Considering this is 10th day and no other country has shown much enthusiasm in joining the war, I think any such call may be ineffective. Individual actions by non-state actors will quickly be labelled as terrorism and may draw harsh response from Israel with no ability by the affected countries to respond. It is best to leave war making to states.
Actually, ANY action against Israel--even kids throwing rocks at Israeli soldiers is already called 'terrorism'.
'Harsh response' from Israel?? What's next, nukes??
I think you have a little too much respect for Israel's military capabilities; if Israel was that strong, then there wouldn't be the American AC Carriers rushing to help Israel. Israel is extremely vulnerable to cheap rocket fired from multiple sides--it will destroy Israel's economy. How many hills Israelis going to carpet bomb?
Here, an article on NY Times to open your's and other's eyes about the 'real danger' to Israel. The NY Times article is behind a paywall and I am only posting a little bit about the network of fighters that Iran has built--something I had already suspected Iran was doing--more than just training and arming Hezbollah, Iran kept taking hits from Israel in Syria and elsewhere
but had kept its eyes on the ultimate battle.
The fighting between Israel and Hamas has raised fears the violence will spill into Lebanon as a wider conflict with Hezbollah. Given the strength of Hezbollah forces, that would pose a real danger for Israel.
www.nytimes.com
For Hezbollah and Israel, the Stakes in Any Broader War Are High
The fighting between Israel and Hamas has raised fears the violence will spill into Lebanon as a wider conflict with Hezbollah. Given the strength of Hezbollah forces, that would pose a real danger for Israel.
...
Such a war poses great risks to everyone involved, experts say. Israel, which appears poised to launch a ground invasion in Gaza, could struggle to fight on two fronts and defend itself against Hezbollah’s skilled guerrillas.
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Changes in the Middle East in recent years have made it more likely that violence in one place could ignite violence elsewhere. That’s because Iran has worked to knit anti-Israel forces in different countries into an
increasingly tight web.
..
Armed groups in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen that once largely fought separately now see themselves as being on the same team. Many of their commanders have received similar training from Iran or Hezbollah and their members share knowledge on how to increase the firepower of rockets and to surveil their enemies with drones.