The war of attrition

In the one hundred year aggression on Palestine by the ‘Israeli’ enemy, no other power has delivered greater blows than the Islamic Resistance of Lebanon, followed by Ansar Allah and the Iraqi Islamic Resistance.

Some scholars with names and reputations have stated throwing stones, including one of my favourites, Rashid Khalidi.

The limited responses to the war in Gaza by Iran and Hezbollah demonstrate that Iran’s so-called Axis of Resistance was designed by Iran to protect itself. It wasn’t designed to protect Palestine,” he was quoted as saying.

There is no need to submit quotations and statistics to prove the Islamic Resistance’s achievements, as northern occupied Palestine, Ashdod, Eilat, and Haifa are lying economically and geographically in ruins.

Let the toxic people spread their venom.

Once again, it is time that the Resistance comes to terms and considers recuperation.

Allah is pleased with the Islamic Resistance Warriors.

Yemeni burn US and Israeli flags during a demonstration in Sanaa, Yemen in 2017

Then again, a chosen one should bring to Khalidi’s attention that we lost an entire leadership line, including the most precious one of all saints.

An excerpt from an interview with Hezbollah Secretary-General Martyr Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah:

We view the Israeli enemy with a different eye—namely, that its very existence in the region poses a constant threat to Lebanon as a whole, even if it withdraws from the frontier zone.

We are not unrealistic. We do not pretend that our military capabilities and
the numbers of our mujahidin would be enough to regain Jerusalem; none of
us have ever made that claim. We do, however, believe that the resistance has
to finish the job it started. It is impossible for us to fight the Israeli enemy
through traditional and classical methods, but rather [we must fight] through
a war of attrition, whereby we drain its energy, weaken it, then one day force
it to withdraw. Some claim that the withdrawal that took place in 1985 came
as a result of political pressure and negotiations; this is obviously a misguided
notion.® The amount of losses the enemy incurred, and the fear it lived through,
created enormous pressure on the Jews in the occupied territories; they, in
turn, put a lot of pressure on their own government and forced it to withdraw.
The enemy considered the price it paid on the ground as exceedingly high,
and [former Israeli Premier Yitzak] Rabin admitted earlier on that their 1982
invasion was a very big mistake, because it introduced another group onto the
battlefield, and created new enemies for Israel.’

Leave a comment