Summary
The future soon will tell whether the 33-day war on the Israeli- Lebanese border now grinding to a halt becomes nothing less than a mere rehearsal for an even wider and more devastating future Middle Eastern Armageddon or serves as a prologue to a restorative and sustainable peace. It is incumbent, therefore, that serious and fair- minded world leaders and their negotiators not succumb to the temptation and simplistic hope posed by President Woodrow Wilson in his 1917 Senate plea for "a peace without victory."
World leaders must not be satisfied and settle for a quick, narrow and short-lived cease-fire, but need instead press ahead to secure a restorative truce, looking toward an eventually sustainable peace. To carry out such ambitious and previously unattainable tasks, they must address some of the Middle East region's ancient and prevailing ills. These primarily include the prevailing psycho- political culture of vengeance and the pervasive resort to retaliation and retribution.See the full content of this document
Extract
Forward From a Fragile Cease-Fire
The current conflict began when armed members of Hezbollah, an organization headed by Iranian-educated Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, crossed the Lebanon-Israeli border July 12 and killed eight Israeli soldiers and seized two others as hostages. The explosive global consequences and potentials were not readily foreseen.
Israel was long threatened by the Iranian regime's fierce animosity and its declared intent to wipe out the Jewish state, and increasingly troubled by the Islamic republic's...See the full content of this document
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