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Charlie Stross

2/

So Iran can be RELIABLY provoked by an attack on Hezbollah, but equally reliably, cannot retaliate effectively.

So it gives Netanyahu a pretext to send tanks into Lebanon and justify his emergency grip on powerโ€”which is all that's keeping him out of prison on corruption chargesโ€”but Iran is not an effective threat to Israel (and is responding predictably to provocation whenever Bibi rattles the cage bars).

19 comments
Charlie Stross

3 (end)

This entire crisis is because one elderly and deepy corrupt politician is too afraid to give up his death-grip on the highest office in Israel, and is willing to murder tens of thousands of foreigners (and not a few of his own people) to cling on.

His support at home is the Israeli equivalent of the USA's MAGA: it's a very angry, militant minority who he's led to power. This too will passโ€”as long as he doesn't succeed in turning Israel into a permanent fascist dictatorship.

Nemo

@cstross
He's well on his way, and the seeds are deeply planted from old.

There's only so long a country can live under constant military threat and increasing militarisation of society and stay democratic.

It's the old myth that had it been combative sabras instead of effete European Jews, the Holocaust would have gone differently.

*Shakes head sadly*

Charlie Stross

@iinavpov Alas, I suspect you're right. (The sane liberal Israelis I know are actively looking for escape/emigration options.)

Andi Popp ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ :antifa:

@cstross I also think Bibi and his inability to let go of power - unless he wants to end up in some juice corruption trials - is a core part of the problem. Yet it's not enough to reduce it only to him. The inciting event was #oct7 and this one was entirely on Hamas and probably #Iran by proxy, who wanted to do their new ally ๐Ÿ‡ท๐Ÿ‡บ a solid, but their murdering hordes were way more successful than they actually wanted.

Duncan

@AndiPopp @cstross

Not sure how this is relevant. There are things happening right now and they are a problem, we kind of want these things to stop.

Sure, the big bang is the original cause of this situation but discussing that right now is not really leading us to any kind of solution

Andi Popp ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ :antifa:

@Duncan @cstross De-escalation is quite a tricky thing. And it is important to know what the options of each player are. We are not far enough down the spiral, that the beginning doesn't matter anymore (in which case only victory for one side or war fatigue on both sides, are the only options anyway).

Charlie Stross

@AndiPopp @Duncan For some insight into de-escalation in this sitch, consider the USA's post-9/11 psychotic break, which lasted about 5 years; by 2011 sanity had more or less resumed. October 6th was an order of magnitude higher per-capita death toll than 9/11 โ€ฆ

I'm pretty sure Hamas weren't aiming that high, any more than Mohammed Atta seriously expected to drop the twin towers. They achieved overkill, again probably by an order of magnitude.

So the current crisis was unplanned.

Dr. Dirtbag

@cstross @AndiPopp @Duncan It's a sobering comparison. It took the US 20 years and four presidents to get out of Afghanistan, after killing around 200,000 Afghans, or 1% of the prewar population. Israel is already well ahead of that killing-wise, but has much farther to go to recognize the absurdity of its war.

Whatever he has said and done since, Biden was right when one of the first things he did after October 7 was warn Bibi not to go down the road we did after 9/11.

Andi Popp ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ :antifa:

@drdirtbag @cstross @Duncan Absurdity is a strong word. While the death toll was painful and the aftermath costly, ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ did manage to crush Al Qaeda. It's somewhat similar for ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ. They did manage to militarily defeat Hamas for now, take out Nasrallah (who ruled for decades) and at least severely cripple Hisbollah. So far they do lack a plan for what comes after (again because Bibi can't form one for political reasons). But it's not like they did not achieve some of their goals.

Andi Popp ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ :antifa:

@drdirtbag @Duncan I would even go as far as to say the absurdity lies with ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท and it's proxies. While ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ has somewhat achievable goals (wether we agree with them or not), I can't see any for their opponents. They can't actually think they can wipe ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ of the map. So what do they want to achieve?

I think they dug themselves into a hole because of the overkill they achieved, like @cstross described. And now they can't find a way out.

Dr. Dirtbag

@AndiPopp Fair enough. Al Quaeda never had a chance of "destroying America" or whatever, but they sure managed to (cause us to) seriously damage our international reputation and domestic politics. The parallels continue.

Andi Popp ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ :antifa: replied to Dr.

@drdirtbag True, that was a result for the US and probably is a result for Israel. I can't argue with that. Yet I still fail to see how Al Qaeda/Iran benefit from that.

Duncan

@cstross

None of these answers really deal with the question I of relevance. In fact they are just getting further into the weeds of armchair political science. I can just imagine some bully kicking the shit out of a kid on the playground and everyone here sitting around discussing the bully's troubled childhood, violent computer games, lead exposure and aggression...

We were talking about how Netanyahu is on a rampage to stay in power. That feels like the only salient point here.

Jacob Christian Munch-Andersen

@AndiPopp @cstross And the inciting event for oct 7 was decades of harassment/murder/theft/dehumanisation. You are right that the problem is far from only Netanyahu, atrocities have been committed by Israel, its leaders, and many of its people for as long as the state has existed.

Netanyahu must go, but I'm not sure how one could salvage something resembling a democracy just because he is gone.

Andi Popp ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ :antifa:

@NohatCoder @cstross Well, I would disagree with your assumptions, but that's irrelevant anyway, because this is not how armed conflict works. The fact that Hamas saw reasons for their (atrocious) attacks on #Oct7 does not change the fact that they where the first to take up arms in this particular conflict. If your goal is de-escalation (as you stated), Israel has the worst options. Netanyahu's personal options are even worse.

Jon

@cstross the settlers have been land-grabbing for decades, enabled by every Israeli government along the way AFAICT. Hard to see any way to a sustainable peace until they are out of the West Bank, and not allowed to establish themselves in Gaza. Which is probably impossible for any Israeli government which wishes to remain in power, and for any American government to press for given our own voting realities. Unless maybe Iran paid Trump enough money to flip on Israel.

Dena

@cstross โ€œas long as he doesn't succeed in turning Israel into a permanent fascist dictatorship.โ€ - for Jewish Israelis?
Because territory controlled by Israel is already a permanent fascist dictatorship for people living in them who are not Jewish.
Some form of resource- and power sharing will be needed to make the place safe for everyone there. Until then, even removing Nโ€™hu only relieves pressure, I think.

ynym

@Shunra @cstross
Israel is weirder than that. Israeli Arabs with blue ID card can buy an apartment in any city. They don't have to serve in the military (unlike Jewish atheist), they vote, have freedom of movement, religion, etc

But the police will harass them, if they buy an apartment in a Jewish city they won't have school in Arabic for their children, and there is a decreasing chance that the police will help them if someone Jewish decides to randomly spit on them in the street.

Dena

@ynym
Functionally, with the de facto exclusion of Palestinian citizens of Israel from the government and such legislation as the Nationality Law, it is pretty solidly a Jewish supremacist apartheid, with a recent history of land grabs and dispossession.

I omitted 126 years of nuance because they didnโ€™t fit in the margins.

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