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In this episode of MESS, Daniella and Yossi Alpher step back from the headlines to examine a deeper problem: the repeated failure of Israeli strategy across multiple fronts. Going back to the idea of “mowing the lawn,” they examine why ceasefires and negotiations on three fronts do not necessarily produce security, why decapitation campaigns and proxy strategies so often fail to deliver lasting results, and how extremist movements can trap entire societies in recurring cycles of conflict. The conversation ranges across Gaza, Lebanon, Iran, and Israel itself, exploring the strategic limits of military power and the uncomfortable possibility that in much of the Middle East, the real challenge is not ending conflict, but learning how to live with it.
By Daniella AlpherIn this episode of MESS, Daniella and Yossi Alpher step back from the headlines to examine a deeper problem: the repeated failure of Israeli strategy across multiple fronts. Going back to the idea of “mowing the lawn,” they examine why ceasefires and negotiations on three fronts do not necessarily produce security, why decapitation campaigns and proxy strategies so often fail to deliver lasting results, and how extremist movements can trap entire societies in recurring cycles of conflict. The conversation ranges across Gaza, Lebanon, Iran, and Israel itself, exploring the strategic limits of military power and the uncomfortable possibility that in much of the Middle East, the real challenge is not ending conflict, but learning how to live with it.