Here we go again. Another ceasefire, another accord, another round of bombs falling on southern Lebanon. The news cycle spins its weary wheel: Israel strikes, Hezbollah condemns, diplomats wring their hands. But let us not pretend this is a surprise. This is the natural rhythm of the Middle East, a dance as old as the Roman limes. The question is not why this happens, but why we persist in the illusion that it might ever be otherwise.
Consider the 'controversial new accord.' What does it propose? A recognition of borders? A freeze on settlements? A promise of security? The details are as irrelevant as the colour of the ink. Such pacts are like treaties with the Parthians: written in good faith, shredded by the first arrow. Hezbollah condemns because to do otherwise would be to admit that its raison d'être is obsolete. Israel strikes because it cannot trust a state that shelters its enemies. And the cycle tightens, a serpent eating its tail.
We have seen this before. The Thirty Years' War ended with treaties that lasted a generation. The Congress of Vienna kept the peace for a century. But those were agreements carved by victors with armies at their backs, not by committees seeking 'mutual understanding.' The modern Middle East lacks the clarity of conquest. It is a landscape of shadows: non-state actors, proxy armies, and ideologies that treat compromise as blasphemy. No piece of paper can tame that chaos.
And yet the intellectuals weep. They call for 'restraint' and 'dialogue,' as if the issue were a lack of conversation rather than a clash of civilisational wills. Lebanon is not Switzerland. Hezbollah is not a polite opposition party. And Israel, surrounded by those who seek its dissolution, is not about to gamble its existence on a diplomat's promise. The irony is that the louder the calls for peace, the more fragile the peace becomes. Each accord raises expectations, each violation hardens hearts.
What we are witnessing is not a failure of diplomacy but a triumph of historical inertia. Empires rise and fall. Tribes fight and reconcile. But in the Levant, the ground is soaked with too much blood to absorb forgiveness. The Romans built walls and burned cities. The Byzantines tried conversion. The Ottomans ruled with an iron hand. The British drew lines on a map and left. None of it stuck. Why should this latest accord be any different?
Perhaps the real scandal is our own naivety. We cling to the belief that reason can overcome resentment, that economic incentives can dissolve ancient hatreds. But humans are not calculators; we are creatures of memory and myth. The gunfire in southern Lebanon is not a disruption of peace; it is a continuation of history. To expect otherwise is to expect the Nile to flow backwards.
So here is a contrarian thought: let these accords fail. Let Hezbollah rage. Let Israel defend itself. The only honest peace is one built on strength, not sentiment. The Romans knew this. The British knew it. We have forgotten it at our peril. But do not worry: the diplomats will convene again. They will clutch their papers and issue statements. And the bombs will fall again. That is the only constant. That is the true accord.










