A ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel has been announced, a deal described by UK diplomatic sources as made ‘in hope rather than expectation’. One can almost hear the collective sigh of relief from the chattering classes, who will now return to their lattes and their moral equivalency. But let us not pretend this is anything other than what it is: a pause, a breathing space, a temporary abeyance of violence that will almost certainly resume once the players have caught their breath.
We have seen this play before. The Israeli-Lebanese border is a stage for a perpetual cycle of aggression, retaliation and ceasefire. It is the political equivalent of a Groundhog Day, only with more bloodshed. The deal, we are told, is fragile, a diplomatic Band-Aid on a gangrenous wound. The phrase ‘in hope rather than expectation’ is revealing. It is the language of the pessimist, the realist, the historian who knows that peace treaties in this region are written in sand, not stone.
The West, ever the optimist, will pour millions into ‘peace-building’ and ‘confidence-building measures’. They will talk of a new dawn, a fresh start. But the fundamental issues remain: Hezbollah’s arsenal, Israel’s security concerns, the plight of Palestinian refugees, the status of the Golan Heights. These are not problems to be solved by a press release. They are historical grievances, hardened by decades of blood and propaganda.
What is particularly galling is the intellectual dishonesty surrounding these deals. We pretend that both sides are equally culpable, equally victimised. But this is not a quarrel between equals. It is a conflict between a nation-state and a non-state actor, between a democracy and a theocracy, between a country that wants to live in peace and a movement that wants to see it erased. To draw a moral equivalence is not just lazy; it is dangerous. It allows the aggressor to claim a legitimacy it does not deserve.
And what of the so-called ‘peace process’? It is a misnomer. There is no process, only a series of crises. The Oslo Accords, the Camp David Summit, the Roadmap for Peace: each one hailed as a breakthrough, each one ending in tears. The optimists will say, ‘But what is the alternative?’ The alternative is to stop pretending that these ceasefires are anything more than a temporary truce. It is to accept that some conflicts are beyond resolution, that some hatreds are too deep to be healed by a handshake and a photo opportunity.
The Victorians, who knew a thing or two about managing empires, understood that certain peoples could not be governed by reason. They called it ‘the white man’s burden’, which is unfashionable today. But there is a kernel of truth: some regions of the world are simply not ready for the kind of peace that liberal democracies take for granted. The Middle East is one such region. It is a land of ancient feuds, of honour and revenge, where a ceasefire is not an end but a tactical pause.
So let us not get carried away by this news. The ceasefire will hold, or it will not. The rockets will fly again, or they will not. But one thing is certain: the diplomats will return to their capitals, the journalists to their keyboards, and the cycle will continue. It always does. This is not pessimism. It is history. And history, as ever, is written in blood.
In conclusion, the Lebanon-Israel ceasefire is a necessary evil, but let us not mistake it for a solution. It is a holding action, a chance to catch our breath before the next round. The sooner we accept this, the sooner we can stop pretending and start preparing for the inevitable. Because in the Middle East, hope is not a strategy. It is a luxury we cannot afford.








