Meengla
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@Juice: This article by NY Times elaborates on what I mentioned to you in one of my recent posts. I'd go even farther and say that even a world war is possible beyond a regional war. Never underestimates the follies of human beings. What this article does not mention is the potential involvement of Pakistan if Iran gets being destroyed with horrible tales of misery and refugees pouring to Pakistan and/elsewhere.
A regional war starting from Syria is probably the most dangerous situation for humanity since the Cuban Missile Crisis over 50 years ago.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/31/w...-plan-to-strike-syria-overlooks-risks.html?hp
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A regional war starting from Syria is probably the most dangerous situation for humanity since the Cuban Missile Crisis over 50 years ago.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/31/w...-plan-to-strike-syria-overlooks-risks.html?hp
...
¶ Irans and Syrias defense ministers threatened on Friday to unleash attacks on Israel if Mr. Assad was in danger. While Hezbollah has said it would wait to see the scale and nature of the attacks before responding, in practice, analysts close to the organization said, it is probably prepared for any contingency.
¶ There is also concern that Shiite-led Iraq could send thousands more militants to help Mr. Assad if it believed he was truly threatened, and that such a step would in turn further rally and embolden Sunni jihadists on both sides of its border with Syria.
¶ Many diplomats and analysts consider retaliation unlikely, but the consequences could be grim. Israel has vowed that if Hezbollah attacks it again, it will respond forcefully, drawing Lebanon into war. And if Syria lobbed missiles into Israel and it responded with airstrikes through Lebanese airspace that threatened Mr. Assad further, Hezbollah would consider that further justification to attack Israel.
¶ Even without such a direct entanglement, Lebanon could be very vulnerable. It has recently suffered its worst sectarian violence in years: a car bomb in Shiite Hezbollah territory in the Beirut suburbs, and two at Sunni mosques in the northern city of Tripoli. Lebanese authorities accused Syria on Friday of involvement in the Tripoli attacks, and intelligence officials fear such bombings could increase.
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