If so, why there is no solution to the known crisis in the world: Palestina, Afghanistan, Kashmir, Syria, Libya, Iraq, Kosovo, Catalonia, Cyprus, Crimea, Karabakh and so on.
First, there is a possibility that there are a number of conflicts that have been solved by dialogue. The Irish civil war over North Ireland comes to mind. There are many others.
Think of how such a solution is often described rhetoric by media, though.
Sometimes these are called "stalemates." That means no rapid and violent solution with piles of highly photogenic bodies. And also "stalemate" means neither side got exactly what it wanted.
So I think we need to look for how many "stalemates' there are in the world. Once the fighting stops, then the areas of common ground can be searched out and work can go to expanding these, work on community-wide projects that help everyone and have nothing to do with factions, thinking of futur egenerations and whether we wish them hope.
Thanks for bring this important issue to our attention. I wish you well and good outcomes.
You know that there is one saying that says - It's better to negotiate for one hundred years than to fight one day.
It is also known that every war is finally ended by negotiations, i.e. dialogue and the signing of a peace treaty.
Unfortunately, we are witnessing that international law does not apply today. In classical international law, the rule is valid - the force makes the right. This rule is still applied today in many cases.
In the context of this issue, we can cite an example of cooperation and dialogue between the Saudi prince Bin Salman and Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed on the one hand, and the state of Israel on the other. These princes, as they transmit some media, have better cooperation with the representatives of the state of Israel than with the Palestinian state.
Both Jewish Israelis and Palestinians turn to archaeologists to help them win the argument over “who was here first”, according to graphic novelist Rutu Modan. Now an associate professor of illustration and comics at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem, she has created a graphic novel that offers a satire of academic life and how it gets politicised in the Middle East...
Hi Dr Harun Hadžić . Dialogue is not always the solution. Because there are countries that do not recognize dialogue as the best solution, and because their interest lies in not having a solution. Colonialism does not know the language of dialogue.