Seventeen dead in southern Lebanon. Not a headline we haven't seen before, but it never gets any easier to write. The Israeli Defence Forces confirm strikes on what they call Hezbollah positions.
The bodies pulled from the rubble say otherwise. Among the dead: three children, two women, and a teacher who lost his entire family in one missile strike. The UK government, ever the diplomat, issues a statement.
'We urge restraint from all parties. We call for de-escalation. We support a diplomatic solution.
' Source at the Foreign Office confirms a quiet phone call to Tel Aviv. But what does that achieve? Nothing.
The bombs keep falling. The death toll keeps rising. And Britain, with its arms sales to Israel still flowing, plays the role of the concerned uncle who refuses to stop the fight.
I have seen this before in Iraq, in Gaza, in Yemen. The same cycle: violence, calls for restraint, more violence. The only thing that changes is the body count.
We should be asking: how many more have to die before we move beyond statements? How many more press releases from Whitehall before someone in London picks up the phone and makes a real difference? Until then, the blood of seventeen souls stains the soil of southern Lebanon, and our words are just that: words.








