Julian Assange's - The World Tomorrow: Interview with Hassan Nasrallah
April 17, 2012
Hezbollah urged the Syrian opposition to engage in dialogue with Assad's regime, but they refused. Hezbollah leader Sayyid Nasrallah confirmed this in his first interview in 6 years, the world premiere of Julian Assange's 'The World Tomorrow' on RT.
Watching this interview reminds me of Lawrence of Arabia - T.E. Lawrence - whom my father knew - and that excellent film made in 1962 with Peter O'Toole as Lawrence - in which Lawrence knew when, at the end of WW1, Palestine was given to the British as a Mandated Territory under British control, the Arabs had lost. It laid the ground work for the creation of the State of Israel in 1947/48 on Arabian lands, who were a wandering peoples, and who were now enclosed in much more smaller and confined areas without any justification nor agreement with these people. The result of this has been only too sadly clear. The Jews could have come back after WW2and lived there besides the Arabians without stealing Arabian lands from the Arabs in order to do so. I think it's clear where I am coming from in all of this. The assassination in 1948 of the UN's Swedish Count Bernadott, who was there to try and broker a resolution to the developing crises was sadly only the beginning of what we have seen since.
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Watching this interview reminds me of Lawrence of Arabia - T.E. Lawrence - whom my father knew - and that excellent film made in 1962 with Peter O'Toole as Lawrence - in which Lawrence knew when, at the end of WW1, Palestine was given to the British as a Mandated Territory under British control, the Arabs had lost. It laid the ground work for the creation of the State of Israel in 1947/48 on Arabian lands, who were a wandering peoples, and who were now enclosed in much more smaller and confined areas without any justification nor agreement with these people. The result of this has been only too sadly clear. The Jews could have come back after WW2and lived there besides the Arabians without stealing Arabian lands from the Arabs in order to do so. I think it's clear where I am coming from in all of this. The assassination in 1948 of the UN's Swedish Count Bernadott, who was there to try and broker a resolution to the developing crises was sadly only the beginning of what we have seen since.
Michael B
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