The War That Always Works—Until It Doesn’t There is a certain elegance to modern war. Not the destruction. Not the bodies. But the presentation . The language is always impeccable: “ Strategic degradation” “Precision targeting” “Limited objectives” It almost sounds like a policy workshop — not the opening act of something that may consume an entire region. And once again, the script is being rehearsed. Iran is “weakened.” Its systems are “degraded.” Its options are “limited.” And somewhere between these carefully chosen words, a very old idea quietly returns: Maybe this time, we finish it. Chapter One: The Seduction of Air Power Airstrikes are irresistible. They promise control without commitment. Dominance without vulnerability. Victory without presence. You can bomb a country… without ever having to meet it . No dialects to understand. No terrain to navigate. No জনগোষ্ঠী to confront. Just coordinates. And for a brief moment— it feels like war ...
There is something deeply inconvenient about criticism that comes from your own house. It cannot be dismissed as antisemitism. It cannot be brushed aside as ignorance. It cannot be labeled “external hostility.” And that is precisely what makes the recent remarks by Tzipi Livni so… uncomfortable. Because when someone like Livni says that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is “dismantling the State of Israel” —you don’t get the luxury of pretending it’s just another activist slogan. You get a mirror. A State “Dismantling Itself” Let’s pause on that word: dismantling. Not under attack. Not misunderstood. Not unfairly criticized. But dismantled— from within. According to Livni, this dismantling is not accidental. It is structural. Deliberate. Policy-driven. She warns of a system where: Armed settler militias are increasingly normalized Parallel legal systems operate side by side —one for settlers, another for Palestinians Occupation is no longer temporary, but indefinite ...