hap0206, Ignorance is bliss, eh. If opinionated opinion is based upon fact then it might be worth reading. Your
"Nah, zab -- that was/is the Korean war -- you know, 1950, the year you were born -- the war that set the standard for all future wars -- no more unconditional surrender wars -- negotiate the cease fire -- live with the enemy forever -- Truman fired McArthur who did not believe in negotiated settlements -- so we wait for the abomb coming from NK."
is neither. You should tell Netanyahu that "the war that set the standard for all future wars" was to a significant part a war of restraint.
"Omar Bradley responded that George was quite mistaken—and, by implication, that MacArthur was quite misleading. The Chinese were not fighting all out, not by a great deal. “They have not used air against our front line troops, against our lines of communication in Korea, our ports; they have not used air against our bases in Japan or against our naval air forces.” China’s restraint in these areas had been crucial to the survival of American and U.N. forces in Korea. On balance, Bradley said, the limited nature of the war benefited the United States at least as much as it did the Chinese. “We are fighting under rather favorable rules for ourselves.”" [...] George Marshall, the secretary of defense and a five-star general himself, made the same argument. Marshall, insisting on “the greatest concern for confidentiality,” said he had asked the joint chiefs just hours before: “What happens to the Army if we do bomb, and what happens to our Army if we don’t bomb in that way.” The chiefs’ conclusion: “Their general view was that the loss of advantage with our troops on the ground was actually more than equaled by the advantages which we were deriving from not exposing our vulnerability to air attacks.” P - In other words—and this was Marshall’s crucial point, as it had been Vandenberg’s—the limitations on the fighting in Korea, so loudly assailed by MacArthur and his supporters, in fact favored the American side. https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=173432774
Tell Netanyahu some restraint on his side would be to Israel's benefit, in the long run. Just as it was to China's benefit during the "the war that set the standard for all future wars." Just as it was to America's benefit back then.
It was Plato who said, “He, O men, is the wisest, who like Socrates, knows that his wisdom is in truth worth nothing”