you're speculating. Egypt's "real economic blockade" was enforced only on Israel's port on the red sea (Eilat). it did not close all the country's sea connections with the world. I argue that Israel could have survived such a partial blockade, working on the diplomatic arena until Egypt would be forced to open the straits.
Rabin suffered a nervous breakdown b/c he was told NOT to go to war. and I don't see how the temporal collapse of the chief of staff is supposed to pose existential threat to the country.
I already agreed that "on paper" Israel was justified in its fear from the Arab armies, you don't need to rehash this every time.
more speculation. we don't know what would happen if Israel waited. perhaps a diplomatic solution could be reached? perhaps something else? as long as we're in the area of speculation, every opinion is acceptable...
Your whole speculation is based on the assumption that the stars had to be alligned in only one way for Israel to win: they had to strike at precise timing, using precise plan of action, etc. according to you, any small deviation would spell doom. based on the outcome, I fail to see how you reach that analysis. Seems more likely to me (again, we're both playing history/military/political expert role here, something we both aren't) that since the outcome was so decisive, the defeat of the Arab armies so complete, that any and all deviations from the plan would bring the same results. It may have taken more time and with more casualties, but I reiterate - Israel could not have lost the six days war.
you're grasping now. every war has casualties among the armed forces and sometimes among the civilian population - from both sides.
the topic is whether there was existential threat to Israel during the 1967 conflict, not about the nature of every war. if we can't differentiate and say different analysis about every war, than there is no point to argue. but I forget that you seem to think it is ok to derail the topic every now and then, and get angry when I point it out.

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