Description
There is no doubt that in 1967 we faced a distressing experience, whatever we call it: setback, defeat, or any other description.
Personally, I don’t prefer to call it a defeat. That’s because defeat implies the complete surrender of one side to another. If this side refuses to surrender and is in control of its own will, then it is not defeated. Moreover, if this side is determined to resist and gives itself the ability to return to the battlefield with strength, then it has not been defeated. On the contrary, it has regained its strength and its chance to achieve victory.
Perhaps we should recall that philosophers from Machiavelli to Wohler have said that any war has two objectives:
1- A primary objective: to destroy the enemy’s military power.
2- A final objective: to break its will.
On June 5, 1967, those who coveted this nation succeeded in “destroying its armed forces,” and this was their initial objective. However, they failed to achieve their ultimate goal, which was “breaking its will.” Now, they want it to forget this, even though this ultimate goal was not achieved even in 1967, and the initial objective also eluded them in the same year, because the nation’s will drove it to rebuild its armed forces and quickly return to the deadly battlefield, from June 5, 1967, to October 6, 1973.











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