Quoting Yossi Klein on why invaders never win:
[…] (They didn't explain how) half a million equipped soldiers can’t defeat 40,000 terrorists without tanks and without planes. The answer lies in Vietnam, in Algeria, in Ireland, and also in the Land of Israel [Palestine] 1948: since World War II, no invading country has defeated a nation fighting for its land—except for one. Since then, there hasn't been a democratic country that wanted to exile millions from their land—except for one. Our country.
Klein argues invading forces historically lose to native populations fighting for their land: #Vietnam, #Algeria, and #Ireland. Israel thus far is a unique exception and also singular as a self-proclaimed “democracy”, which is actively seeking mass expulsion of the indigenous Palestinians of their homeland.
[…] The state created a guiding myth, and it's been with us since childhood. In the name of this "fighting for our home" ethos, thousands of young people sacrificed their lives. This ethos has been erased. Not only erased, but transferred to the enemy. *They* are "fighting for their home," not us.
[…] A war for your home is fought near your home. Maybe near your neighbors. But certainly not by going into their home, not by expelling the owners, and not by settling family and friends there for 57 years. Nobody will admit it, but even #Hamas—despicable and condemned as they may be—is fighting for their home.
[…] The inhabitants of a home always defeat the invader. They know their home better, and their motivation is higher. They have no other land. When you're not fighting for your home, you try to find another reason for the war. Amit Segal recommends the war for destroying the tunnels (exposing the tunnels is worth 20 dead hostages). Others believe it's meant to wipe Gaza and its residents off the face of the earth.
Sofia ☭🇧🇷☭
in reply to Sofia ☭🇧🇷☭ • • •