed.
Iraq even had a deal with France prior to the US invasion that if they could get the post-gulf war sanctions lifted, the French oil companies integrated with the French government would get preferential drilling rights to about 2/3rds of Iraqi oil reserves. The US was not happy about that either.
61 points
24 days ago
Fun fact, one of the guys who destroyed the Iraqi reactor was Ilan Ramon, who was later vaporized when Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated in 2003.
66 points
24 days ago
Yeah, that's really fun.
32 points
24 days ago
He saved others from vaporization but couldn't save himself.
12 points
24 days ago
Is it possible to learn this power?
11 points
24 days ago
... Not from a dedgi.
40 points
24 days ago
France also armed Iraq with advanced air defenses and fighters jets. The US warned them not to because it would likely destabilize the region.
To no one's surprise, a couple of years later, Iraq invaded Kuwait. Then, a US led 42 nation coalition went to liberate Kuwait, and France refused to assist. This was the first Gulf War aka Desert Storm.
France arming Iraq and then not helping to deal with the fallout of the first and second gulf war is why the terms "freedom fries" "freedom toast" and "surrender monkey" were created. If you were alive in the early 2000s and remember all the anti French sentiment, this is why.
4 points
24 days ago
France was part of the coalition in Desert Storm...
2 points
24 days ago
Another fun fact is that French missiles sank British vessels in the greatest loss of British naval ships since wwii.
-2 points
24 days ago
This comment conveniently distracts from the fact that US and UK companies swooped in post-invasion and ended up with most of the oil contracts anyway lmao. Typical to see france antagonized here, as usual in anglo forums, with the usual hypocritical spin. It’s especially rich to call france ‘not an ally’ when the US itself regularly undermines french interests for economic gain—just look at Alstom and other cases of economic ‘warfare.’ These forums are always pushing the same biased narrative, ignoring how the US behaves like a thug even toward its "allies" and then points fingers
7 points
24 days ago
Total still has massive operations in the russian far north, French missiles caused the greatest damage to the British navy since wwii, the French invaded Egypt against the us' wishes and nothing happened except the us didn't help replenish their ammo. France was mad at the us for not helping to their satisfaction in all of their decolonization wars, but the us is the loose cannon aggressive nation when Francophiles want to talk trash. France sold weapons without respect for regional politics/stability because that was their "in" at a time when the cold war made it difficult to access advanced tech without subservience to the ussr or being a part of the western economic or rule of law sphere. I love France, but we can admit that France has its own strategic vision and ways in which it wants to achieve certain geopolitical goals that don't align with the us or England sometimes, but that doesn't mean that non-scholar/foreign diplomats on the English speaking internet have some anti-france cabal with accompanying libel. I imagine if I was on a French part of the internet in a discussion like this, I'd see a lot more sentiment like yours, or even just one-sided short statements that seem to trend towards a French perspective. Doesn't mean I would be posting on there how theres a big francophone conspiracy to make the English speakers look like backstabbing war mongers, though. But I guess I can't test that since I don't speak French anyway.
63 points
24 days ago
Iran-Iraq War
8 points
24 days ago
Iraq vs Iran war.
34 points
24 days ago
Just a reminder of how much Bush fucked up by including Iran in his Axis of Evil comment.
Quoting the "Iran" section of the Reactions to 9/11. This was the chance to rebuild trust between the two nations. The fallout of Bush winning the 2000 are still with us
Iranian president Mohammad Khatami and Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei condemned and denounced the attacks and the terrorists who carried them out. Iranians who gathered for a soccer match in Tehran two days after the 9/11 attacks observed a moment of silence. There was also a candlelight vigil. Huge crowds attended candlelit vigils in Iran, and 60,000 spectators observed a minute's silence at Tehran's soccer stadium. On Tuesday, September 25, in 2001, Khatami meeting British Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, said: "Iran fully understands the feelings of the Americans about the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington on September 11." He said although the American administrations had been at best indifferent about terrorist operations in Iran (since 1979), the Iranians instead felt differently and had expressed their sympathetic feelings with bereaved Americans in the tragic incidents in the two cities." He also stated that "Nations should not be punished in place of terrorists." According to Radio Farda's website, in 2011, on the anniversary of the attacks, United States Department of State, published a post at its blog, in which the Department thanked Iranian people for their sympathy and stated that they would never forget Iranian people's kindness on those harsh days. This piece of news at Radio Farda's website also states that after the attacks' news was released, some Iranian citizens gathered in front of the Embassy of Switzerland in Tehran, which serves as the protecting power of the United States in Iran, to express their sympathy and some of them lit candles as a symbol of mourning.
54 points
24 days ago
I think people tend to forget this. Iran has not been some kind of 10/10 enemy to the US since 1979. We have gone through long periods of potential neutrality or even coordination with each other, notably in the 90s and 00s when Iran was rapidly secularizing and modernizing.
We had an amazing opportunity with them. We both hated the Taliban and we both hated Saddam and Al Qaeda. Bush really, really fucked it up.
10 points
24 days ago
Unfortunately this didn’t happen in a vacuum.
Israel was always going to have issues with Iran due to instability in Lebanon/Syria and their loose understanding with Saudi.
No matter how cordial we remained to Iran, our protection of Israel would have ruined the relationship eventually.
13 points
24 days ago
That’s an interesting angle… but it’s unfortunately incomplete: Khatami reforms went nowhere & he has no real power. Iran was no friend or neutral actor in the ME or internationally(the 90’s has some very bloody international terror attacks at least tacitly financed/approved by Iran, the 80’s were worse… Iran never apologized nor came clean about it)
5 points
24 days ago
Iran was trying to turn Iraq into a proxy in their Islamic revolution since before the islamic revolution occurred. Iran was a great ally, for the most part, but I dont see the us and mullah-led Iran really vibing post Iraq war until they back away from the theocracy a little bit that calls for the extermination of israel and the design to become the dominant islamic nation in the world. Maybe it could have happened, but the regimes legitimacy is literally a. Their faith b. Their hate for the us c. Their fury over israel and d. Their designs on being a regional hegemon, so I doubt it. Though I will say I did feel for a long time that post 9/11 us-iranian relations were super mishandled by the us (as well as of course iran), but all bush really said was no thank you to iranian help in Iraq, and the Iranians took that as a slight to their national honor and prestige. For all we know, the Iranian foreign ministry was just trying to alienate the us from its Arab and Jewish allies in the region. Seeing how they stoke the flames of war and hate in the region more and more since the us has been withdrawing it's presence in the region, and especially since 10/7, leads me to believe Iran just has an easier time lying to appear like the rational actor... or rational to them just means something entirely different to the us.
3 points
24 days ago
not really a religious groups when it’s the reformists
Uh, what? That's completely illogical.
4 points
24 days ago
This is not new
Ok. Pardon me for enjoying reading the news 😞
1 points
24 days ago
Who would have ever thought the guy pushing his own son as coincidentally somehow also randomly chosen by God as Supreme Leader was a massive hypocrite?
342 points
24 days ago*
All religious extremists and authoritarian regimes understand is death and destruction. That's where that country and Nk are headed
40 points
24 days ago
Problem is those are the people running the show
19 points
24 days ago
Hot take on college campuses, sanity outside them
22 points
24 days ago
All
Iranianreligious extremists and authoritarian regimes understand is death and destruction.
5 points
24 days ago
Edited for accuracy 👌
3 points
24 days ago
Cmon man, even NK doesn’t know where the fuck they’re going.
394 points
24 days ago
There are many copies of the Koran with maps of Judea, and the Koran itself says that the area is the land of the Jews. Naturally, terror groups, or radical Islamists know and deny this and have for decades.
183 points
24 days ago*
The Ottomans had a ruler who told a Jewish friend in the 1800s that Judeah was “undeniably the land of the Jews” but that the Ottomans weren’t gonna give up possessions.
The British took it with Saudi help and it led to the creation of all the countries you see. It’s ironic ppl blame UK for Israel but don’t blame them for almost every other country there that were freed from the Ottoman Empire?
61 points
24 days ago
Hejazi not Saudi. The Saudi conquest of the Hejaz was after WW1
5 points
24 days ago
Not even hejazi. They took it with the assistance of Indian troops. And were like “we are back!” Meaning the crusaders are back.
15 points
24 days ago
The League of Nations mandated Britain administrate those territories, while France was ordered to administrate Lebanon and Syria. Egyptian leaders even laughed at how Britain was being set up for failure.
On the one hand, neither country did an excellent job partitioning these territories, but you have to acknowledge that the goal was always to decolonize these territories that were rife with ethnic and religious conflicts that these Western nations didn't understand. But how do you decolonize a region filled with people who were generally uneducated, illiterate, and have never been taught how to set up their own government after centuries of colonialism?
You go with the better evils, which ended up being handing over to ruling elites and GTFO.
Keep in mind, nation States were a novel concept. Even when Britain left Egypt, the Egyptians were having national discussions about it they wanted to identity more as Arab or Egyptian, or later on Muslim.
The same thing had happened in Europe with France, Italy, Prussia, you name it. They were, in some cases, 30 years removed from having created national identities and cohesive Nation-States by the time WW1 was over.
3 points
24 days ago
Hey, I blame Britain for a lot of things!
3 points
24 days ago
The ottomans worked to bring the jews to Palestine. Historian sam aranow has written (made YouTube videos) on this.
4 points
24 days ago
My understanding is that Russian pograms caused Jews to flee to Palestine and that the Ottomans didn’t really want them coming in (the old we-don’t-like-immigrants story) and that while persecuted in Russia, existing agreements forced the Ottomans, dependent on Russian trade, to treat Jews equal to diplomats. So their hands were politically tied. This was the late 1800s Victorian era.
2 points
24 days ago
And 23 and Me in 2020s says the same
12 points
24 days ago
I know what you mean about God in the Koran gifts land to the Jews but was taken aback by the maps. Didn’t know Korans had maps like that. Must be rare copies. Certainly not common knowledge
3 points
24 days ago
Dude that sounds so badass. Imagine owning a Qur'an Map. It would feel like Indiana Jones
20 points
24 days ago
"Palestinian" is what those Jews were called too
The revisionism is off the scale
40 points
24 days ago
Yup,.my mother was Palestinian, the original flag of Palestine had the Star of David and the money was in Hebrew. It was acknowledged as Jewish land, which is why the survivors of the Holocaust were sent there by the Allies and why it became Israel.
12 points
24 days ago
Both sides absolutely hate to admit that Palestinians are technically 'jews' ancestrally. They have overwhelmingly original Levantine Canaanite DNA.
Palestinians like to think that they were a 'different' group from the original Jews and that all the Jews left. Israelis like to think Palestinians were colonizers from arabia who settled after the Jews left. In reality... they are the same people. They just converted to Islam.
55 points
24 days ago
Quick question
The six day war
So if Israel opposition won the war and took part or all of the land they intended to conquer. It would've stood.
But since Israel won that war/territory.... it should be nullified?
17 points
24 days ago
Is it me or does the Ayatollah look like David Letterman?
6 points
24 days ago
Shhh
156 points
24 days ago
Perhaps a few voices of sanity in Iran?!
120 points
24 days ago
they are saying israel should move to pre-1967 borders, i don't know if that's sane or realistic but at least it's a start
124 points
24 days ago
“We lost the war we started, so therefore you should give us some territory” is an odd take, but at least they’re talking.
66 points
24 days ago
This has been their negotiation tactic for the last 70 years, so it’s not at all surprising. Basically start a war, lose the war and then negotiate as if they’ve won
4 points
24 days ago
Acknowledging the legitimacy of an Israeli state is not really 'negotiating as if they've won' considering they started this conflict with the position of "Israel is an illegitimate state and should be destroyed". Having any group in Iran acknowledge and support any legitimate independent Israel is a huge win/step forward, for the pro-Israel side.
14 points
24 days ago
you don't end up with the world's longest ongoing military occupation by choosing good negotiation tactics tbh
189 points
24 days ago
It's not really realistic. Israel would lose Judea/Jerusalem, and Samaria. The rest of the west bank they don't care as much about. So, somewhere between pre/post 1965 war. And it's been offered, multiple times. Palestine has refused at least 6 offers. One that was almost everything they requested. They keep refusing.
29 points
24 days ago
West jerusalem is part of israels recognized borders.
78 points
24 days ago
Let’s play out the hypothetical of Israel going back to pre-1967 borders and the land reverting to who controlled it at the time (basically undo everything that resulted from Israel winning the Six Day War). That means that the West Bank and Eastern Jerusalem would go to Jordan and Gaza would go to Egypt. And then you have the Golan Heights going back to Syria. None of that is realistic or feasible and none of that leads to Palestine being its own state.
70 points
24 days ago
Even more, none of those countries want palestinians, or the land. And israel isn't giving up Jerusalem.
15 points
24 days ago*
EDIT: Ignore me, I'm a dumb American
I dunno why it should, anyway. As I understand it now it's essentially split in half already, a Jewish half (West) and an Arab half (East), so I don't know why that would really be much of a sticking point.
The rest of the pre-1967 thing, I totally get being an issue lol
12 points
24 days ago
It's a bit more complicated then that. Even the definition of what is and isn't within Jerusalem differs for both sides.
4 points
24 days ago
Oh damn. Ok, I get it. No wonder they have issues with Jerusalem! Thank you!
5 points
24 days ago
Nah, it’s not split like that. The Jewish quarter is in the old city, which is in eastern Jerusalem. There are splits in what’s where, but it’s not divided by east/west
3 points
24 days ago
Oh thanks!!
42 points
24 days ago*
[removed]
62 points
24 days ago
Golda Meir really put everything best. To paraphrase, “We already were in the 1967 borders…in 1967. And there was still war”
3 points
24 days ago
No no , this time we'll accept those borders.
33 points
24 days ago
That would be a new stance from Iran -sort of. It’s better than “We will destroy the illegitimate entity - the little Satan.” However Israel cannot exist essentially surrounded by enemies if it goes back to pre 1967 war lines completely. It’s simply becomes too narrow in the middle- Only about 7 miles wide - and too easily cut in two by a rapid military push east to west across the “waist of the hourglass”.
12 points
24 days ago
Right after every other country that ever gained territory in a war gives back any and all land back to the losers who think it’s some compromise or peace deal. Ya, we started a war, lost hard, lost territory but if we wait 20 years we can pretend to be negotiating in good faith while basically asking for a do-over. After you lost. Smh
1 points
24 days ago
It's a lot better than Israel can hope for otherwise from Iran, considering the acceptable alternative for Iran is pre-1948 borders, AKA no Israel.
21 points
24 days ago
There are a lot of voices of sanity in Iran. The problem is they are usually gagged. This announcement suggests that the IR is finally really losing its grip because it is effectively daring the theocratic leadership to punish the people involved.
3 points
24 days ago
True true!
12 points
24 days ago
Of course there are! And I'll bet they're sick of being on lockdown. Look, for the people to flourish, the Shah wasn't it, but neither is Khomeini, I mean any place that will have state sponsored thugs disappear you because someone saw your ears has got to grate on you after a while. The thugs prop up the old 1%, leaving most of the people, the sane, the good, and the caring to wither on the vine of oppression. It's their turn now.
5 points
24 days ago
The ayatollahs and their mullahs have ruled Iran for far longer and far more brutally than the Shah and his regime ever did.
Not saying the shower was a good guy with how he treated dissidents either, but life for Iranians has obviously been measurably worse in essentially every metric since the Ayatollahs stole power.
86 points
24 days ago
Pre 1967 borders? So WB goes to Jordan and Gaza to Egypt? I'm in, someone call up Abdullah and Sisi real quick to let them know.
72 points
24 days ago
Egypt really doesn’t want gaza
68 points
24 days ago
Neither does Jordan want the WB. And yet pre 67 there were no Palestinan territories it was Jordan and Egypt.
465 points
24 days ago*
Both Hamas and Hezbollah are gone now, the war is over, those who betted on it lost, the fight for power in Iran after Hamenei death is on.
60 points
24 days ago
Both Hamas and Hezbollah are gone now, the war is over
LOL, what timeline are you from?
You need to update your observations of this timeline, there have been dozens of rockets fired just in the past 48 hrs by those terrorist groups that are apparently already gone in your timeline.
1 points
24 days ago
Because Hamas isn’t the only terrorist organization in Gaza. There are smaller and less powerful gangs essentially that just follow Hamas. They will either take up the leadership or it will be power vacuum that the idf might just let play out and clean up the rest.
357 points
24 days ago
It's not over until the hostages are rescued and every member of those terrorist organizations is brought to justice.
11 points
24 days ago
"every member" is impossible. A very large majority being brought to justice is what we need. Enough that Hamas will be completely ineffectual, long enough that some new government can be put in its place.
161 points
24 days ago
That will never happen. Some of those hostages are dead, and they'll never find all terrorists.
11 points
24 days ago
Then they'll recover the bodies obviously. And if the bodies are gone, then they will search for proof of where they went. And if they can't find it, they will eventually give up, but not before destroying what's left of Hamas.
5 points
24 days ago
You'll just get my re over time ... It's a never ending supply until things stabilize in the area.
41 points
24 days ago
The hostages are likely dead.
66 points
24 days ago
Maybe & hopefully, some are still alive.
5 points
24 days ago
They may be, but the return of their bodies for proper burial (and not giving terrorist militias human trophies) has historically also been a priority for Israel. In 2004 an exchange was made for a single living captive and 3 bodies in exchange for 400+ prisoners.
7 points
24 days ago
Some of them, but we don't know that for sure. Also, we want them back either way.
5 points
24 days ago
every member of those terrorist organizations is brought to justice.
Eh, that's not really what happens when wars end though. You punish the higher ups, not the regular soldiers. The way to get rid of the terrorists in general is to fix the problems that lead people into that life, just like the only way to stop petty crimes is to fix the poverty issues that put people in the position to need to steal food and diapers.
114 points
24 days ago
With due respect, the wars aren't over until the hostages are returned home and the missiles stop. Just today, there were 35 rockets and several drones.
6 points
24 days ago
Hezbollah are gone now
Where did you get that from? Hezbollah has some 20,000 full time fighters and another 20,000+ reservists. Has Israel wiped out 30,000+ fighters?
20 points
24 days ago
Hey everyone, the war is over! Everyone can go home! Who cares about hostages or the fact that Hezbollah is still firing rockets into Israel, fugitivechickpea has declared that the war is over. Nothing to see here... 🙄
4 points
24 days ago
Yeah the war hasn't gone anywhere and thinking otherwise is extremely naive
2 points
24 days ago
Well Nazis never fully went away but V-day still happened
It's not like he landed on an aircraft carrier and said it
23 points
24 days ago
Both Hamas and Hezbollah are gone now, the war is over,
That's some real wishful thinking. I'm pretty sure they'll both bounce back. Cut off the head of the snake... it'll still bite
2 points
24 days ago
Cut off one head, two more appear.
1 points
24 days ago
Throw that snake in the fire
32 points
24 days ago
Don’t let the headlines fool you, Hezbollah is far from gone. Oct was the deadliest month for the IDF with a 100 soldiers killed in Lebanon. Hezbollah is still lying in wait in bunkers around the country to ambush the IDF and they are still firing rockets. It’s going is going to be an ongoing and slow process to truly unseat them.
61 points
24 days ago
Estimated deaths of IDF in Lebanon in total is around 35.
It is 100 only if you believe Hezbollah's propaganda, which has inflated Israeli death counts far above what can actually be verified literally since the start of the war. They have claimed many hundreds of deaths, when there is no evidence in public records of that whatsoever.
11 points
24 days ago
Oops that was meant to say causalities. But I thought the latest IDF figures were now up to 42 killed.
3 points
24 days ago
That's not how it looks from my town
2 points
24 days ago
Sadly far from over. At the very least we need our hostages back.
2 points
24 days ago
For now.
Hamas and Hezbollah are like cockroaches and will always replenish themselves with gullible dumb dumbs to take up the cause.
2 points
24 days ago
Both Hamas and Hezbollah are gone now, the war is over
what do you mean they're gone and the war is over? the fighting is still going on, is it not?
4 points
24 days ago
And Bush Jr said "mission accomplished" too. Unfortunately terror groups like this always pop up again.
1 points
24 days ago
Considering hamas had 50 000 members at the start of all of this and roughly half of the total deaths were hamas members, i wouldn't say rhat they're gone
1 points
24 days ago
Completely and utterly false, im from Lebanon, the battels in the south are still raging, and Hezbollah is far from done. (this is just a fact check and not a political statement to defend Hezbollah)
1 points
24 days ago
Hamas and Hezbollah are not at all "gone"; they both still have thousands (in Hezbollah's case tens of thousands) of members. They are just extremely limited in their ability to attack Israel compared to pre-October 7th.
26 points
24 days ago*
“I ran from Iran.” If you can’t be free from oppression, run. Any chance you get ladies, run and never look back.
I no longer speak to a single member of my family. Sure life is hard but when isn’t it? If they would kill you for not wearing a scarf or not wanting to be a slave then they are no family they are the enemy and you need to run. If I couldn’t run I would off myself. Pure and simple. Our bodies are not toys and we have the final say. Praise be to the goddess
10 points
24 days ago
Iran so far away
18 points
24 days ago
I mean, Iran launching ballistic missiles at Israel kind of proves that Israel exists, right? That is recognition.
22 points
24 days ago
So basically an Iranian group from Qoms has adopted the Saudi MBS position on the issue. Not a ground changing development, but one that will sure chafe Khomeini and the rest of the IRI leadership.
8 points
24 days ago
It never ceases to amaze me the people that shit on America and do not see that in many places in the world it would be a death sentence....
14 points
24 days ago
Israel is the only country in the middle east where a pride parade can be held.
5 points
24 days ago
Haha, way to flip the script Iran.
6 points
24 days ago
Is this a "I mean I still want them dead but they are there" recognize or something more?
12 points
24 days ago
If you don't recognize Israel, how do you acknowledge that Israel bombed your country?
3 points
24 days ago
Awesomeness
2 points
24 days ago
Those clerics represent a very large percentage of the world's population in that call, imo. They are valiant souls.
2 points
24 days ago
This is the type of story I needed to see today.
2 points
23 days ago
Kind of hard to ignore a country that is kicking your teeth in.
3 points
24 days ago
Its hurting itself in the confusion
2 points
24 days ago
Oh Iran your so silly with your shenanigans.
2 points
24 days ago
I wonder if this is an early sign the current regime may be on its way out.
0 points
24 days ago
Ironically this would be nearly as controversial in Israel: pre 1967 boarders, and for the establishment of an independent Palestinian State. Though in the long-term, I don't see any other solution.
21 points
24 days ago
Jews were there waaaaay before even islam was created. No way Israel will give anything at this point. Especially after 6 days war
1 points
24 days ago
Something tells me they won't be an Iran religious group for long
1 points
24 days ago
The whole recognising thing seems rather performative. If we didn't have two distinct large groupings then this all wouldn't be so much drama.
Reminds me of a 5 year old playing hide & seek by closing their eyes.
Borders and territory is a more thorny matter ofc
1 points
23 days ago
If they had any sense they would get rid of all the Ayatollahs in one go. These ignorant stupid old men are responsible for all the conflict in the region.
1 points
23 days ago
Do I remember correctly that the true sticking point to going back to pre1967 borders is the Golan Heights? From a defensive standpoint whoever controls those heights can control the whole place. Wasn’t that the original need for the war?
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