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Wars are always destructive and their results are often elusive. But no other struggle quite underlies the short-sightedness and unfruitful nature of fighting as well as the Byzantine-Sasanian War of 602 to 628. Neither empire gained much through this long conflict and the war allowed a completely new power, Islam, to become dominant in the region. Welcome to the new edition of Kings and Generals, the documentary series. Since the disastrous Battle of Carrhae in 53 BC, the Romans and Persians fought in countless conflicts until a certain balance formed between them. Neither side was ever able to strike a final blow against its long-standing enemy. The new hostilities started in 571. The Sassanidsamp;#39; Arab clients, the Lakhmids, attacked Byzantiumamp;#39;s Arab clients, the Gassanids in 570 and then the Persians invaded Yemen and expelled the Byzantine allies from there. The Romans attempted to incite revolts against the Sasanians in modern-day Georgia and Armenia and eventually o