Peace In The Middle East

well its so true, arabs are terrorists we have to live with them bombing us nearly everyday with suicide bombings. i am sick of them and hope they all get massacred one after the other. and oh yeah your women look like ****ing ninjas.
Do you know the first terrorists group in the ME was the Zionests.
 
I'd normally say that such a comment isn't very "Christian" but we're on an Islamic forum. I bet it isn't very "Islamic" either.


would u please not get on my case and try to correct me now as if ur my mother, i think we all know murder besides in self defense is punishable by hell? is this gonna be argued?
 
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You think you can kill us and get away with it, NOWAY every israeli killed 100 ****ing arabs will be killed.

This is just the beginning for you arabs, next is syria, iran, saudi, all of you are going down one by one
You seriously need to chill out.

Peace in the middle east would require a ceasefire (For all participants) first and foremost.
 
Lets take an example out mossad book and lets not ever stoop to such hatred no matter what side the hatred comes from.
 
oh my is right. Oh my that people like him dont anger u, if he saw your husband or children he might just kill them for looking arab, u really need to wake up

Well, if that were the case, wouldn't they be considered martyrs?

I apologize for this comment. It was out of line. But I don't there would be such an issue arise.

People like him don't anger me. Their irrational attitudes concern me. There is a difference. I hope you understand.
 
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Who thinks the middle east will solve it's problems and become peaceful once again?

I hope they do, but realistically i don't think it's going to happen in my lifetime.
 
Who thinks the middle east will solve it's problems and become peaceful once again?

I hope they do, but realistically i don't think it's going to happen in my lifetime.

Never, when was the last time there was peace there? And for how long?
 
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Who thinks the middle east will solve it's problems and become peaceful once again?
It would require outside intervention i.e ceasefire by the UN. Although, this wouldn't solve the problems instantly, it would help bring about the prevention of them. Gradually.
 
In more ancient times the conflict was about Jerusalem, now it is more political than religious, although many on both sides use their religion to justify certain actions. I think there will be peace eventually, but I doubt anyone on this forum will be alive to see it when it happen. I suppose we can all hope that we are.
 
GEORGE GAVRILIS is Assistant Professor of Government at the University of Texas at Austin

Contrary to most predictions, Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip last August was a dull affair, accomplished ahead of schedule and with little violence. Since then, as the Palestinian Authority (PA) has assumed control of the area, a relative calm has persisted.

The United States and the other members of the Quartet (the group, which also includes the European Union, the United Nations, and Russia, that sponsored the "road map" for Middle East peace three years ago) have used the time to follow up on the withdrawal by focusing on two secondary projects: helping the PA build a functioning government in Gaza and pushing Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas to disarm Hamas, the militant organization that has spent the last decade entrenching itself as the dominant force in the territory.

American policymakers and their colleagues in Europe and at the UN see securing Gaza as a key step toward achieving Palestinian sovereignty. As President George W. Bush said on August 23, 2005, "There must be confidence -- confidence that the Palestinian people will have in their own government to perform, confidence with the Israelis that they'll see a peaceful state emerging." If Gaza becomes a viable political and economic entity ruled by Palestinian moderates, the thinking goes, Israel and the PA will soon return to the negotiating table and extend the self-rule experiment to the West Bank -- and a full-fledged Palestinian state will then quickly take shape.

This logic, however, rests on misguided optimism. The orderliness of the transition from Israeli rule in Gaza seems to have convinced Washington and its allies that the PA, if pushed hard enough, could fairly easily solidify its rule there, supplanting Hamas. Indeed, the withdrawal has made Gaza the new focus of the Middle East peace process, with the Quartet deciding that this area should get the PA's undivided attention and the lion's share of a new, multibillion-dollar aid package that is scheduled to be disbursed in early 2006.

To focus attention and money exclusively on Gaza, however, is a dangerous mistake for one simple reason: the West Bank, an area far larger and more populous, is in increasingly desperate straits. As in Gaza, in the West Bank the economy has been shattered by the second intifada, and Islamist extremism is on the rise. Political reform is thus desperately needed. Were the PA to concentrate all its energy on Gaza while ignoring the West Bank, this area -- with its 2.3 million residents -- could spin out of control
 

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