This battle has been going on for the last 2000 years. Israel is fighting for their Biblical Promised Land given to them at the end of the 2nd World War by the Allies.
The Arabs don't agree with that idea in Palestine.
Neither the Israelis or the Arabs will ever back down, it's a fight to the death by both sides; at least one reason is because neither of them has a religion which even hints at the New Testament and Jesus and redemption, forgiveness, turn the other cheek, etc. All of these laudable traits are seen as weakness by both sides.
This will go on forever until one side eliminates the other which is not very likely, so an endless battle, like we have seen so far.
Abandon them and leave them to it as a lost cause (a problem that has no solution) is my advice, they have evolved into a mindset that will never change, and they are not willing to change ever.
It's just another intractable problem on the world political chessboard, just use it to gain advantages, like cheap oil, as has been done in the past.
The Arabs don't agree with that idea in Palestine.
Neither the Israelis or the Arabs will ever back down, it's a fight to the death by both sides; at least one reason is because neither of them has a religion which even hints at the New Testament and Jesus and redemption, forgiveness, turn the other cheek, etc. All of these laudable traits are seen as weakness by both sides.
This will go on forever until one side eliminates the other which is not very likely, so an endless battle, like we have seen so far.
Abandon them and leave them to it as a lost cause (a problem that has no solution) is my advice, they have evolved into a mindset that will never change, and they are not willing to change ever.
It's just another intractable problem on the world political chessboard, just use it to gain advantages, like cheap oil, as has been done in the past.
It's not the least charm of a theory that it is refutable. The hundred-times-refuted theory of "free will" owes its persistence to this charm alone; some one is always appearing who feels himself strong enough to refute it - Friedrich Nietzsche