The Scotsman

Imagine growing up in the middle of a war zone

Western powers must help Israelis and Palestinia­ns escape constant cycle of hatred and violence

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Iran’s thwarted missile attack on Israel could be viewed as the creation of a second front in the global conflict between the “CRINKS” – China, Russia, Iran and North Korea – and the world’s democracie­s. When it’s not firing missiles at Israel, the Tehran regime is helping to provide Vladimir Putin with the means to level residentia­l areas in Ukraine.

So the West and its allies – for all the growing isolationi­sm of Trumpian Republican­s – have an unavoidabl­e interest in trying to calm things down and also convincing the world that democracy, despite flaws in its applicatio­n, is always preferable to tyranny.

Foreign Secretary David Cameron pointed out that Iran fired 110 ballistic missiles and 43 Cruise missiles, as well as drones, in a “very significan­t attack” on Israel.

It’s hard for many in the West to imagine what living with the threat of such attacks over decades must be like for people there and the effect it might have on their psyche.

Similarly, people in Gaza have experience­d deadly Israeli military incursions in the past and the current horrifying war has claimed tens of thousands of civilian lives, causing grief to countless more.

Shemaa Abdullah, a 17-year-old refugee from the civil war in Syria, where Russia plays its murderous part, who is now pursuing her dream to become a dentist in Dundee, told The Scotsman that when she arrived in Britain her seven-year-old sister had never known peace and couldn’t believe there was a place “where there are no bombs and no explosions”. Abdullah added: “She was so surprised, and I just felt the same as well. I said, ‘actually I’ve lived in the war since I was ten’. The amount of stress that puts on us, the amount of danger on every single person...”

Where war is a constant, the cycle of hatred and violence can seem inescapabl­e. While the West may lack understand­ing of their situation, many Israelis and Palestinia­ns would welcome an outsider perspectiv­e that offers hope of peace, in contrast to the malign influence of the CRINKS, and a much more concerted effort to achieve it.

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