So the dance of mutual destruction continues. A Lebanese general and three of his soldiers are dead, dispatched by an Israeli strike that, we are told, was a retaliation for a Hezbollah rocket barrage. The usual script. The usual outrage. The usual fearful headlines about a wider Middle Eastern war. But let us not fall for the comforting illusion that this is merely another cycle of violence in a region that has known nothing else. This is something far more dangerous. This is a wilful march into a catastrophe that will make the Syrian civil war look like a border skirmish.
I am reminded, as I often am, of the summer of 1914. The sleepy, arrogant capitals of Europe sleepwalked into a conflict that would consume a generation. The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand was a spark, but the powder keg was decades in the making. Today, the Middle East is that powder keg. And the matches are held by men who believe that escalation is a strategy, that restraint is a weakness, and that the only language their enemies understand is the language of the missile and the drone.
Let us examine the logic. Israel, a nation that prides itself on its intelligence and military prowess, has apparently decided that the way to deter Hezbollah is to kill a senior Lebanese army officer. What, precisely, does that achieve? Hezbollah and the Lebanese state are not the same thing. In fact, they are often at odds. By striking the Lebanese army, Israel does not weaken Hezbollah. It does the opposite. It drives a wedge between the international community and its own narrative of self-defence. It gives Hezbollah exactly the kind of unifying grievance it needs. It makes the Lebanese state, already a fragile and sectarian contraption, even more beholden to the militias that claim to be its protectors.
And what of the wider war that everyone fears? The phrase has become a kind of incantation, a way of signalling seriousness without actually grappling with reality. A wider war would involve not just Israel and Lebanon, but Iran, its proxies in Syria and Iraq, and perhaps the Gulf states dragged in by treaty or by panic. It would be a regional conflagration that would see cities levelled, economies shattered, and refugees flowing into an already overwhelmed Europe. And for what? For the sake of some abstract concept of deterrence? For the sake of proving that Israel can strike anywhere, anytime, without consequence?
The tragedy is that this is all so predictable. We have seen this movie before. The assassination of Qasem Soleimani. The strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus. Each time, the world holds its breath, and each time, the retaliatory fire is measured, calibrated, designed to avoid all-out war. But calibration is a game of diminishing returns. Each escalation raises the threshold for the next response. The risk is not that someone will deliberately start a war, but that a miscalculation, a misread signal, a errant drone will turn a controlled escalation into an uncontrollable inferno.
This is not the mark of a great power acting with strategic clarity. It is the behaviour of a nation trapped in a tactical mindset, unable to see the forest for the trees. The leaders who order these strikes think they are being strong. In reality, they are being lazy. They are choosing the dramatic, kinetic option because it is easier than the hard work of diplomacy, of state-building, of addressing the root causes of the conflict. They are playing with fire in a region that is already a bonfire.
And we, the spectators in the West, wring our hands and publish worried editorials. We call for restraint. We call for de-escalation. But we do nothing. We have no leverage, no will, no clear idea of what we want. The United States, the supposed guarantor of regional order, is paralysed by its own domestic divisions and its own conflicting loyalties. Europe is a collection of timid bureaucrats who cannot even agree on a common foreign policy. So the matches keep being struck, and the powder keg keeps growing.
A wider war is not inevitable. But it is becoming more likely every time a missile strikes a general, every time a rocket hits a school, every time a leader chooses the path of least resistance. The ghosts of 1914 are watching. They know what comes next. The question is whether we are willing to learn from their tragedy or whether we are determined to repeat it.









