Israel, not Iran, has been the largest destabilizing force in the history of the Middle East since 1948.
The recent unprovoked attacks on Iran are just the latest violation of regional stability.
This is a list of Israeli wars and destabilizing actions in the region.
1947–1949: Nakba (Palestinian Catastrophe)
16,000+ Palestinians killed and 700,000+ Palestinians forcibly expelled or fled during the 1948 war.
Over 400 Palestinian villages were destroyed.
Marked the start of the Israeli policy of demographic engineering through ethnic cleansing.
1948: First Arab-Israeli War
Following the UN partition plan and Israel’s declaration, Arab states entered the war to stop the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. Israel’s actions in mass displacement, a permanent refugee crisis, and armistice lines (not recognized borders).
1956: Suez Crisis
Israel, with the UK and France, invaded Egypt after Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal. Severely destabilized Egypt and violated international law.
1967: Six-Day War
Preemptive Israeli strikes on Egypt, Syria, and Jordan.
Israel occupied: West Bank, East Jerusalem, Gaza, Golan Heights, Sinai.
Set the stage for 56 years of ongoing occupation.
UN Resolution 242 called for withdrawal from the occupied territories - ignored by Israel.
1967–1970: War of Attrition
Illegal Israeli settlements established on internationally-recognised Egyptian land.
Prolonged fighting with Egypt along Suez Canal.
Thousands killed, largely Egyptians.
1967–present: Illegal Settlements Begin
Systematic construction of Israeli settlements in occupied territories, especially in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Violates Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Over 800,000 settlers now live illegally in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
1973: October War
Egypt and Syria launched a counter-offensive to reclaim their lost land.
Israel nearly collapsed, but was supported by massive US resupply.
1978: Operation Litani (Lebanon)
Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon to expel the PLO.
100,000+ Lebanese civilians displaced.
1982: Lebanon War & Sabra–Shatila Massacre
Full-scale Israeli invasion.
Siege of Beirut.
Sabra and Shatila massacres: 2,000+ Palestinian refugees killed by Lebanese Phalangist militia under Israeli protection and oversight.
Israel occupied parts of Lebanon until 2000.
1985–2000: South Lebanon Occupation
Ongoing low-level war with Hezbollah, created in response to Israeli occupation of Lebanese territory.
Israel supported and armed the South Lebanon Army, a brutal proxy militia.
1987–1993: First Intifada
Mass Palestinian uprising against repressive and racist policies.
Israeli military response killed ~1,200 Palestinians.
Sparked international attention to the brutality of the occupation.
1993–1995: Oslo Accords Signed—Then Undermined
Israel and the PLO agreed to a peace framework.
Israel repeatedly violated terms by:
Expanding settlements during and after negotiations.
Refusing final status negotiations.
Maintaining military control over most of the West Bank.
Oslo process eventually collapsed.
2000–2005: Second Intifada
Sparked by Sharon’s provocative visit to Al-Aqsa, a holy site for Palestinian Muslims.
Over 3,000 Palestinians killed, many in extrajudicial assassinations and military raids.
2003–2011: Mossad Cooperation with US in Iraq
Israel pushed and lobbied for the US invasion of Iraq, which massively destabilized the region and Iraq, leading to millions being displaced.
Targeted assassinations and destabilization of post-invasion Iraq.
Supported Kurdish separatist movements.
Allegedly gathered intelligence from northern Iraq for strikes against Iran.
2006: Lebanon War
Israel invaded Lebanon again after Hezbollah border raid.
Over 1,100 Lebanese civilians killed, ~1 million displaced.
2007–2012: Israeli Attacks on Sudan, Syria, Iraq
Targeted alleged arms convoys to Gaza and Hezbollah.
Violated the sovereignty of multiple nations.
2008–2009: Gaza War (Cast Lead)
1,400+ Palestinians killed.
Use of white phosphorus, targeting of civilian infrastructure.
2011–present: Covert Role in Syrian Civil War & Support for ISIS
Israel supported anti-Assad rebel groups, including some linked to al-Qaeda. UNDOF reports confirmed medical and logistical support to rebels near Golan.
Helped create and support ISIS, a radical Salafist group that killed, enslaved and displaced ethnic minorities. Destablized Syria leading to the Refugee Crisis in Europe.
2012: Operation "Pillar of Defense"
Israeli campaign in Gaza.
160+ Palestinians killed, mostly civilians.
2014: Operation "Protective Edge"
2,200+ Palestinians killed (70–80% civilians).
Over 500 children killed.
Gaza infrastructure devastated.
2015–2025: Regular Airstrikes in Syria
Hundreds of Israeli strikes against Syrian and Iranian targets.
Violation of sovereignty; risk of regional war escalation.
2017–present: Deepening Annexation and Settlement Expansion
Official declaration of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
De facto annexation of large parts of the West Bank.
Netanyahu’s governments pushed for "Greater Israel" policy.
2021: Gaza Conflict (Operation Guardian of the Walls)
250+ Palestinians killed, many in residential tower bombings.
2023–present: Gaza Genocide (Post-October 7 War)
After Hamas-led attack killed (allegedly) 1,100 Israelis, Israel launched a massive war on Gaza.
As of June 2025: Over 100,000 Palestinians killed, mostly civilians. Figures are likely an underestimate.
Over 1.7 million displaced (in Gaza alone).
Entire neighborhoods razed.
Accused by UN and global NGOs of war crimes and genocide.
2024: Israeli Invasion of Southern Lebanon
Israel launched airstrikes and limited ground incursions against Hezbollah amid the Gaza war.
300+ civilians killed, thousands displaced, major infrastructure damage.
Escalated regional tensions and deepened Lebanon’s crisis.
UN peacekeepers (UNIFIL) bases came under fire
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Volkvulture has submitted a response debunking professional liar and pseudo-intellectual @Soothlayer—who claims nobody will debate him, despite blocking everyone who challenges him.
We will address the liar’s pseudo claims one by one.
Claim 1: "V. Vulture’s article tries to reframe American history as a latent socialist “civilization.” It’s loaded with idealism, settler nostalgia, and Duginist language dressed up as Marxism. If you have the article, ill be going paragraph by paragraph and unpacking the grift"
Response: From the first paragraph, the article in question not only isn’t trying to say that America is an ‘idealized’ or perfectly imagined ‘civilization’ but is pushing back on the tendencies in American socialist ‘historiography’ from the ‘progressive left’ and ‘bourgeois academia’ both. Not only is America not “inherently good”, it’s also not “inherently evil” nor a historical “aberration” or exception.
Claim 2: "Volk opens by calling both socialism and America “unbounded dreams”
Response: Not only does Volk not “call” American & socialism this, it’s a quote that Volk is
criticizing from the historian ‘Daniel Bell’. Daniel Bell was notoriously a self-proclaimed SPA ‘socialist’ in his youth and later became a hardened anti-communist ‘liberal’ historical revisionist & anti-communist sociologist in academia. Volk writes explicitly against the anti-Bolshevik & New Left historiography that tries to downplay American socialist history. The article also shows US socialist and democratic history’s significance within and for Marxism as being no less than any other great national revolutionary socialist and democratic tradition.
Volk’s writing directly says “socialism as it actually exists is neither unbounded, nor a dream”, and then says that “Our nation was more than dreamt of” and finally “Socialism and America are not dreams.” Blatant bad faith mischaracterization by Soothliar of the writing in question.
🧵The CIA feared the USSR could reach communism because they were reducing hours at the workday.
In "The Economic Problems Socialism USSR", Stalin gave an argument for how the USSR would reach Communism. He proposed doubling living standards, and reducing the hours of labor in the USSR.
Starting in 1956, the USSR begun reducing the total hours of labor, which had a deadline to meet by 1968. If this plan was successful, hours of labor would have went from 48 hours a week, to 30 hours a week, and the minimum wage would have went from 250 to more than 600 rubles.
1/4 The reason we believe it is so important to study the gold standard is that since the United States abandoned it in 1971, labor hours have not decreased and have instead remained stagnant.
This was a deliberate attack on the working class.
2/3 Unions have also capitulated to this reality, instead focusing on demanding higher wages—which will ultimately be eroded by inflation. This ability to erode wages and extend work hours is a hidden feature of the fiat dollar system. Bourgeois economists call it "full employment."
3/4 Due to the hidden power of fiat currency, wages can increase, but inflation can increase faster. This is why Marx ultimately concluded that workers could "rob" capitalists by shortening work hours:
"If the laborer uses his disposable time for himself, he robs the capitalist."
🧵Quotes from Nick Land (@xenocosmography) that are similar to Karl Marx.
1: Accelerating accumulation as the definition of capital:
Land: “Among [accelerationism’s] predictions is the expectation that you’ll be too slow to deal with it coherently.”
Marx: “Constant revolutionising of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fixed, fast-frozen relations, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, …”
2: Capital as a process headed to a final crisis:
Land: “[The] deep problem of acceleration is transcendental [that] describes an absolute horizon – and one that is closing in.”
Marx: “As soon as labour in the direct form has ceased to be the great well-spring of wealth, labour time ceases and must cease to be its measure, and hence exchange value [must cease to be the measure] of use value. The surplus labour of the mass has ceased to be the condition for the development of general wealth, just as the non-labour of the few, for the development of the general powers of the human head. With that, production based on exchange value breaks down, and the direct, material production process is stripped of the form of penury and antithesis.”
🧵 How the Bolshevik revolution turned Russia into a Chess superpower.
In an earlier thread, we explained how the Communist Revolution led to a radical reduction in working hours, giving millions of people ample free time to engage in various activities, including sports. One sport in particular—chess—eventually became a staple of Soviet society.
Chess was typically an upper-class activity. Despite this, Soviet society, once an impoverished nation with a massive peasantry class, not only industrialized but also went on to dominate the 20th century in chess.
🧵 How Soviet Workers benefited from the shortest working day in the world:
The Soviet Constitution of 1936, also known as the "Stalin Constitution," was approved by the Eighth Congress of Soviets and became law on December 5, 1936.
The right of citizens of the Soviet Union to rest and leisure is promised in Article 119 of the Constitution of the USSR
For its time, the Soviet Union had the shortest working day in the world.
A minimum of two weeks' vacation with full pay was also guaranteed.
Employees in healthcare, engineering, technical fields, & scientific research were often entitled to 1 month or more of paid vacation.