tkr4lf wrote:saxitoxin wrote:tkr4lf wrote:saxitoxin wrote:tkr4lf wrote:So, I am going to ignore your hypothetical, as it does not apply here. Would you care to answer my hypothetical
No, I will - likewise - ignore your hypothetical.
Well, that is your right. But I ignored your hypothetical because it was not relevant to the situation
me too
How was my hypothetical situation not relevant? The original topic was the Suez Canal and Egypt restricting Israel's passage. You came back with what if you wanted to screw my girlfriend, and I said no, and you stabbed me. Not a good hypothetical because that is a personal matter, not a major world affairs matter. Then I came up with a very similar situation, in hypothetical, of panama denying use of its canal to america. Then you came up with China wanting to use the Great Lakes. Again, this does not relate to the others because of it being a regional thing. The Great Lakes are not used for major world shipping like the two canals are. So you cannot equate either of your hypotheticals with the original topic. However, mine directly equates to the original topic, as they are essentially about the same thing, just different countries and different canals. So again, how exactly is my hypothetical irrelevent? And I believe I've sufficiently shown why your's are irrelevent.
Let's take it back one step, before Egypt attempts to close shipping to Israel.
Who's really provoking who in that incident? You say the Egyptians were, but in fact it's the Israelis because the Israelis were receiving massive shipments of weapons that could be used for an offensive nature. By closing the Suez Canal to Israel, Egypt actually engaged in a defensive maneuver against Israel, who then attacked them outright.
I'd argue that what Egypt did was right. Recall how the Israelis justify stopping shipments of weapons to Gaza or Hezbollah. They board ships and confiscate the weapons to prevent them from getting into the hands of their enemies. Same with the Egyptians, who were not in the wrong by denying Israel such weapons. Granted, Egypt may have blocked essential, non-military goods, but those could have been shipped through different routes, or a compromise could've been made to guarantee such products passage. However, the Israelis would never want to be in a position to placate Egypt's demands, so they dealt with the situation in a highly aggressive manner by starting the war.
