ハマースのイスラエル侵攻

(https://www.meforum.org/64946/time-for-a-firm-stand-us-policy-options-in-light)

Time for A Firm Stand: U.S. Policy Options in Light of Hamas’s Invasion of Israel
by Gregg Roman and Clifford Smith
*Gregg Roman is director of the Middle East Forum; Clifford Smith is director of the Middle East Forum’s Washington Project.

The National Interest
8 October 2023

In the tumultuous wake of an unprecedented attack on Israel by Hamas forces from Gaza, a defining moment has arisen for United States foreign policy.

As a longstanding ally of Israel, the U.S. is compelled to reevaluate its stance and actions amidst a conflict steeped in complexity and historical precedent. The escalation of violence prompts the consideration of stringent policy measures aimed at curbing the Islamist organization’s aggression and restoring stability in the region.

The adoption of a “Dismantle Hamas” resolution represents one such measure. In the face of ongoing crisis, rhetorical support or increased pressure on Hamas proves insufficient. A Congressional resolution calling unequivocally for the eradication of the Hamas threat would signify a paradigm shift, underscoring the United States’ unyielding commitment to Israel’s sovereignty and safety, and the eradication of threats to Israel, and the wider region.

Yet, Israel’s security is intertwined with regional dynamics, notably the role of Qatar in funding Gaza. While ostensibly aimed at humanitarian relief, the financial aid flowing from this Gulf state has inadvertently fueled Hamas’s militancy. A recalibration of U.S.-Qatar relations is urgent. Measures such as the revocation of Qatar’s Major Non-NATO Ally Status, threatening Qatar’s access to US financial systems, and even the potential relocation of the Al Udeid Air Base, hang in the balance as potent levers to enforce a cessation of all funding to Gaza.

In tandem with these international diplomatic maneuvers, a domestic reassessment of aid to Gaza is pivotal. The recent conviction of World Vision’s Gaza Director for siphoning off tens of millions of dollars for Hamas shows that even well-intended USAID funds can easily be used for nefarious purposes. A comprehensive review of aid to Gaza is required. No U.S. aid should reach Gaza’s shores so long as it can be siphoned off by a terrorist organization running a functional military dictatorship, thereby perpetuating the tragic situation it ostensibly seeks to mitigate.

Global efforts to corner Hamas’s leadership, ensconced in the safe havens of “frenemy” countries, Turkey and Qatar in particular, can tighten the noose around the organization. Nations providing refuge to these leaders must face a stark choice – sever ties with the organization, including expelling senior leaders who live in luxury as ordinary Gazans suffer, or confront a cessation in U.S. military and intelligence support. This measure exemplifies an act of international solidarity against terrorism. Regional dynamics hold the key to further isolating Hamas.

Egypt, in particular, has a pivotal role to play. The U.S. should consider restoring military aid to Egypt, on the condition that it assists in dismantling Hamas and offers refuge to Gazan citizens fleeing the conflict. Such a policy aligns mutual interests for regional stability and underscores the role of cooperative diplomacy in quelling violence.

Yet, these diplomatic and financial efforts must be complemented by direct actions to stem the flow of arms to Gaza. Inspired by the Biden Administration’s recent interception of Iranian weapons bound for Yemen, which were brilliantly then shipped to Ukraine, the U.S. should intensify efforts to halt the supply of arms destined for Hamas and repeat this success by sending captured arms to Ukraine. Each weapon intercepted represents a concrete step towards de-escalating ongoing conflicts and restoring a semblance of peace.

Lastly, the legislative arsenal of the United States can be fortified by reviving and reinforcing the Palestinian International Terrorism Support Prevention Act, perhaps to be aptly renamed as the ‘Dismantle Hamas Through Sanctions and Direct Action Act.’ Adapted to the current crisis, this legislative initiative should aim to disempower Hamas, cutting off its financial and political lifelines. As Israel grapples with the onslaught initiated by Hamas, the U.S., fortified by its unwavering commitment to the Jewish state, is not only expected to stand with its ally but also to enact decisive actions.

The proposed policy measures represent a comprehensive approach, reflecting the necessity for a sustained solution to a conflict that has festered far too long. In this defining moment, the U.S. can exemplify international leadership, affirming that its support for an ally is not only resilient but unyielding.

©1994-2023 Middle East Forum

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Posted in Daniel Pipes, research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

MEFの特報

Victory’s Edge: Israel’s Strategic Decisions Ahead
by Gregg Roman
7 October 2023

In this special MEF newsletter, get an in-depth analysis of the ongoing Israel-Gaza conflict. Uncover the brutal actions of Hamas, Israel’s response, and international reactions. Delve into Iran’s role, the US’s stand, and UK Islamists’ concerning support for terrorism.

Hamas’ Brutal Massacre

Today, Hamas went door to door, butchering women, men and children, dragging teenagers and children into captivity in Gaza.
Why it matters: This brutal massacre by Hamas highlights the true nature of the organization and the urgency to address their actions.
The big picture: For the past 20 years, there have been claims that Hamas is moderating, but their recent actions prove otherwise.
Yes, but: Despite claims of moderation, Hamas continues to engage in violent acts, contradicting the narrative of their willingness to accept a two-state solution or ceasefire.
What’s next: It is crucial for the United States to address this issue and take appropriate actions to back Israel’s efforts to defeat Hamas.

Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant

In the wake of a terrifying invasion by Hamas, Israel faces an urgent imperative to take definitive action against the organization. MEF director Gregg Roman analyzes the dangers of the situation here.
Why it matters: The invasion poses a fundamental threat to Israel and its citizens, highlighting the need for a direct and unequivocal response.
Hamas’s aggression includes infiltrating IDF bases, taking civilians hostage, and launching rockets at civilian centers, underscoring the urgent necessity for Israel to reevaluate its approach.
The bottom line: Israel must dismantle Hamas and neutralize its threat to ensure the safety and security of its citizens.

The surprise attack on Israel by Hamas, the Islamist organization ruling Gaza, is a humanitarian horror. However, MEF president Daniel Pipes also details a potential silver lining for Israel in the Wall Street Journal
Why it matters: It is also a strategic opportunity for Israel, the U.S. and democracies everywhere.
Hamas is an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, engaging in violence against Israelis, Palestinians, and others.
A sequence of Israeli missteps led to Hamas taking power in Gaza, imposing a totalitarian rule and threatening to destroy Israel.
The bottom line: Most Gazans loathe Hamas, but they dare not rise up against their power-hungry oppressors, who enjoy support from Iran. Israel must destroy Hamas in order to prevent this tragedy from ever happening again.

Iran Drives War Against Israel

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh and Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
The Islamic Republic of Iran is the driving force in the war launched against Israel by the Palestinian Hamas terrorist movement in the Gaza Strip, according to Israel’s Foreign Ministry and Middle East experts.
Why it matters: The information is important because it highlights Iran’s role in supporting and financing terrorist organizations that are attacking Israel.
The big picture: Iran’s jingoistic foreign policy aims to destroy the Jewish state and fund Palestinian terrorist groups on Israel’s borders.
What’s next: The situation is ongoing, and the conflict between Israel and Hamas continues to escalate.
Go deeper: Read MEF research director Jonathan Spyer’s piece in the Jerusalem Post for more.

(pic) Islamic Human Rights Commission headquarters in London

Just a day after Iran-backed Hamas terrorists slaughtered and kidnapped Israeli civilians, Iranian Islamists in the UK are organizing an event featuring pro-Hamas voices. MEF Islamist Watch director Samuel Westrop has the story at FWI.
Why it matters: The event is being held at a venue controlled by a British Hamas network, raising concerns about the support for terrorism within the UK.
Speakers include Mohd Azmi Abdul Hamid, who has praised ‘jihad’ against the ‘Zionist regime,’ and Dawud Walid, who has denounced Jews and is associated with a group described as part of ‘Hamas’ propaganda apparatus.’
The bottom line: The event highlights the presence of pro-terror voices in the British Islamist scene and the ongoing fundraising activities of Hamas-linked charities in the UK.

In the tumultuous wake of an unprecedented attack on Israel by Hamas forces from Gaza, a defining moment has arisen for United States foreign policy. The Middle East Forum will release a set of policy proposals on Tuesday, along with model legislation for Congress to help guide American policy vis-à-vis Hamas and its supporters.
Why it matters: The escalation of violence prompts the consideration of stringent policy measures aimed at curbing aggression and restoring stability in the region.
The adoption of a legislative package by Congress is one such measure. It should call for:

1. Dismantle Hamas Resolution: This atrocity calls for more than just pressure on Hamas or rhetorical support for Israel; it demands the eradication of the Hamas threat.
2. Halt Qatari Funding: Coerce Qatar to cease Gaza funding; use strategic threats and financial restrictions.
3. Withhold USAID funding: Stop all aid to Gaza until Hamas’s power and manipulation are terminated.

1. Restrict “Frenemies”: Halt military aid until countries expel Hamas leaders, forcing them to face justice.
2. Condition Egyptian Aid: Offer military aid to Egypt contingent on assisting in dismantling Hamas, aiding refugees.
3. Interdict Hamas Weapons: Redirect focus, intercept weapons bound for Gaza, similar to the Yemen-Iran-Ukraine precedent.
4. Reintroduce an Enhanced Palestinian International Terrorism Support Prevention Act: Update and pass the act, strengthening tools to dismantle Hamas, cutting funds.
In tandem with the Biden administration’s ongoing international diplomatic maneuvers, a domestic reassessment of aid to Gaza is pivotal.
The bottom line: The proposed policy measures represent a comprehensive approach, reflecting the necessity for a sustained solution to a conflict that has festered far too long.

“Victory belongs to the most persevering,” said Napoleon Bonaparte.
Israel’s opponents are on the road to ultimate victory through a series of smaller victories if Israel does not act decisively to once and for all end Hamas rule in Gaza.
Why it matters: These victories are emboldening for the Palestinians and demoralizing for Israel.
Israel must assert control, provide deterrence, and achieve victory by beating its enemy into submission.
The bottom line: Israel needs to make Hamas sue for peace, not another ceasefire.

Rami Aman recently gave a webinar to MEF focused on the suffering Palestinians face in Gaza at the hands of Hamas.
A Palestinian activist, Rami Aman, has been empowering Gazan youth through non-violence, seeking good leadership and Palestinian reconciliation.
Why it matters: Aman’s peace projects aim to provide sustainable plans for the lives of Gazans, filling the gap left by Hamas and the Palestinian Authority.
The big picture: Aman’s initiatives, such as connecting Israeli and Palestinian peace activists through video chats, challenge the narrative that Hamas represents all Gazans.
What’s next: Aman continues his activism despite facing opposition from Hamas, believing that most Palestinians want to start negotiations with Israelis or Jews.

Multiple Hamas targets in Gaza targeted by the Israel Defense Force.
In the latest Israel-Hamas conflict, strategies for containing and deterring Hamas are debated, with some advocating for a decisive military victory and others favoring containment and periodic use of force. MEF writing fellow Gary Gambill analyzed Israel’s last war against Gaza in 2021. Here are some up to date thoughts:

Israel’s military capabilities, including the Iron Dome air-defense system, have improved, allowing for precision airstrikes and minimizing civilian casualties. This did little to prevent a massive rocket barrage on Israel this morning.
Deterrence and psychological victory are key strategies that will be tested during this war.
The influence of Iran on Palestinian groups complicates deterrence efforts. Palestinian rejectionism as an ideology must be defeated, as much as Hamas, a terror organization.

The conflict will highlight the challenge of avoiding civilian suffering while countering and destroying Hamas.
Until yesterday, the outcome of the last operation against Hamas was still debated, with Israel delaying the next round of violence but not achieving significant strategic gains. This led to the massacre that took place today in Israel.

Why it matters: The Israel-Hamas conflict has far-reaching implications for regional stability and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Understanding the strategies employed and their outcomes is crucial for assessing the effectiveness of different approaches that must be taken in this war.
The big picture: The conflict between Israel and Hamas is complex and influenced by regional dynamics, including Iran’s involvement.
The challenge of balancing military actions with minimizing civilian suffering is a central concern, but should not deter Israel from accomplishing its objectives.
The outcome of this conflict has implications for future rounds of violence and the prospects for peace in the region.
What’s next: The aftermath of the conflict will likely involve efforts to rebuild and address the underlying issues that contribute to the cycle of violence. International diplomacy and regional dynamics will play a significant role in shaping the path forward, but only after Israel achieves unconditional victory in Gaza.

©1994-2023 Middle East Forum

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Posted in Daniel Pipes, research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

ハマースのイスラエル戦を理解

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGyPfA8kXYw)

Understanding the Hamas War on Israel
834 回視聴
2023年10月10日
Middle East Forum
チャンネル登録者数 3340人

Hamas managed to pull off a surprise attack on Israel, leading to many casualties and political consequences. What does this mean for Israel’s domestic debate? For the rapprochement with Saudi Arabia? For the Palestinian Authority? Will it lead to fundamental changes in Israel’s security establishment? Will Hamas survive? How will Hezbollah respond? And what about Israel’s Muslim citizens? To make sense of this complex, fast-moving scene, the Middle East Forum will host a roundtable discussion for a full hour on Monday. Participants will include Daniel Pipes, MEF’s president; Jonathan Spyer, the director of research; and Nave Dromi, the director of MEF-Israel. Gregg Roman, MEF’s director, will moderate.

©1994-2023 Middle East Forum

(転載終)
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(https://www.facebook.com/ikuko.tsunashima/)

2023年10月10日投稿・2023年10月11日修正版

パイプス氏達は、1994年頃からずっと、小さな組織を立ち上げて、丹念に中東の情報分析を行ない、イスラエルと米国および同盟諸国にとっての危機を警告し続けてきました。

2012年頃には、中東フォーラムに対して、日本のインターネット上や中東関係の書籍では口を極めた非難が蔓延っていましたが、パイプス氏から直接依頼されて、私が丸6年、拙い翻訳作業をウェブサイトに掲載し続け、拙ブログ「ユーリの部屋」“Lily’s Room”でも背景説明を書き綴ったところ、今や「保守派」を自称する層がようやく日本でも増えてきました。

10年前の今頃を思い起こすと、感無量です。

因みに、今回のガザ国境近くの攻撃対象地域には、2015年春、私は中東フォーラムの旅団で訪問いたしました。
アメリカ、オーストラリア、カナダの英語圏の人ばかりの中で、紅一点の日本人は私でした。

その前年にもカッサムロケット弾がイスラエル南部に飛んできていて、その証拠品が無造作に並べられている場所にも見学に行きました。
このロケット弾の出所はどこか?日本では公に報道されていないようです。

詳細は、『ユーリの部屋』(https://itunalily.hatenablog.com/search?q=ネゲブ)をご覧ください。

問題は、中東が日本にとってエネルギー資源国であり、日本文化にとっては馴染みの薄い一神教の揺籃の地であること、日本が米国と同盟国関係にあること、日本の周辺諸国も長らく日本に向けて情報戦等の攻撃を仕掛けて来たのに、最近になるまで、大半の普通の日本人は、まるで他人事の様に「平和温泉」に浸って能天気に暮らしてきたことです。

ネタニヤフ首相の男らしさや勇敢な発言に靡く日本人もいますが、気を付けるべきは、ベングリオン首相等、歴代のイスラエル首相の側近さえ、実はソビエトのスパイだったことが後に判明していることです。英語で出版された書物には、そのような震撼すべき事例が率直に記されています。(例:”KGB Today The Hidden Hand” by John Barron)

右派の強硬なやり方を批判する人が日本でも多く、「話し合い」で相互理解を促進すれば、あるいは、経済援助をすれば、問題は解決するという意見が主流でした。ところが、今回の状況に及んで、そのような甘い夢想は吹き飛んでしまいました。

(2023年10月10日転載・2023年10月11日修正版転載)

Posted in Daniel Pipes, Japanese culture, research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

ハマースを排除せよ

Middle East Forum(https://www.meforum.org/64942/silent-cries-amidst-invasion-israel-must)

Silent Cries Amidst Invasion: Israel Must Eliminate Hamas
by Gregg Roman (director of the Middle East Forum)
The Times of Israel
7 October 2023

Members of Knesset discuss the disarmament of Gaza in a June 2023 meeting of the Knesset Israel Victory Caucus. (Copyright Middle East Forum)

In the haunting silence that follows yet another terrifying burst of gunfire, amidst the charred remains of a once peaceful kibbutz near the Gaza border, lies an emblem of innocence—a baby, found alone at Kibbutz Kfar Aza, whose parents may have been kidnapped by Hamas.

Hamas terrorists infiltrate an IDF base in Israel’s southern district, severing contact with the soldiers stationed there, instilling a chilling silence that reverberates the menace of an unyielding enemy.

In the border town of Sderot, the crisis assumes an unprecedented hue. Shoval Kahlon, a resident, details a harrowing narrative where Hamas terrorists tread with impunity, their boots echoing the terror that now haunts the streets. They knock on doors, their sinister motives revealed when residents, expecting to find IDF troops, unwittingly open their doors to terrorists who take them hostage.

The child’s silent cries for the missing parents, the silence of soldiers under siege, and the gunfire breaking out in front of kindergartens and supermarkets in Sderot, echo the unspeakable horrors of a conflict that knows no boundaries, a vivid testament to the wanton brutality and ruthlessness of Hamas’s aggression and unprecedented invasion against Israel.

Each rocket launched, each life claimed, and each family torn apart underscores the urgent need for Israel, and the world, to reevaluate and respond to the ongoing crisis with a blend of strategic might and lethal determination.

In June, the Middle East Forum released a policy paper challenging Israel’s passive “mow the lawn” Gaza policy, instead presenting a path toward Israel victory. The paper calls on Israel to rid itself of Hamas’s threat by disarming it, prohibiting its rearmament, and demonstrating conclusively the cost of threatening Israel. With today’s attack, however, it is time to destroy Hamas once and for all.

The imagery of terror unleashed upon innocent Israeli lives flickers incessantly across television screens. Hamas and their allies have not just violated international law, they have trampled upon the very essence of humanity, initiating an era of darkness on this fateful fiftieth anniversary of the Yom Kippur War. The world has witnessed the resilience of the Jewish people, their undying spirit echoing the sanctity of their historical endurance. Today, as war detonates at Israel’s doorstep, that endurance is summoned again – not out of choice, but necessity. Israel fights not for conquest, but for survival; not for dominance, but for the right to live without the darkened clouds of existential threat shadowing its every step.

The echoes of innocence are drowned out by the terrifying sounds of explosions. Hamas has not just ignited a war; it has declared an open siege on the Jewish state. The harrowing scenes unfolding in Israel’s heartland cities, as terrorists pour into the streets and rockets rain down, tens of Israelis murdered, dozens kidnapped, and hundreds maimed, highlight an urgent imperative: The time has come for Israel to take definitive action against Hamas in Gaza.

The world watches in stunned silence, the horrors unfolding with each passing moment. Every rocket fired is a testament to Hamas’s entrenched enmity and an unyielding commitment to Israel’s destruction. Each act of terror underscores the urgent necessity for a direct, unequivocal response unencumbered by prevailing considerations of international consensus. Israel’s action is not born of choice, but of an existential imperative.

The current situation is not just an act of terrorism: it is an invasion, an orchestrated massacre gleaming with the sinister glare of genocidal intent. Mohammad Deif’s call for a total Arab war against Israel pulls the Middle East to the brink of catastrophe, resurrecting the ominous shadows of historic conflicts.

In the wake of this horrible invasion, a call is scheduled to take place this morning between President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin. Netanyahu, embodying the resolve and anguish of a nation under siege, should articulate the grim realities Israel faces. “Mr. President,” Netanyahu might say, “our nation is under assault. The skies are ablaze with rockets from Hamas, an organization that places its weaponry amidst civilians, using them as shields while they aim to exterminate us. The child found alone, echoing the silent yet deafening screams of a nation, is a stark testimony to the urgency and gravity of this threat.”
for Israel to take definitive action against Hamas in Gaza.

Israel’s consideration to eliminate Hamas’s leadership and disband its organization is born not from a thirst for retribution, but from strategic and legal necessity. It is rooted in the objective to neutralize an existential threat, to silence the guns that leave children orphaned, and to dismantle the ideological edifice that fuels a relentless campaign of terror.

This is not a decision made lightly, but is necessitated by the evolving nature of the threat. There is a detailed case for a comprehensive military intervention against Hamas, reasons that go beyond the need to respond to the despicable invasion launched this morning from Gaza.

Hamas’s charter unequivocally calls for the destruction of the State of Israel. Their acts of aggression are not limited skirmishes or disputes over borders, but pose a fundamental existential threat to Israel and its citizens.

Over the years, Hamas has significantly upgraded its military capabilities, amassing thousands of rockets, including many that can reach Israel’s major cities.

The recent barrages on civilian centers underscore the extent of this threat.

Hamas has built an intricate network of tunnels used for smuggling weapons, launching attacks, and infiltrating Israel. The recent invasions are testament to the effectiveness and danger of these tunnels.

Hamas has consistently and strategically placed its military infrastructure within civilian areas near schools, hospitals, and homes. This strategy not only puts

Palestinian civilians at risk, but complicates Israel’s efforts to neutralize threats.

History has shown that Hamas has not honored ceasefire agreements, but uses periods of calm to regroup and rearm, only to renew hostilities with increased vigor. Hamas’s actions and alliances, particularly with Iran, contribute to broader regional instability. Addressing the Hamas threat can help create a more stable Middle East.

Every state has a primary duty to protect its citizens. With Hamas’s escalating aggression and capability to strike deep within Israel, military action becomes a matter of national security and civilian protection. Hamas’s dominance in Gaza is one of the most significant impediments to a lasting peace between Israelis and Palestinians. By removing this extremist element, the door might open for more moderate voices to emerge.

Hamas, with its clear-cut and unambiguous intent to obliterate the State of Israel, presents an existential threat that transcends conventional security challenges. Every rocket launched and tunnel constructed underscores an existential menace that compels Israel to prioritize the safety of its civilians.

It is at this critical juncture that the complete destruction of Hamas and the targeted assassination of its leadership emerges as a central tenet of Israel’s strategic response.

Each act of aggression from Gaza is not an isolated incident of terror, but a stark reminder of an ideological and existential war waged against Israel’s very existence. To mitigate this persistent threat, neutralizing Hamas becomes an essential, albeit complex, objective. The organization’s intricate military and social infrastructure, embedded deep within civilian habitats, exacerbates the challenge.

Completely dismantling Hamas and targeting its leadership for elimination are strategically calculated measures to eradicate an immediate and profound threat. The potency of this approach lies in its ability to decapitate the organizational and ideological machinery driving the incessant attacks, thereby incapacitating its operational capability.

The re-occupation of Gaza is the only tactical maneuver to achieve this objective. The direct oversight of the territory would enable a systematic and comprehensive destruction of Hamas’s military and ideological edifice. Additionally, it would curtail the influx of weapons and militant resources, thereby crippling the organization’s capacity to wage war.

For all these reasons and more, Israel’s case for military action against Hamas in Gaza is clear. The organization must be torn from Gaza root and stem. While war should always be a last resort, Israel now faces a situation in which decisive action is required to safeguard its future and pave the way for a more stable, peaceful Middle East.

©1994-2023 Middle East Forum

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Middle East Forum (https://www.meforum.org/64460/policy-paper-disarmament-of-gaza)

Policy Paper: Disarmament of Gaza
by Yossi Kuperwasser
Middle East Forum
1 June 2023

Israel’s Iron Dome air defense system intercepts Hamas rockets fired from Gaza toward the southern Israeli city of Ashdod. Due in part to Iron Dome’s effectiveness, Israel’s leadership has not attempted to neutralize, let alone eliminate, the threat posed from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

The Middle East Forum has released a policy paper challenging Israel’s passive “mow the lawn” Gaza policy, instead presenting a path toward Israel Victory. The paper calls on Israel to rid itself of Hamas’s threat by disarming it, prohibiting its rearmament, and demonstrating conclusively the cost of threatening Israel.

Executive Summary

Jonathan Spyer (director of research at the Middle East Forum)

Israel has in recent years allowed a situation to emerge in which it has accepted the emergence on its southern border of an Islamist statelet committed to its destruction. Currently, Jerusalem’s stance toward the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip amounts, as the author of this paper puts it, to seeking “the longest possible intervals of relative calm between major eruptions of violence.” That is, Israel seeks to achieve a kind of live and let live situation vis-à-vis Gaza. This is maintained via a system of inducements – such as the Qatari financial assistance which Israel permits – and occasional punishments. This policy is not the result of careful formulation and planning on the part of the relevant Israeli bodies. Rather, it has emerged as a de facto response to events since the Hamas takeover of Gaza in 2007.

In this paper, Yossi Kuperwasser attempts for the first time to examine and challenge the assumptions behind this policy. He asks if Israel has ceded the initiative to the rulers of Gaza and in so doing permitted a dangerous situation to emerge in which Hamas is continually improving its capacities and arming itself with more sophisticated systems, while this situation is accepted by Israel in return for periods of quiet. Kuperwasser proposes that Israel rid itself “of Hamas’s threat by disarming it, prohibiting its rearmament, and demonstrating conclusively that threatening Israel is indisputably against its interests.” To do this, the author suggests a series of pro-active steps and initiatives that Israel should implement.

At the present time, Hamas is actively engaged in a campaign of violence against Israel launched from the West Bank and from southern Lebanon. At the same time, it is improving its capacities in Gaza. The movement and its allies are thus dictating the pace and shape of events. Israel, meanwhile, seeking short-term quiet as a cardinal objective, is reactive. In the face of the current reality, a discussion of whether the current contours of Israeli policy remain tenable is long overdue. This paper intends to begin this debate.

Introduction

Zvi Hauser

Israel’s unilateral disengagement from Gaza in 2005 kindled buoyant predictions of its bright future. Some even envisaged a “Singapore of the Middle East,” hoping that Gaza’s coastline alone with massive international aid and a desire for self-betterment would steer it toward a prosperous, independent existence that would culminate in a comprehensive peace agreement with Israel.

Nothing of the sort happened. As Hamas, an Islamist terrorist organization, gained control of Gaza in the summer of 2007, the Singapore dream gave way to a Somali-Iranian mutation. In 2009, Hamas began implementing the strategy of its Lebanese counterpart, Hezbollah, making massive rocket and missile attacks on Israel’s population centers the cornerstone of its attempt to eliminate the Jewish State.

For its part, Israel’s leadership absorbed the countless attacks and contained their devastating impact through a string of defensive measures, notably the development of the Iron Dome anti-missile system. In other words, Israelis did not attempt to neutralize, let alone eliminate, the threat (contrary to pre-withdrawal warnings that all future terror attacks would be met with unforgiving retaliation). The political-military-media elite seemed to view the thousands of missiles raining down on Israel as a preordained calamity that could not be eradicated, only mitigated and protected against.

As a result, Israel’s four operations against Hamas (2008-09, 2012, 2014, 2021) all ended inconclusively with the latter quickly replenishing its losses after hostilities ended. Since the May 2021 operation (“Operation Guardian of the Walls”), an effective status quo has ensued whereby Israel acquiesces not only to Hamas’s continued rule of Gaza, its partial reconstruction and build-up of its rocket and missile arsenal, but even to its new self-proclaimed role as “defender of Jerusalem.”

The transformation of the home front (particularly the “Gaza envelope area,” as the localities around the Strip are known) into the new military frontline has undermined Israel’s sovereignty and the personal security of its citizens. It has also damaged its status as a regional power and eroded its deterrent posture. To make matters worse, Hamas’s strength grew even as Israel became increasingly desperate to reach a long-term arrangement with it. This explains why Israel engaged in virtuoso, pinpoint military tactical attacks instead of a comprehensive strategy that would ensure the security of its citizens.

As the range of rockets and missiles increases and the technology of destructive unmanned aerial devices becomes widely accessible, the ability of the few to threaten the many, anywhere and anytime, grows. Eventually, the astounding growth in the scope, range, and accuracy of Hamas’s rockets and missiles will leave Israel no choice but to make the dismantling of this deadly arsenal its goal. Jerusalem even articulated this objective at the end of the 2014 operation, only to ignore it altogether in 2021. Israel must now return to this goal, not least since Hamas’s disarmament was already envisaged by the Oslo Accords in 1993. The terror group must be made to choose between keeping its regime or its rockets.

Some doubt the possibility of disarming Hamas, thinking this either not feasible or that it would exact an intolerable cost to Israel. This recalls the debate among the Israeli leadership on the eve of Operation Defensive Shield in April 2002, when there was widespread skepticism regarding Israel’s ability to regain control over large swathes of the West Bank in order to destroy the Palestinian Authority’s terrorist infrastructure. Yet Operation Defensive Shield achieved this goal at a much lower human cost than initially feared despite being implemented too late and only when a rapidly rising death toll forced the issue and broke the mental gridlock that had paralyzed the political, military, and media leaderships.

In its most recent operations in Gaza – “Guardian of the Walls,” “Breaking Dawn,” and “Shield and Arrow,” Israel remained captive to the concept of rounds of fighting. But the Gaza quagmire will not be resolved through further inconclusive rounds of hostility. To create a new reality, Israel must adopt a new policy that conditions Gaza’s reconstruction on the dismantling of Hamas’s rocket and missile arsenal, which threaten Israel’s civilian population, violate the essence of international law, and must be ended.

Israel has often proved to be the canary in the coal mine, and its current woes may thus become others’ problems. Europe, for example, may soon face a similar threat of rocket and missile attacks from ungovernable regions of North Africa.

Demilitarization should become the overriding goal of Israel’s military strategy vis-à-vis Gaza. The most powerful army in the Middle East must immediately remove the threat from a far weaker terrorist organization and achieve a decisive victory after fifteen years of inconclusive fighting.

* Zvi Hauser is an Israeli businessman, lawyer and politician. With experience spanning more than thirty years, he is an expert in Israeli national security policy, international relations, regulation, and communication. He is a former cabinet secretary, Member of Knesset, Chair of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, and Co-chair of Knesset Israel Victory Caucus.

What Should We Do about Gaza?

Brig. Gen. (Res) Yossi Kuperwasser

Background: The Problem with Israel’s Gaza Policy

Israel has in recent years been living with a dangerous phenomenon to which it has become accustomed: namely, a process of adjustment to an unacceptable situation. This process has occurred without any real debate as to its advisability. Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), antisemitic Palestinian terror organizations committed to annihilating Israel through jihad, control Gaza, use its territory and the assistance they get from Iran to accumulate a growing arsenal of arms directed towards Israel, and threaten to launch attacks at a time of their choosing if Israel does not behave as they expect. These organizations use Gaza’s population as human shields to prevent Israel from hitting their terror infrastructure.

Israel has defined its goals vis-à-vis Gaza as achieving the longest possible intervals of relative calm between major eruptions of violence without challenging Hamas’s rule over the Strip. Israel regards Gaza as a de facto state where Hamas is accountable for the use of force, though from time to time, as in Operations Black Belt in 2019 and Breaking Dawn in 2022, it preferred to address the PIJ threat directly, realizing Hamas is unwilling and/or incapable of doing so itself. Israel wants Hamas to be sufficiently weak that it is deterred from initiating armed conflict, yet strong enough to force its will over any potential competitor, such as PIJ, ISIS, or other Salafist groups. Israel also seeks to keep Egypt on its side as a force that can and will help ensure tranquility and stability. Israel desires to help the Gazan economy both because it wants prosperous neighbors and to make Hamas more reluctant to commence hostilities. In the end, Israel believes the division between Hamas in Gaza and the Palestinian Authority in Judea and Samaria is beneficial to its interests.

As in all the arenas of military conflict in which Israel is engaged, in Gaza Israel plays a key role in developing specific rules of the game that determine what the parties can and cannot do. Such rules are meant to support Israel’s security doctrine to give Israel the ability to deter attacks, defend its territory, maintain intelligence dominance, and safeguard the capability to win decisively in the event of war. In the context of Gaza, these rules assure Hamas that its rule over Gaza will not be challenged and that in between the rounds of escalation it will be allowed to continue its military buildup, as Israel seldom strikes first, and its responses to Hamas’s limited attacks are always measured and proportionate.

Israel refrains from using its economic leverage over Gaza for an extended period of time, rules out the possibility of a large ground operation, avoids eliminating key Hamas figures, does not retaliate in Gaza for Hamas terror operations originating elsewhere (even if Hamas manages them from Gaza), does nothing about Hamas incitement, and does not try to alter the negative role that UNRWA plays by eternalizing the conflict and promoting hate. It is also careful to limit the collateral damage of its operations in Gaza and adheres to the law of armed conflict and international humanitarian law.

This policy reflects Israel’s view that Hamas’s challenge from Gaza is a chronic problem that cannot be solved, and yet a minor threat compared with those from Iran, Hezbollah, the Israeli Arabs, and the Palestinians living under the Palestinian Authority. It also reflects an approach that rules out putting IDF soldiers in harm’s way should a ground operation become necessary to effect change, and a fear that reuniting Gaza and the PA will invite international pressure on Israel to succumb to Palestinian demands regarding any permanent settlement to the conflict. Israel is also worried that an attempt to proactively change the situation may raise tensions with the U.S., its strategic ally, and with its regional allies Egypt, Jordan, and the Abraham Accords partners.

The flaws of such an approach are clear: it grants Hamas the self-confidence to develop its military and terror capabilities, increase its power in the Palestinian political arena, and, worst of all, condemn Israelis – especially those living in the vicinity of the Gaza Strip – to persistent threats from Hamas terrorists.

The IDF defines victory as achieving its mission, which in the context of Hamas is realized by inflicting the degree of damage necessary to ensure a renewed and relatively long interval of calm until the next round of violence. This facilitates the win-win scenarios characteristic of the last several cycles, including Operation Guardian of the Wall in May 2021, in which Hamas paid a heavy price militarily in a way that restored Israeli deterrence, but achieved its strategic goals inside the Palestinian political arena and was able to recover quickly to continue threatening Israel.

A far more effective definition of victory would be to rid Israel of Hamas’s threat by disarming it, prohibiting its rearmament, and demonstrating conclusively that threatening Israel is indisputably against its interests. Achieving this goal will not be easy, but with proper preparation it may be feasible, and Israel should craft a campaign to achieve it. It must further improve its excellent intelligence coverage of the terror groups in Gaza, improve and make optimal use of its operational capabilities, and better employ its diplomatic and legal assets. Moreover, Hamas is recognized as a terror organization by the countries whose support in this matter Israel needs, so defeating it should be seen as self-defense.

Achieving true victory also requires Israel to revisit its mode of operation in Gaza. Israel must take the initiative and deny Hamas the ability to produce and develop new weapons even absent Hamas’s provocation. This must be done on a grand scale and not in the limited way it is performed today, which is futile. Economic pressure is one particularly effective option, because Hamas’s leadership should be held accountable as long as it incites and threatens Israel and arms itself to fulfill its threats. Achieving lasting victory also means convincing Hamas (and Egypt) that if there is no other option, Israel might launch a ground operation against Hamas as well as encourage Gazans to revolt.

All of this requires invigorating public debate about Gaza. Discussion on this matter usually dies out minutes after the last rocket launch in any given conflict – a situation arising from Israel’s crowded agenda and its (over)confidence that the Iron Dome and other new defense capabilities will protect it from Gaza-based threats. Politicians, civil society groups such as the Israel Victory Project, and popular movements must keep this debate alive, as otherwise the old paradigm will remain in place.

When to implement any new policy is an open question. On the one hand, immediate execution would be ideal, as there is no justification for allowing Hamas to stall in order to boost its ability to harm Israel and threaten its population. On the other hand, adopting a new policy without sufficient time to properly prepare military and diplomatic forces as well as public opinion would be a mistake. Therefore, it would be best to implement a new policy only after preparations are complete, or if Hamas hands Israel a trigger to apply the new plan. Some elements of the new policy, however, such as clandestine activities, can be adopted right away.

Some of the opposition to forcing Hamas to disarm may stem from fear that it would threaten Hamas’s power in Gaza, thereby forcing its replacement, at least temporarily, by the IDF, a move that would be costly over time. In fact, an Israeli takeover is neither necessary nor inevitable. Even should it occur, it may be preferable to the alternative of never-ending barrages of Hamas rockets threatening Israelis nationwide.

What Is to Be Done?

A proactive and decisive strategy must be formulated and implemented to eventually force Hamas to accept a new set of rules that will relieve Israel of this threat. Such a strategy will also make Israel’s strength and resoluteness clear to the Palestinians, weaken Hamas’s political standing, and send a message of deterrence to Iran, Hezbollah, and their allies. Eventually it may also aid the peace process by demonstrating that armed attacks and jihad against Israel harms Palestinians, and that their conditions will improve only after they accept Israel as the permanent Jewish state.

What is needed is not only a change in the rules of the game (see Appendix II), but a change in both the public discourse and in Israel’s definition of victory. This new definition should include denying Hamas the ability to rearm itself so that it will be less willing to reengage in terror campaigns against Israel.

To convince Hamas that Israel is ready to adopt a new, more proactive and offensive attitude, including ground operations if necessary, and thus enhance the deterrence against Gazan terror groups, Israel should conduct more exercises focused on operations in Gaza involving both standing forces and reservists, and embark on a campaign against Hamas’s military buildup in the same manner it conducts campaigns against Hizballah’s buildups. It should deploy forces in the area as it does occasionally in times of military escalation, conduct clandestine deniable operations in Gaza, and use influence operations to deliver an unmistakable message.

Diplomatically, Israel can pressure Hamas to reconsider its military build-up ambitions, just as in the past Israel was able to end Sudan’s cooperation with Hamas in delivering arms to Gaza. Today, based on its tight security cooperation with Egypt, improved relations with Turkey, strong security cooperation with some of the Gulf states, and cooperation with Qatar and Jordan, Israel can form a joint effort comprised of all these forces to force Hamas to reassess the benefits from its efforts to arm itself.

This can complement efforts in the economic sphere, where Israel should condition any influx of money and economic assistance that can benefit Hamas, directly or indirectly, on Hamas’s readiness to end all efforts to arm itself. This may be well received by many potential donors to Gaza if it is accompanied by, first, explanations of the severe repercussions of donating without conditions and, second, a plan to improve living conditions in Gaza if Hamas ends all efforts to acquire arms. The complete dependence of Hamas on foreign sources – and especially on Israel and Egypt – for keeping Gaza’s economy functioning is a key tool at Israel’s disposal. Using it involves conditioning the influx of funds and economic activities and benefits, such as entry of Gazan workers to Israel, on accepting this justified demand, which is a component of the Oslo Accords, and not merely on refraining from using its weapons arsenal, as is the situation today.

These efforts are not only necessary to provide Israelis and Palestinians with the security they deserve, but legally justified since Israel handed over responsibility for the Gaza Strip to the Palestinians in the context of the Oslo Accords wherein the Palestinians are committed to not possess weapons beyond those agreed upon. The various weapons that Hamas has amassed today are forbidden by the agreement, and Hamas should relinquish them.

It is worth noting in this respect that the Quartet that oversees international efforts to promote peace between Israel and the Palestinians has three conditions for accepting Hamas as a legitimate player, including denouncing terrorism and accepting the agreements between Israel and the PLO, among them the Oslo agreements. Obviously, Israel has sufficient justification to deny Hamas, a terror organization that boasts of its success in arming itself to kill Israelis indiscriminately, from possessing such weapons to use against Israelis and using them in such a manner to threaten Israel’s security. Moreover, Hamas is designated a terrorist organization by the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and Japan. Therefore, the Israeli government has the obligation to take harsh steps to force Hamas to disarm and to deny it the capacity to arm itself. Israel should be able to count on the support of every country and organization that recognizes Hamas’s terror status. Some Arab countries, such as Saudi Arabia, also consider Hamas a terrorist organization and may support decisive action by Israel against it.

As noted above, advancing these demands on Hamas and adopting this new policy regarding threats from the Gaza Strip, though justified and feasible, require Israel to revisit some of the rules of the game and change the discourse about Gaza in Israeli society. For example, the rule stipulating that Israel will not take the initiative and will content itself with retaliation needs to be reconsidered. If Israel wants to force Hamas to disarm or to stop arming itself, it should be able to operate on its own initiative and at the time and place it chooses so that, instead of limited military action against arms production facilities, it could hit vital locations as they are discovered. Under current rules, Hamas may learn in advance when its facilities are in danger and make the necessary arrangements to minimize damage, knowing it can expect only a minimal attack against some of them. This severely limits Israel’s ability to punish Hamas for an attack. Moreover, it allows Hamas to maintain weapons procurement and production between terrorist attacks and to store them in hard-to-find locations.

Operation Guardian of the Walls is a notable example of how self-defeating this rule is. For several days before the Operation began, Hamas threatened to launch rockets and made the necessary preparations to attack. Had Israel known about these concrete preparations, it could have prevented the rockets’ launch and made Hamas pay a much heavier price for its intent. Had Israel taken the initiative and hit Hamas’s infrastructure in advance, its actions would have been well within the confines of the law of armed conflicts, not only because Hamas is a terror organization, but because it was clear Hamas was planning to attack Israel. As Israel interprets Article 51 of the United Nations Charter, it reads: “Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations.” Such intent is a casus belli and Israel is legally allowed to act preemptively against a planned armed attack on its citizens. Israel used this article to justify the attack on the Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981, its many attacks against terror groups in Lebanon, and the Six Day War in 1967. In Operation Breaking Dawn, Israel acted to foil a terror attempt in advance in a perfectly legal manner. In Operation Shield and Arrow in 2023, meanwhile, Israel responded to rocket attacks launched by Palestinian Islamic Jihad from Gaza.

The second rule described above – Israel’s choice to refrain from enforcing long-term sanctions or pressuring the Gazan economy to prevent Hamas from arming itself – should also be reconsidered. Because Hamas’s need to provide for Gaza’s inhabitants is one of its principal burdens, economic restraints have an immediate impact on its behavior. Instead of using them only as retaliation in the aftermath of terror attacks against Israel, they can be leveraged effectively to prevent Hamas from arming itself. The same is true of the economic measures Israel takes against Hamas to encourage it to refrain from launching rockets and to commit to longer periods of quiet. These measures could and should be conditioned on Hamas’s commitment to stop arming itself and eventually disarm.

Obviously, these actions should also depend on Hamas’s readiness to move ahead on the issue of detainees held in Gaza and the corpses of the two Israeli soldiers.

Regarding the third rule granting immunity to the upper echelon of Hamas’s political leaders, Israel should make clear that as long as Hamas continues to behave as a terrorist organization with no separation between the political and military/terror wings, and as long as it arms itself, its political leadership is a legitimate target, and not merely in the context of a high-intensity confrontation. Hamas may protest, but eventually this new attitude positively affects its decision making.

The fourth rule, which allows Hamas to operate against Israel from other areas without risking its assets in Gaza, must also be reconsidered. This rule makes sense if Israel’s interest is to keep Gaza quiet, but leaves Hamas unrestrained in Judea, Samaria, and Jerusalem. In recent years Israel managed to thwart most of Hamas’s terror plots from areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority or Jerusalem. There is no guarantee these successes will continue forever, however, so deterring Hamas from operating in other areas while its headquarters are in Gaza is necessary. The ongoing effort to convince Turkey to expel from its territory Hamas’s offices overseeing terror operations in Judea, Samaria, and Jerusalem can serve as an example of what can be done regarding Gaza. If Hamas knows that conducting terror operations from areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority and from Jerusalem is costly, it might take this into consideration.

The same is true for the fifth rule regarding inaction on Hamas’s incitement. Israel should take diplomatic action against Hamas in retaliation for its provocation and expose its deadly messages to justify steps necessary to prevent Hamas from arming and to disarm it. Obviously, a terror organization that calls publicly for the murder of Israeli citizens and for the destruction of the state of Israel should not be allowed to arm itself as Hamas does.

The same thinking applies for the sixth rule concerning UNRWA. Israel treats this organization courteously despite its harmful actions because it believes UNRWA contributes to ensuring calm among Gaza’s population and helps improve living conditions in the Strip. This is understandable as short-term logic, but if Israel wishes to change the situation in Gaza for the long run, it must adopt a policy that recognizes UNRWA as part of the problem and not part of the solution. The refugee question should not be treated in a way that perpetuates the problem, which is exactly what UNRWA is designed to do. At a very minimum, Israel must insist that UNRWA removes from its textbooks any indoctrination and incitement toward hate and disengages from and condemns all its employees, especially teachers, who are Hamas members or have openly supported terror against Israel. Israel’s broader goal should be UNRWA’s elimination. The treatment of refugees should be remanded to the agency responsible for providing services to all other refugees worldwide, namely, the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), which defines refugees very differently and focuses on taking care of people in need rather than on political agitation.

Revisiting the seventh rule is key for changing the results of this conflict. As long as Hamas knows that Israel will not attempt to uproot it from Gaza, it can continue arming itself and conducting periodic terror attacks knowing the price it will pay may be heavy – especially if Israel changes the other rules mentioned – but not existential. History teaches us that even though Western powers like the United States and Israel try to avoid overreacting to enemy provocation, an enemy’s own drastic actions may provoke a dramatic and decisive reaction. Historical examples illustrating this include America’s intervention in the First and Second World Wars and the occupation of Afghanistan, and Israel’s two wars in Lebanon and Operation Defensive Shield (2002). Clarifying this as among Israel’s viable options may not only deter Hamas and make it easier to persuade it to stop arming itself, but may also further commit Egypt to pressure Hamas and tighten its control of arms smuggling routes. Egypt is always eager to avoid any decisive Israeli operation that could undermine its own stability.

Unseating Hamas would not necessarily require a ground operation. Much of the work can be accomplished via stand-off capabilities, but convincing Hamas and Egypt that such an option is feasible requires a willingness to seriously consider and then prepare for a ground operation. Most of that operation could focus on the less populated areas and on the Philadelphi corridor between Egypt and Gaza. Still, some of it may occur in densely populated neighborhoods.

The one rule that should not be revisited – rule number eight – is Israel’s commitment to international law, and its efforts to minimize collateral damage. This is not an impediment to achieving the goals Israel should set; on the contrary, it confirms that Israel occupies the moral high ground. This in itself cannot guarantee any softening of the international criticism such Israeli actions would spark, but it is extremely important for Israelis to know they are doing the right thing.

On top of all of that, achieving the goal of preventing Hamas from arming itself or of convincing it to disarm requires a change in Israel’s dialogue on relations with Gaza. First, its assessment of risking soldiers’ lives in a ground operation must change, as mentioned before, to convince Hamas that a ground operation is a viable threat. Second, there must be an understanding that Hamas’s threat is strategic and thus worth the effort required to remove it. Though Hamas does not pose as great a threat as Iran or Hezbollah, its readiness to use force, and the frequency of its attacks against Israel, are much greater and therefore renders it a strategic problem and not simply a nuisance. As long as many Israelis consider Hamas’s threat as a chronic problem of limited importance because other problems are more demanding, the government will not be able to build the necessary public support for such an operation. The strategy advocating Hamas’s rule over Gaza as an asset for Israel in the wider context of the Palestinian problem must also be reevaluated.

Achieving this requires sustained efforts to persuade the public by making use of the strategies described in this paper. The political class in Israel must deal with the matter, and so must civil society organizations and civilians at large. The Israel Victory Project (IVP) and the Israel Victory lobby in the Knesset, which are bipartisan, are well placed to lead this effort. Civil society organizations like HaBitchonistim can help as well. Yet these groups are not strong enough on their own and must be complemented by popular movements with greater citizen participation from the area around Gaza. Generally, such groups are acknowledged for a brief period after an escalation erupts, yet recede shortly afterwards. But there is no ongoing debate on the matter. Because Israel faces myriad threats and challenges, attention spans for a specific issue are short-lived and fail to permanently alter the conversation.

The Time Factor: Growing Used to the Status Quo

People are also deterred from dealing with this matter because over time they have grown used to the way things are. Despite attendant difficulties and the heavy cost of maintaining the status quo regarding Gaza, one may posit that, after fifteen years of this approach, Israelis have largely become accustomed to it. With Iron Dome operational and other countermeasures being added to active defense capabilities, they are less concerned. They also worry about the consequences should Israel eliminate Hamas’s threat through a ground operation that would leave Gaza under Israeli control because ruling Gaza would prove costly over the long run. It is therefore necessary to devise a way forward that does not leave Gaza under Israeli occupation indefinitely.

Achieving this goal requires convincing people that the alternative future should Israel not force Hamas to stop arming itself and disarm is even worse. Hamas’s determination to harm Israel is not going to disappear, and its ability to terrorize may grow and pose an even greater threat. Time is on the side of those who make the best use of it regarding the ongoing strategic competition between Hamas and Israel.

Summing up the factors of time and habit: Israel is clearly not yet ready – politically, militarily, and most obviously in its public’s opinion – to adopt a different strategy towards Gaza. But the time is ripe to start a public debate about these issues and to develop the strategy and military capabilities and plans that would make such a debate meaningful. The cost of adhering to the current strategy is rising, and the enemy may make better use of the time strategically. Moreover, a change in policy and strategy cannot occur absent the necessary context. This means Israel must reassess its approach and prepare the necessary tools for implementing a different strategy that will remove Hamas’s threat, but it must implement it only after it is ready and once Hamas provides a proper trigger to do so.

Similar reevaluations are in progress regarding Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Iranian nuclear project, and to some extent regarding segments of Arab society in Israel. The threats are growing steadily and Israel’s reluctance to proactively confront the challenges in pursuit of short-lived periods of calm emboldens its enemies to threaten it belligerently and therefore to raise the risk of escalation. A decision to change strategies cannot be postponed much longer. Israel must not be tempted to imagine that Operations Breaking Dawn and Shield and Arrow were sufficient to restore deterrence in the face of all these challenges. A more thorough-going and comprehensive strategy must be formulated.

Appendix I: Who Is Hamas?

Hamas is a Palestinian terror organization founded in Gaza in December 1987 as an offspring of the Islamic Association (AlMujamaa AlIslami) led by Shaikh Ahmad Yassin. The movement, which is the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, rapidly gained strength and influence within the Palestinian communities and became the major competitor to the Fatah movement for the leadership of the Palestinian people. It has spread its influence in Judea and Samaria as well as in the Palestinian diaspora and amongst the Israeli Arabs through groups close to it such as the Islamic Movement (especially its Northern Branch).

Hamas’s goal is to eradicate Israel, and it believes the only way to do that is through jihad (Islamic holy war). Its charter, filled with antisemitic tropes, outlines the Islamic roots of its commitment to destroy Israel and describes its national identity as a Palestinian movement. Hamas strictly opposes the Oslo agreements and any sort of recognition of Israel, much less its Jewish identity. Nevertheless, it attempts to gain political prowess and reach out to international audiences. In pursuit of these goals, Hamas integrates some pragmatism into its policy. For example, in 2006 it participated in elections to the Palestinian parliament created by the Oslo Accords. Similarly, its 2017 political plan sought to represent its policies as pragmatic, although its commitment to its radical charter was unchanged.

In pursuit of its goal, Hamas has built an extensive civilian network that assures the population’s loyalty to the cause of struggle and to the organization. It has also constructed an impressive infrastructure for terror and military capabilities in Gaza that enables it to launch occasional rounds of escalation with Israel while creating the impression that an Israeli military operation inside Gaza will be very costly. These capabilities give Hamas the ability to overcome internal challenges to its rule in Gaza or to its policies, including its struggle against Israel. Its military wing AKA, “Iz aldin Alqassam Battalions,” made up of some 30,000 activists, is comprised of several regional brigades, special operations, ground, sea, and air units, all supported by a strong military industrial infrastructure. It possesses impressive terror capabilities centered around a variety of rockets and mortars with ranges of up to 150 km (93 miles) that are often deployed indiscriminately against Israeli civilians. In recent years the organization has been developing and acquiring advanced weaponry, including unmanned aerial vehicles, guided land-to-sea torpedoes, and advanced anti-tank and anti-air missiles that may increase its capacity for inflicting strategic damage on precisely chosen targets in Israel. Hamas had already warned that it will start the next round of escalation with a barrage of 1,111 rockets and introduce new UAVs and other weaponry that will catch Israel off guard.

Hamas’s reasoning holds that whatever happens in its rounds of armed confrontation with Israel, it will be victorious since its military capabilities are inferior to Israel’s. Hence, any damage to Israel, especially if achieved by a surprise attack using a new system or capability, is a great accomplishment. Any damage inflicted on Hamas and the Palestinians, however, is expected and may strengthen the mentality of victimhood and suffering that is a critical pillar of the Palestinian narrative, promote the demonization and delegitimization of Israel, and help present Hamas in the Palestinian arena as the symbol of the struggle against Zionism. That approach is limited, of course, and when the damage inflicted on Hamas is significantly greater than what it perpetrates on Israel, it is deterred and desires to end the conflict. This logic illustrates why the learning competition that characterizes the confrontation between Hamas and Israel is so important for both sides.

Hamas’s goal is to eradicate Israel, and it believes the only way to do that is through jihad (Islamic holy war). Its charter, filled with antisemitic tropes, outlines the Islamic roots of its commitment to destroy Israel and describes its national identity as a Palestinian movement. Hamas strictly opposes the Oslo agreements and any sort of recognition of Israel, much less its Jewish identity. Nevertheless, it attempts to gain political prowess and reach out to international audiences. In pursuit of these goals, Hamas integrates some pragmatism into its policy. For example, in 2006 it participated in elections to the Palestinian parliament created by the Oslo Accords. Similarly, its 2017 political plan sought to represent its policies as pragmatic, although its commitment to its radical charter was unchanged.

In pursuit of its goal, Hamas has built an extensive civilian network that assures the population’s loyalty to the cause of struggle and to the organization. It has also constructed an impressive infrastructure for terror and military capabilities in Gaza that enables it to launch occasional rounds of escalation with Israel while creating the impression that an Israeli military operation inside Gaza will be very costly. These capabilities give Hamas the ability to overcome internal challenges to its rule in Gaza or to its policies, including its struggle against Israel. Its military wing AKA, “Iz aldin Alqassam Battalions,” made up of some 30,000 activists, is comprised of several regional brigades, special operations, ground, sea, and air units, all supported by a strong military industrial infrastructure. It possesses impressive terror capabilities centered around a variety of rockets and mortars with ranges of up to 150 km (93 miles) that are often deployed indiscriminately against Israeli civilians. In recent years the organization has been developing and acquiring advanced weaponry, including unmanned aerial vehicles, guided land-to-sea torpedoes, and advanced anti-tank and anti-air missiles that may increase its capacity for inflicting strategic damage on precisely chosen targets in Israel. Hamas had already warned that it will start the next round of escalation with a barrage of 1,111 rockets and introduce new UAVs and other weaponry that will catch Israel off guard.

Hamas’s reasoning holds that whatever happens in its rounds of armed confrontation with Israel, it will be victorious since its military capabilities are inferior to Israel’s. Hence, any damage to Israel, especially if achieved by a surprise attack using a new system or capability, is a great accomplishment. Any damage inflicted on Hamas and the Palestinians, however, is expected and may strengthen the mentality of victimhood and suffering that is a critical pillar of the Palestinian narrative, promote the demonization and delegitimization of Israel, and help present Hamas in the Palestinian arena as the symbol of the struggle against Zionism. That approach is limited, of course, and when the damage inflicted on Hamas is significantly greater than what it perpetrates on Israel, it is deterred and desires to end the conflict. This logic illustrates why the learning competition that characterizes the confrontation between Hamas and Israel is so important for both sides.

The Regional and Palestinian Aspects

This paper focuses on Israeli options in relation to Gaza, yet the conflict between Israel and the terror groups that control Gaza, led by Hamas, is best understood within the broader regional aspects of the conflict and as a part of the wider Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) are significant players among the Middle East’s radical Islamic groups, as they provide an important foothold in the Palestinian arena, which in turn helps justify their activities and their radical ideology calling for Israel’s demise. Hamas’s importance also stems from its unique situation as a member of both the Iran-led Shiite radical camp and of the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood radical camp led by Qatar and, until recently, by Turkey as well.

Simultaneously, Gaza is part of the power struggle for Palestinian leadership. Separated from the areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority in Judea and Samaria since 2007, it has distinguished itself as the embodiment of the idea of jihad/armed resistance against Israel, and it challenges the more nuanced approach of the Palestinian Authority. It also defies the legitimacy of the Palestinian Authority’s political structures and the PLO’s status as the sole representative of the Palestinian people as long as Hamas and PIJ are not members of it. The battle over Palestinian leadership is exacerbated by the competition for influence within Israeli Arab society and by the aging of PA leader Mahmoud Abbas – factors that set the stage for a struggle between potential successors, including Hamas. Fatah’s weakening and fragmentation and the PA’s diminishing ability to control the areas under its responsibility, coupled with Hamas’s relatively strong grip on the territories under its command, give Hamas an advantage in its confrontation with Fatah and the PA.

Appendix II: Refining Israel’s Gaza Strategy to Meet Current Security Challenges

Israel’s Overall Policy

Israel’s policy in general, and regarding the threat from Gaza in particular, is founded on a vision of a secure and democratic nation state of the Jewish people in their ancestral homeland that can integrate into the Middle East by creating peaceful relations with its neighbors.
Security, the guiding principle of Israel’s policy, is achieved through developing intelligent strategies, strong armed services, and shrewd policies that guarantee its ability to:

1. Win decisively any confrontation with its enemies.
2. Provide accurate intelligence and early warning about the development of threats to its security in a timely manner to enable it to foil these threats.
3. Deter its enemies from threatening its security.
4. Protect and defend Israel should threats materialize despite efforts to thwart and deter them.

Several concepts have been developed throughout the years to achieve these four components:

1. A people’s armed forces, based on conscription and a large reserve army, which enables amassing the necessary well-trained manpower for confronting any combination of threats. That said, Israel’s elite units and air force are based on volunteers from among the conscripts and on recruitment of the best and brightest to allow its security services to maintain an advantage over its opponents. In recent years there is a growing outcry about the erosion of the preparedness of the ground forces reserve units to fight in future armed conflicts. This has many implications regarding, among other things, the readiness of the military and political leadership to engage these units in ground operations in Gaza if they are deemed necessary.

2. Air force superiority and intelligence dominance to guarantee the ability to thwart any military threat. In the Gaza context Israel enjoys complete freedom in using its air force, though in recent years Hamas’s threats include anti-aircraft missiles and an intelligence apparatus that is impressive, though far from perfect.

3. Qualitative military edge (QME) over any opponent or combination of potential adversaries based on the technological lead Israel maintains in military equipment over its neighbors, including Hamas and the other terror organizations operating in Gaza. Maintaining this QME vis-à-vis Gaza is very expensive, as stopping the simple weapons used against Israel requires a huge investment in counter-measures, such as Iron Dome interceptors.

4. Special strategic security cooperation with the United States based on common strategic interests and values as well as reciprocal military and intelligence benefits. Though the U.S. supports Israel’s efforts to stop terror attacks from Gaza, it is opposed to any Israeli attempt to proactively change the rules of the game in the Strip, especially if this means pressuring Gaza’s population. Moreover, to maintain the QME in the Gaza context, Israel needs American support, especially to sustain sufficient production of Iron Dome interceptors while developing and acquiring other weapons options.

5. Fighting the war on enemy territory, both because Israel’s small size precludes fighting on its own territory, and because thwarting emerging threats requires operations on foreign soil. In the last couple of decades Israel’s readiness to use massive ground formations for maneuvering in enemy territories has diminished significantly because of its reluctance to pay the inevitable price in casualties. It withdrew from Lebanon in 2000 and, following its disengagement from Gaza in 2005, it refrained as much as possible from entering the Strip with ground forces. This places most of the burden for taking the battle into enemy territory on the air force and on clandestine special operations units.

6. Inhouse security innovation and creativity reflect the understanding that warfare involves an ongoing competition for knowledge, both in the technological sphere and in operational concepts, especially when dealing with varied and ever-changing enemies. In recent years, for example, Israel had to develop relevant technologies and operational concepts against new challenges emanating from the Palestinian community, often from Gaza, such as suicide bombing attacks, operations within densely populated refugee camps, rockets, offensive tunnels, UAVs, incendiary balloons, and the new challenges posed by Israeli-Arabs. In the wider context, growing challenges of big data, cyber, and cognitive warfare are examples of areas in which Israel needs to lead innovation.

7. The Begin doctrine, which holds that Israel will prevent its opponents from acquiring the capabilities to produce nuclear weapons. Preparedness according to this doctrine is achieved at the expense of the readiness to take the initiative in other arenas, such as Gaza.

8. The retaliation principle, through which Israel is committed to militarily respond to every attempt to harm its civilians or interests. This response is usually related to the effects of the enemy attempt and is exemplified in addressing the terror threat from Gaza. The Israeli retaliation tariff chart is contingent on the damage caused by the terrorists and the kind of targets they try to hit.

9. The campaign between the wars (known by its Hebrew acronym MABAM). To avoid and delay war, Israel needs to keep degrading its enemies’ capabilities so that they will lack the confidence and capability to launch an offensive.

10. Home front resilience: In recent decades, after Israel’s enemies realized they could not win a conventional confrontation against its military, they have focused on their ability to harm civilians. This has required Israel to strengthen the resilience of both its population and its strategic infrastructure to withstand the threat and maintain the functioning of daily life. These are achieved in part by passive and active defense and by inculcating an appropriate state of mind and awareness within the population and by developing the necessary infrastructure and processes to ensure a continuous supply of basic commodities during crises. Still, Israel’s home front is far from being properly prepared to sustain a long conflict.

11. Commitment to the law of armed conflict and international humanitarian law: Israel’s security forces operate in accordance with international law and are proud of adhering strictly to the ethics of armed conflicts.

12. Maintain international legitimacy and international relations to expand Israel’s freedom of action and maneuver and to improve its military capabilities.

13. Self-reliance: Israel should be ready to defend itself alone.

14. From a policy point of view, Israel seeks stability and peace and is a committed participant in the international war on terror. It regards Iran as the major threat to regional stability and is an avowed supporter of regional cooperation to confront the Iranian threat. In pursuit of these goals, it cooperates with the United States and pragmatic Arab states. The Abraham Accords with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Morocco are a major proof of this commitment, as are Israel’s security relations with Egypt and Jordan. Israel has developed close relations with Eastern European countries as well as with Greece and Cyprus, both of whom offer a potential strategic depth that can compensate for Israel’s narrow territory. Recently, Israel has improved its relations with major Islamic states, including Turkey and Saudi Arabia. Its relations with the Saudis and Emiratis are based on a shared regional outlook regarding both Iran and Sunni radical groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood and Islamic State as dangerous threats to regional stability. Israel’s improving relations with Turkey are premised on a reduction of Turkey’s support for Hamas.

Israel and the Palestinian Issue

1. Israel’s policy toward the Palestinian issue is complex. It desires a stable peace agreement with the Palestinians that will guarantee Israel’s security, but over the years has become increasingly skeptical about the possibility of reaching such an agreement because of the Palestinian leadership’s ongoing terror, incitement, and consistent rejection of Israel’s peace plans. Moreover, many Israelis believe the Palestinians are not ready for a compromise requiring them to recognize Israel’s identity as the nation state of the Jewish people and are committed to struggle against Zionism until it is destroyed. At the same time, Israel does not want to govern the Palestinians and prefers they rule themselves.

2. Israelis differ on questions of territorial divisions of the areas taken in 1967. Most Israelis believe the Jewish people, based on history and international law as well as Israel’s security needs, have a justified claim to areas in Judea and Samaria that are not populated by Palestinian Arabs. Given these security considerations, they also believe that in any future agreement Israel should maintain sole sovereignty of a united Jerusalem, certain areas along the 1967 line, and the Jordan Valley. Israeli’s lack of trust in the Palestinians is exacerbated by Palestinian antagonism toward Israel in international fora, their opposition to a normalization process with the Arab world and to normalizing their own relationship with Israel, and their insistence on paying salaries to terrorists. Most of all, Israelis’ distrust stems from the indoctrination of Arab Israelis with radical propaganda, a strategy that led to Arab riots during Operation Guardian of the Walls (May 2021) and later to a spree of terror attacks by Arab Israelis.

3. Also concerning to Israel is the international support for many of the Palestinian positions coupled with Israel’s limited success in convincing segments of international public opinion, especially Europeans and left-leaning Americans, including the younger generation, that Israel deserves the West’s understanding and support in its conflict with the Palestinians. Recent developments in Western politics have portrayed Israel as the enemy among Europeans and the American left, where Palestinians are viewed as the underdog. The result is a readiness to tolerate Palestinians’ rejectionism and eliminationism, including their frequent use of terror.

4. Faced with this complex reality and with the division inside the Palestinian camp between Hamas in Gaza and the Palestinian Authority in Judea and Samaria, along with its singular domestic political situation, Israel has adopted a policy of “Managing the Conflict.” This means that Israel militarily opposes Palestinian terrorism originating from Judea and Samaria, Gaza, and among Arab Israelis. It therefore carries out military operations in Judea and Samaria, retaliates for and tries to thwart terror attacks from Gaza, and attempts to deny Gaza terrorist organizations the ability to damage Israel.

5. It also seeks to appease and deter the Israeli Arabs to minimize the danger they pose. At the same time Israel tries to improve the living conditions of the Palestinians everywhere by, among other things, increasing the number of Palestinians allowed to work in Israel. Israel also attempts to improve the Palestinian Authority’s financial situation so it can meet the challenges posed by Hamas and look after its citizens. This strategy assumes the PA is more pragmatic and less supportive of terror than the alternative, and that the existence of the PA is a major asset in maintaining the status-quo. It sees the PA as assuming the responsibility of ruling over the Palestinians and remaining committed to its security cooperation with Israel, which is allegedly aiding the fight against Hamas in Judea and Samaria. In this context Israel refrains from taking decisive steps against the Palestinians’ problematic initiatives on the ground (such as unauthorized construction in area C) and in international fora. At the same time, Israel continues to authorize construction in the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria and in Jerusalem and takes tentative steps against the PA’s outrageous payments of salaries to terrorists. This policy, filled as it is with internal tensions and contradictions, does not and cannot deliver genuine peace. Yet this status-quo is deemed the least bad option compared with its alternatives, especially as Israel develops close relations with the signatories to the Abraham Accords.

Israel and Gaza

For years, Israel has viewed Gaza as a chronic problem with no easy solution. The densely populated area suffers from insurmountable economic and infrastructural difficulties, and its population has been radicalized for decades. It is home to active Islamists and other extremists who support terror. Many of its inhabitants self-define as “refugees” and their descendants who, unwilling to define themselves as Gazans, nurture their aspirations to return, a stance that makes them susceptible to recruitment for terrorist acts against Israel. For these reasons, Israel willingly handed over Gaza to Palestinian responsibility in the first part of the Oslo Accords in 1994 and in 2005 disengaged from Gaza and uprooted the Israeli communities there. Though no one knows what the outcome may have been had Israel stayed in Gaza, many Israelis believe disengagement was a mistake since it allowed Hamas to present the withdrawal as the result of their terrorism while setting the stage for their complete takeover, including expelling the PA. Without question, the rapidity with which Hamas built up its terror capabilities in Gaza following the disengagement was impressive, and the use of these new capabilities against Israel caused most Israelis to view their unilateral withdrawal as a mistake. That said, Israelis have very little desire to reenter Gaza. Lieutenant General Dan Halutz, the IDF Chief of Staff at the time, told me when I suggested we launch a limited military incursion into the northern part of Gaza in response to Hamas’s first rocket attacks on Israel after disengagement: “We didn’t leave in order to return.”

Israel believes that even though Hamas’s threat is chronic and may at times result in pain and suffering among the Israeli populace, it should not distract it from confronting the more dangerous threats from Iran and Hezbollah. Therefore, Israel’s objective vis-à-vis Gaza is limited to securing long periods of (relative) quiet. Following this approach and bearing in mind the above-mentioned principles of Israel’s security model, Israeli policy towards Gaza over the past sixteen years was based on the following principles:

1. Accept Hamas as the power responsible for Gaza to avoid the need to enter and recapture the Gaza Strip, while incentivizing Hamas to control more radical groups tempted to escalation because of their lack of accountability by holding Hamas accountable for any terrorist acts. Since the disengagement and after Hamas’s takeover, Israel has treated Gaza as a de facto sovereign enemy state ruled by Hamas. This legally disputed stance limits Israel’s options of what can and should be done about Hamas’s weaponry. Additionally, when Hamas launches attacks, Israel spares it from paying any consequences for its actions and either ignores the problem (by attributing rocket launches to lightning) or acts unilaterally (as in Operations Black Belt, Breaking Dawn and Shield and Arrow). Clearly, Israel wants to avoid confronting Hamas and maintain relative calm.

2. Keep Hamas wary and weak to force it to be cautious and reluctant to attack Israel from Gaza. Israel seeks to prevent Hamas from delivering military or dual-use equipment into Gaza and therefore maintains a naval and land blockade over the area and inspects the merchandise entering Gaza to thwart smuggling. It also takes advantage of the sporadic limited or large-scale escalation fighting to attack Hamas and PIJ infrastructure and production facilities in Gaza.

3. Improve the economic conditions in the Gaza Strip to discourage the population from supporting terror activities and to incentivize Hamas to refrain from escalation. This explains why Israel allows extensive trade with Gaza from Israel and Egypt, encourages donor countries to invest in Gaza, permits and encourages Qatar to help Gaza via monthly donations even though this assistance is used partly to finance Hamas’s military build-up, and recently allowed a growing number of Gazans to work in Israel. (In 2021-2022 the number of trade and work permits grew steadily and recently hit 14,000.) Israel’s option to curtail this economic support in the aftermath of terrorist attacks serves as an effective means of retaliating against Hamas and pressuring it to refrain from further attacks.

4. Leverage Egypt’s influence to help maintain calm in Gaza. Egypt, like Israel, is a stability-seeking country and a necessary gateway for Gazans entering and exiting the Strip and as a route for providing its economic needs. It therefore enjoys considerable clout over Hamas and Gaza’s population. During military escalations, Egypt is also the preferred mediator from Israel’s perspective, and both countries are interested in limiting the influence and the involvement in Gaza of groups from Sunni Islamists and Iran.

5. Because Israel seeks to maintain the status quo in Gaza, it does not believe changing Gaza’s ruling party is in its national interests, even though Israel wants to strengthen the PA. This suggests Israel accepts the separation of governments for Gaza, on the one hand, and Judea and Samaria, on the other hand. In Israel’s view, the status quo is beneficial because it makes it difficult for the Palestinians to leverage international and Arab pressure on Israel to accept their demands. Israel is, however, concerned about Hamas’s growing influence in Judea and Samaria, Jerusalem, and especially among Israeli Arabs. This concern intensifies as the prospects of Abbas’s departure from the political scene grow.

6. Israel will develop strategies to better cope with the military challenges originating in the Gaza Strip. Examples include: Iron Dome; the anti-tunnel barrier along the border; the laser anti-mortar system; the anti-UAV systems; and the defense of the gas production platform and the train, all to disincentivize Gazans from launching terror attacks and to thwart attacks when deterrence fails. Even though such systems are expensive, Israel invested in them rather than attempting to disarm Hamas or recapture Gaza for all the reasons mentioned above and perhaps – though no one will admit it – because Gaza is considered a remote border area that may withstand threats better than the sensitive centers of the major cities.

Israel’s Policy Shortcomings

On the surface Israel’s policy towards Gaza, as described above, complements its security doctrine, its principles and concepts, and reflects Israel’s strategic thinking. However, it sets the stage for periodic military escalations with Hamas and other terror groups in Gaza, between which occur sporadic rocket launches and other terror attacks by Hamas and other groups in Gaza. Gazan terror groups’ military capabilities increase unchecked thanks to limited retaliation against weapons-production facilities in the Gaza Strip following periodic rocket attacks. Hamas also steadily increases its terrorist capabilities in Jerusalem and areas under PA control and promotes its stature within Israeli Arab society. This strategy empowers it to encourage this demographic to commit terrorist acts while strengthening its standing as the most prominent political group within the Palestinian community. Hamas’s leaders and its propaganda outlets intimidate Israel’s population, especially those along the Gaza border, who live under the constant threat of attack from the Gaza Strip.

In this struggle, the case of Hamas’s observation tower overlooking the community of Netiv HaAsara, bordering Gaza to the north, is revealing. Constructed in 2022, the tower posed an immediate threat to the community. During a limited escalation round it was attacked as part of an Israeli reaction to a terror attack from the Gaza Strip, but it was rebuilt immediately, empowering Hamas to boast of its ability to do so. A couple of weeks later, direct fire was aimed at Netiv HaAsara from the Gaza Strip.

Israeli policy may deter the terror groups operating in Gaza from entering high intensity conflicts for long periods of time, but it will not deter them from building the cognitive and operational infrastructure necessary for such confrontations or from launching limited rounds of escalation. According to the rules of the game that were established on the ground, Palestinians may retain their hateful propaganda and their incitement against Jews and Israel in order to inculcate in the minds of Gazan youth the desire to participate in the jihad against Israel for the sake of eliminating it and bringing about the “return” of the Palestinian refugees and their descendants to all of Palestine.

Palestinians are not deterred from maintaining their military build-up. As a result of the ongoing learning curve between Israel and the terror groups in the Gaza Strip, Israeli measures minimize the impact of the capabilities of these groups, but do not prevent their impact entirely. Therefore, the logic of terror, which is not to win the war but rather to sow fear in the hearts of the enemy’s population and to degrade its resilience and its policy, is still achieved. The fact is that Israelis, especially along the border with Gaza, still fear a potential attack from Gaza at any time. This is the major goal of Hamas and PIJ that is not addressed by Israeli policy or by the current rules of engagement vis-à-vis Gaza.

Moreover, this policy fails to deter the terror groups from launching major attacks periodically and from trying to impose new rules of engagement on Israel. Over the last year, first Hamas in Operation Guardian of the Walls, and then PIJ in the terror attempt that led to Operation Breaking Dawn, and the rocket attacks that led to Operation Shield and Arrow, tried to force on Israel limitations on its ability to act in Jerusalem. They acted based on several premises and motivations, including the false assumption that Israel is weak and therefore so committed to assuring peace from Gaza that it may accept these new rules. Israel prevented the application of these rules by demonstrating its military might, but at the price of exposing its population to the threat of thousands of rockets launched in their direction, shutting down civilian and commercial traffic in the south of the country, and forcing millions to flee into shelters.

Israeli Public Discourse

Israelis have been accustomed to living under constant threat since the Jews returned to their ancestral land over 100 years ago. In his 1956 eulogy to Roi Rotberg, the security coordinator of Nahal Oz kibbutz bordering Gaza who was ambushed and murdered by Palestinians, Moshe Dayan, then IDF Chief of Staff, emphasized that his generation of Israelis bears the burden of an ongoing struggle and must be constantly alert and sufficiently strong to defend itself against the relentless hatred of the Arabs (who were not referred to at that time as Palestinians) living in the Gaza Strip. If this approach still prevails, one expects Israeli society to grasp that this is an unavoidable part of its reality, to focus on its ability to maintain a reasonable deterrence, and to foil most terror attempts, rendering the existing situation an unpleasant but bearable reality.

Yet a different strategy views this position as unacceptable and advocates that Israel rid itself of the ever-growing and enduring threat of Hamas. This approach emerges from two opposing arguments. The first does not question the premise that Israel remains a state with a special mission engaged in an ongoing battle for its survival and prosperity. But it suggests that, since there is a huge difference in military capabilities between Israel and Hamas, and due to the formidable advantages of the IDF, Israel cannot afford to let Hamas taunt it for so long and keep its citizens constantly fearful. When the frustration of Israelis living near Gaza increases, whether because of renewed attacks or other political reasons, some claim Israel should take the lead and end Hamas’s threat once and for all.

A second argument supporting this view holds that the era of such struggles should have ended with Israel’s ascent as an affluent society. Not only Tel Aviv – a symbol of this society – but the rest of the country deserves to enjoy the benefits of this progress and should not, therefore, continue to be a target of Hamas’s terrorism. As a result, decisive action must be taken to rid Israel of this threat.

This argument also has a not-so-well-hidden motivation. Many who adopt it support a compromise with the Palestinians and believe that weakening Hamas and strengthening Fatah will contribute to preparing the ground for an agreement to settle the conflict. They believe the main reason Israel fails to deal harshly with Hamas is that it benefits from the current division within the Palestinian camp, which constitutes an obstacle to a settlement.

The flip side of the same argument holds that Israel should strengthen Hamas and thereby rid itself of its threats. This could be achieved, for example, by helping the Palestinians build a port for Gaza, or by easing its blockade and control of the passage of people and merchandise to and from the Gaza Strip. This is a dubious argument, since unless Hamas changes its ideology – a highly unlikely move – it will almost certainly use this new reality to arm itself even faster.

Another debate affecting Israeli thinking about this matter concerns the option of using ground forces to pressure Hamas. Regardless of whether such a ground operation is necessary or helpful for denying Hamas the option to attack Israel with rockets or other means, there are many in Israel who are reluctant to put the lives of Israeli soldiers at harm’s way. Because a ground operation is believed to extract a painful price in soldiers’ lives, they oppose this option. Yet another view holds that if a ground operation is necessary to end Hamas’s threat, it should be executed despite the price, since a soldier’s mission is to protect civilians. The military has a difficult time explaining the added value of using ground maneuvers to improve security, rendering it a moot point.

Conclusion

In recent years, Israel has grown accustomed to living in a dangerous situation: Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) – antisemitic Palestinian terrorist organizations committed to annihilating Israel through jihad – control Gaza, use its territory and Iranian assistance to amass a growing arsenal directed against Israel, and threaten to attack when they choose should Israel fail to behave as they demand. They regularly use Gaza’s civilians as human shields to prevent Israel from hitting their terror infrastructure. This approach gives Hamas the self-confidence to develop its military and terror capabilities and increase its power in the Palestinian political arena. Worst of all, it condemns Israelis – especially those living near the Gaza Strip – to persistent threats from Hamas terrorists.

Operating under the principle of revealed preference (i.e., judging the interests of entities and individuals by their deeds, preferences, and decisions rather than their declared interests), it appears that Israel prefers the option of “mowing the grass,” which allows Hamas to build up its strength and leaves Israelis under constant threat.

According to the prevailing policy, Gaza is a chronic and unsolvable problem not included among Israel’s top priorities. It may therefore be tackled by developing qualitative state-of-the-art defensive systems and through leveraging Israel’s military advantage coupled with Gaza’s systemic economic failings to incentivize Hamas to avoid extensive use of its growing arms arsenal. The policy’s goal is to defer as long as possible the next escalation round, thus extending the time between terror escalation rounds, shortening the duration of these rounds, and using them to inflict heavy damage on the terror group’s infrastructure and arsenal. These will be pursued toward an end of leaving Hamas weakened and deterred vis-à-vis Israel, but strong enough to govern Gaza. For that purpose, Israel vows to keep Egypt, the U.S., Qatar, and possibly Turkey, all of whom are interested in avoiding escalation, as potential mediators and tools to back Israeli policy, even though using their good offices may entail a price.

This paper explains how Israel should replace this policy, and how it can be freed from Hamas’s threat by prohibiting its rearmament and eventually disarming it, while demonstrating conclusively that threatening Israel is unmistakably against its interests. Achieving this goal will not be easy, but with proper preparation it may be feasible.

A proactive and decisive strategy must be formulated and implemented that will eventually force Hamas to accept a new set of rules that will rid Israel of this threat. Such a strategy will also make Israel’s strength and resoluteness clear to the Palestinians, weaken Hamas’s political standing, and send a clear signal of deterrence to Iran, Hezbollah, and their allies. Eventually it may also aid the peace process by demonstrating that armed attacks and jihad against Israel harms Palestinians and that their conditions will improve only after they accept Israel as the permanent Jewish state.

Militarily, Israel should improve its already quite good intelligence coverage of Gaza to enable it to thwart most terror attempts before they are launched and eliminate Hamas operatives at any level. Israel must gain the confidence to operate in a secured manner from the air, sea, and ground against the terror infrastructure inside the Gaza Strip, just as it does in Judea and Samaria or on the Syrian front. It must more widely use intelligence intensified warfare (“LOCHAMAM” in its Hebrew acronym) that is designed to mobilize and make available to the ground units all the capabilities of the intelligence community in a way that is relevant to the battle in which they are engaged, as well as provide better protection to ground forces. Israel should embark on a campaign against Hamas’s military buildup in the same manner it conducts campaigns against Hizballah’s expansions, especially as it has developed these capabilities in recent years. A ground operation would not necessarily be required, but Hamas and Egypt must be convinced that the possibility of a ground operation is very real.

Diplomatically, it is possible to pressure Hamas to abandon its ambition of strengthening itself, just as Israel helped in stopping Sudan’s cooperation with Hamas in the transfer of weapons. Israel should take advantage of its close security cooperation with Egypt, its improved relations with Turkey, its close security cooperation with some of the Gulf countries, and its cooperation with Qatar and Jordan. Diplomatic steps must be taken to retaliate against incitement and to expose Hamas’s deadly propaganda. Israel should demand that UNRWA remove from its textbooks all indoctrination and incitement to hatred and disassociate itself from and cease to defend all its employees who are members of Hamas or have openly supported terrorism against Israel. Israel’s broader goal should be the elimination of UNRWA and the return of care to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which is a non-political aid organization.

Economically, Israel must condition the flow of money and economic aid that could benefit Hamas on its willingness to stop building its arsenal. The absolute dependence of Hamas on foreign suppliers, especially Israel and Egypt, should be leveraged by conditioning the flow of funds and many economic activities and benefits on Hamas’s acceptance of this justified demand – a component of the Oslo Accords – and not only on not using its arsenal of weapons, as is the situation today. Economic pressure should be applied not only as a response to terror attacks, but to prevent arming and terrorist activity.

From a legal point of view, these efforts are justified, since Israel transferred responsibility for the Gaza Strip to the Palestinians within the framework of the Oslo Accords, according to which the latter are obliged to limit armaments to agreed-upon levels. The Quartet overseeing international efforts to promote peace has three conditions to accept Hamas as a legitimate actor, including the condemnation of terrorism and the acceptance of the agreements between Israel and the PLO, including the Oslo Accords. Hamas is defined as a terrorist organization by the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and Japan. Some Arab countries, such as Saudi Arabia, also view Hamas as a terrorist organization. Of course, Israel must continue to abide by the law of armed conflict and minimize peripheral damage.

A continuous and open debate is needed to convince the public and the policy makers for a change of policy beyond the discussions that arise briefly following an escalation but recede shortly afterwards. We hope this paper sparks a debate that will ultimately lead both the public and elected officials to conclude that now is the time to remove this threat once and for all. Due to the complexity of this issue, the new policy requires significant preparations and will have to be implemented gradually, all while making the best use of options and opportunities that may open to Israel.

Brig. Gen. (Res) Yossi Kuperwasser is an Israeli intelligence and security expert. Formerly, Kuperwasser served as the head of the research division in the Israel Defence Force Military Intelligence division and Director General of the Israel Ministry of Strategic Affairs. Kuperwasser is currently a Head of the Israeli Intelligence Methodology Research Institute and a Senior Project Manager at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs specializing in the security dimensions of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict.

©1994-2023 Middle East Forum

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2024年1月28日追記

「いかりちゃん」こと飯山陽さんのYou Tubeシリーズは、概ね私と同感路線である。実は、私の方が彼女よりも先に、マレーシアとイスラエルを中心に発信していた内容と重複する。
但し、「いかりちゃん」は、レッキとしたアラビア語とイスラム研究の「文学博士」。方や私は、21年以上の若年性神経難病患者持ちの修士卒。
というわけで、世間の軍配は「いかりちゃん」の勝ち!

なのだが、「いかりちゃん」が「ハマース」と表記ないしは発音する日本のイスラム(イスラーム)研究者を強く非難されていた件に関して、私にとっては、ユダヤ系イスラエル人の国連大使ダニー・ダノン氏や東欧ユダヤ系米国人のイスラム研究者であるダニエル・パイプス博士の発音に従って、「ハマース」でも「イスラーム」でも全く問題なし、である。

問題がないどころか、「いかりちゃん」の著作では、何とダニエル・パイプス氏が引用されていた!とはいえ、私がパイプス氏に知らせたところ、けんもほろろに「あ、そ?」程度の反応。非常に古い文献を引用されていたので、呆れられていたようだ。

「いかりちゃん」も、あまりダラダラと喋っていないで、本来の業務に専念された方が、長い目で見ると得策かも?

余計な雑談でした。

(2024年1月28日記)

Posted in Daniel Pipes, research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

二国家解決の終焉

(https://www.meforum.org/64947/the-death-of-the-two-state-solution)

The Death of the Two-State Solution
The Spectator
8 October 2023
by Efraim Karsh

* Efraim Karsh, a Middle East Forum writing fellow, is emeritus professor of Middle East and Mediterranean studies at King’s College London and former director of the Begin-Sadat Centre for Strategic Studies.

Hamas has achieved something that no Arab army has done since the 1948 war: captured several Israeli localities and held them for hours. Yet the magnitude of this initial success, in which they took Israel by complete surprise having lulled its famed intelligence services into false complacency, may prove a double-edged sword.

Yes, they have a huge bargaining chip, with as many as 50 civilians and soldiers believed to have been captured and taken to Gaza, many of them women and children. But it is likely now that Israel will end its decade-long policy of containment in favour of an attempt to totally destroy Hamas’s military capabilities, despite the possible escalation of such a move to a wider regional conflagration.

Hamas’s latest aggression may well have driven the final nail in the coffin of the two-state solution. For one thing, while most Israelis have been disabused of the idea by Yasser Arafat’s war of terror (euphemized as ‘al-Aqsa Intifada’) and the subsequent confrontations with Hamas, Saturday’s horrendous massacres may convince other international players of the mortal dangers that would follow if Israel withdraws from key West Bank areas (which would be needed for a viable Palestinian state to exist).

After all, were such an invasion to ensue from a West Bank state, hordes of terrorists would be able to roam the more populous streets of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv in no time. What do two-state solution campaigners believe would happen then? What sovereign state could possibly allow a situation that would arise in which their citizens could be indiscriminately slaughtered on its streets?

What’s more, the grim brutality of Hamas’s recent atrocities may also draw international attention to the corrupt and oppressive nature of its regime. And just as the creation of free and democratic societies in Germany and Japan after World War II necessitated a comprehensive sociopolitical and educational transformation, so long as the West Bank and Gaza continue to be governed by Hamas’ (and the PLO’s) rule of the jungle, no Palestinian civil society, let alone a viable state, can possibly develop there.

The eminent British historian AJP Taylor quipped that ‘Wars are much like road accidents. They have a general cause and particular causes at the same time’. As far as the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is concerned, the general cause stretches back to the century-long rejection of the Jewish right to statehood. At a more immediate level, the origin of the latest confrontation can be traced to the Oslo Accords of 1993-95, which the Rabin-Peres government viewed as a pathway to peace but the Palestinian leadership considered a ‘Trojan Horse’ (to use the words of prominent PLO official Faisal Husseini) designed to bring about Israel’s demise.

Rather than use the end of Israel’s ‘occupation’ as a springboard for bringing the Oslo process to fruition (control of the Gaza and West Bank Palestinian population was transferred to the PLO-dominated Palestinian Authority in May 1994 and January 1996 respectively), terrorism in these territories spiralled to its highest level since their capture by Israel in the 1967 war.

By the time of Yasser Arafat’s death in November 2004, his war of terror – the bloodiest and most destructive confrontation between Israelis and Palestinians since 1948 – had exacted 1,028 Israeli lives: nine times the average terrorist death toll in the pre-Oslo era. Yet, while Israel destroyed the West Bank’s terror infrastructure in a sustained four-year counterterrorism campaign, Hamas managed to keep its Gaza infrastructure largely intact despite the targeted killing of many of its top leaders. Reverting to massive rocket attacks on Israeli cities and villages, especially after its violent takeover of the Strip in the summer of 2007, Hamas drove Israel into four inconclusive wars in an attempt to stop these relentless attacks: in December 2008-January 2009, November 2012, July-August 2014, and May 2021. But the latest conflagration may prove one war too many.

Shortly after the September 1993 signing of the first PLO-Israel accord, Oslo’s chief architect Yossi Beilin arrogantly prophesied that ‘the greatest test of the accord will not be in the intellectual sphere, but will rather be a test of blood’. Should there be no significant drop in the level of violence and terrorism ‘within a reasonable period of time’ after the formation of the Palestinian Authority, he argued, the process would be considered a failure, ‘and should there be no choice, the IDF will return to those places which it is about to leave in the coming months’.

Thirty years and thousands of deaths later, with Saturday’s 400 (though some estimates suggest it could be as high as 600) fatalities four times as large as the 9/11 death toll in relative terms, Israel seems to be finally coming to terms with the abysmal failure of Oslo’s ‘test of blood’.

©1994-2023 Middle East Forum

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Posted in research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

アヤトッラーの計画

Gatestone Institute (https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/20032/khamenei-plan-israel)

The Ayatollah’s Plan for Israel and Palestine
by Amir Taheri
8 October 2023

* The book has received approval from Khamenei’s office and is thus the most authoritative document regarding his position on the issue.

* Khamenei makes his position clear from the start: Israel has no right to exist as a state. He claims his strategy for the destruction of Israel is not based on anti-Semitism, which he describes as a European phenomenon. His position is based on “well-established Islamic principles.”

* According to Khamenei, Israel, which he labels an “enemy” and “foe,” is a special case for three reasons. The first is that it is a loyal “ally of the American Great Satan” and a key element in its “evil scheme” to dominate “the heartland of the Ummah.”

* Khamenei describes Israel as “a cancerous tumor” whose elimination would mean that “the West’s hegemony and threats will be discredited” in the Middle East. In its place, he boasts, “the hegemony of Iran will be promoted.”

* Khamenei’s tears for “the sufferings of Palestinian Muslims” are also unconvincing. To start with, not all Palestinians are Muslims. And, if it were only Muslim sufferers who deserved sympathy, why doesn’t he beat his chest about the Burmese Rohingya and the Chechens massacred and enchained by Vladimir Putin, not to mention Muslims daily killed by fellow-Muslims across the globe?

* In the early days of his mission, the Prophet Muhammad toyed with the idea of making Jerusalem the focal point of prayers for Islam. He soon abandoned the idea and adopted his hometown of Mecca. For that reason, some classical Muslim writers refer to Jerusalem as “the discarded one,” like a first wife who is replaced by a new favorite. In the 11th century the Shiite Fatimid Caliph, Al-Hakim even ordered the destruction of Jerusalem.

* Dozens of maps circulate in the Muslim world, showing the extent of Muslim territories lost to the infidel that must be recovered. These include large parts of Russia and Europe, almost a third of China, the whole of India and parts of the Philippines and Thailand.

* Originally published on July 31, 2015.

* “The flagbearer of Jihad to liberate Jerusalem.”

* This is how the blurb of “Palestine,” a new book, published by Islamic Revolution Editions last week in Tehran, identifies the author.

* The author is “Grand Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Husseini Khamenei,” the “Supreme Guide” of the Islamic Republic in Iran, a man whose fatwa has been recognized by U.S. President Barack Obama as having the force of law.

* Edited by Saeed Solh-Mirzai, the 416-page book has received approval from Khamenei’s office and is thus the most authoritative document regarding his position on the issue.

* Khamenei makes his position clear from the start: Israel has no right to exist as a state.

* He uses three words. One is “nabudi” which means “annihilation”. The other is “imha” which means “fading out,” and, finally, there is “zaval” meaning “effacement.”

* Khamenei claims that his strategy for the destruction of Israel is not based on anti-Semitism, which he describes as a European phenomenon.

* His position is based on “well-established Islamic principles”, he claims.

* One such is that a land that falls under Muslim rule, even briefly, can never again be ceded to non-Muslims. What matters in Islam is control of a land’s government, even if the majority of inhabitants are non-Muslims. Khomeinists are not alone in this belief.

* Dozens of maps circulate in the Muslim world, showing the extent of Muslim territories lost to the infidel that must be recovered. These include large parts of Russia and Europe, almost a third of China, the whole of India and parts of the Philippines and Thailand.

* However, according to Khamenei, Israel, which he labels as “adou” and “doshman,” meaning “enemy” and “foe,” is a special case for three reasons. The first is that it is a loyal “ally of the American Great Satan” and a key element in its “evil scheme” to dominate “the heartland of the Ummah.”

* The second reason is that Israel has waged war on Muslims on a number of occasions, thus becoming a “hostile infidel” (“kaffir al-harbi”).

* Finally, Israel is a special case because it occupies Jerusalem, which Khamenei describes as “Islam’s third Holy City.” He intimates that one of his “most cherished wishes” is to one day pray in Jerusalem.

* Khamenei insist that he is not recommending “classical wars” to wipe Israel off the map. Nor does he want to “massacre the Jews.” What he recommends is a long period of low-intensity warfare designed to make life unpleasant if not impossible for a majority of Israeli Jews so that they leave the country.

His calculation is based on the assumption that large numbers of Israelis have dual-nationality and would prefer emigration to the United States or Europe to daily threats of death.

Khamenei makes no reference to Iran’s nuclear program. But the subtext is that a nuclear-armed Iran would make Israel think twice before trying to counter Khamenei’s strategy by taking military action against the Islamic Republic.

In Khamenei’s analysis, once the cost of staying in Israel has become too high for many Jews, Western powers, notably the U.S., which has supported the Jewish state for decades, might decide that the cost of doing so is higher than possible benefits.

Thanks to President Obama, the U.S. has already distanced itself from Israel to a degree unimaginable a decade ago.

Khamenei counts on what he sees as “Israel fatigue.” The international community would start looking for what he calls “a practical and logical mechanism” to end the old conflict.

Khamenei’s “practical and logical mechanism” excludes the two-state formula in any form.

“The solution is a one-state formula,” he declares. That state, to be called Palestine, would be under Muslim rule but would allow non-Muslims, including some Israeli Jews who could prove “genuine roots” in the region, to stay as “protected minorities.”

Under Khamenei’s scheme, Israel plus the West Bank and Gaza would revert to the United Nations’ mandate for a brief period during which a referendum would be held to create the new state of Palestine.

All Palestinians and their descendants, wherever they are, would be able to vote, while Jews “who have come from other places” would be excluded.

Khamenei does not mention any figures for possible voters in his dream referendum. But studies by the Foreign Ministry in Tehran suggest that at least eight million Palestinians across the globe would be able to vote, against 2.2 million Jews “acceptable” as future second-class citizens of the new Palestine. Thus, the “Supreme Guide” is certain of the results of his proposed referendum.

He does not make clear whether the Kingdom of Jordan, which is located in 80 percent of historic Palestine, would be included in his one-state scheme. However, a majority of Jordanians, who are of Palestinian extraction, would be able to vote in the referendum and, logically, become citizens of the new Palestine.

Khamenei boasts about the success of his plans to make life impossible for Israelis through terror attacks from Lebanon and Gaza. His latest scheme is to recruit “fighters” in the West Bank to set-up Hezbollah-style units.

“We have intervened in anti-Israel matters, and it brought victory in the 33-day war by Hezbollah against Israel in 2006 and in the 22-day war between Hamas and Israel in the Gaza Strip,” he boasts.

Khamenei describes Israel as “a cancerous tum or” whose elimination would mean that “the West’s hegemony and threats will be discredited” in the Middle East. In its place, he boasts, “the hegemony of Iran will be promoted.”

Khamenei’s book also deals with the Holocaust, which he regards either as “a propaganda ploy” or a disputed claim. “If there was such a thing,” he writes, “we don’t know why it happened and how.”

Khamenei has been in contact with professional Holocaust deniers since the 1990s. In 2000, he invited Swiss Holocaust-denier Jürgen Graf to Tehran and received him in private audiences. French Holocaust-denier Roger Garaudy, a Stalinist who converted to Islam, was also feted in Tehran as “Europe’s’ greatest living philosopher.”

It was with Khamenei’s support that former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad set up a “Holocaust-research center” led by Muhammad-Ali Ramin, an Iranian functionary with links to German neo-Nazis who also organized annual “End of Israel” seminars.

Despite efforts to disguise his hatred of Israel in Islamic terms, the book makes it clear that Khamenei is more influenced by Western-style anti-Semitism than by classical Islam’s checkered relations with Jews.

His argument about territories becoming “irrevocably Islamic” does not wash, if only because of its inconsistency. He has nothing to say about vast chunks of former Islamic territory, including some that belonged to Iran for millennia, now under Russian rule.

Nor is he ready to embark on Jihad to drive the Chinese out of Xinjiang, a Muslim khanate until the late 1940s.

Israel, which in terms of territory accounts for one per cent of Saudi Arabia, is a very small fry.

Khamenei’s shedding of tears for “the sufferings of Palestinian Muslims” are also unconvincing. To start with, not all Palestinians are Muslims. And, if it were only Muslim sufferers who deserved sympathy, why doesn’t the “Supreme Guide” beat his chest about the Burmese Rohingya and the Chechens massacred and enchained by Vladimir Putin, not to mention Muslims daily killed by fellow-Muslims across the globe?

At no point in these 416 pages does Khamenei even mention the need to take into account the views of either Israelis or Palestinians regarding his miracle recipe. What if Palestinians and Israelis wanted a two-state solution?

What if they chose to sort out their problems through negotiation and compromise rather than the “wiping-off-the-map” scheme of he proposes?

Khamenei reveals his ignorance of Islamic traditions when he designates Jerusalem as “our holy city.” As a student of Islamic theology, he should know that “holy city” and “holy land” are Christian concepts that have no place in Islam.

In Islam, the adjective “holy” is reserved only for Allah and cannot apply to anything or anyone else. The Koran itself is labeled “al-Majid” (Glorious) and is not a holy book as is the Bible for the Christians.

The “Supreme Guide” should know that Mecca is designated as “al-Mukarramah” (the Generous) and Medina as “al-Munawwarah” (the Enlightened). Even the Shi’ite shrine cities of Iraq are not labeled “muqqaddas” (holy). Najaf is designated as “al-Ashraf” (the Most Noble) and Karbala as “al-Mualla” (the Sublime).

In the early days of his mission, the Prophet Muhammad toyed with the idea of making Jerusalem the focal point of prayers for Islam. He soon abandoned the idea and adopted his hometown of Mecca, where the black cube (kaabah) had been a magnet for pilgrims for centuries before Islam. For that reason, some classical Muslim writers refer to Jerusalem as “the discarded one” (al-yarmiyah) like a first wife who is replaced by a new favorite. In the 11th century, the Shiite Fatimid Caliph, Al-Hakim, even ordered the destruction of “discarded” Jerusalem.

The Israel-Palestine issue is not a religious one. It is a political conflict about territory, borders, sharing of water resources and security. Those who, like Khamenei, try to inject a dose of religious enmity into this already complex cocktail deserve little sympathy.

Copyright © 2023 Gatestone Institute.All rights reserved.

(End)

Posted in Christianity, research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

今回の侵入攻撃の発端

Tablet Magazine(https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/israel-music-festival-massacre-eyewitness-account?fbclid=IwAR2FRSJs3RW1zqXeObSl_EEgVP4xmnbLbgXJVFUw_G03Ab1OhRH4tH5JfeA)

Eyewitness Account of the Rave Massacre
Scenes of young women raped next to the dead bodies of their friends
by Liel Leibovitz

* Liel Leibovitz is Editor at Large for Tablet Magazine and a host of its weekly culture podcast Unorthodox and daily Talmud podcast Take One. He is the editor of Zionism: The Tablet Guide.

9 October 2023

I’ve spent the last 12 hours speaking to Israelis who were at the Supernova music festival. Their testimonies, as you would imagine, are very emotional. At least one broke down mid-conversation and wasn’t able to continue his recollection.

The attack on the festival outside of Re’im began around 7 a.m. The party was at its peak by then—which meant that by then most people were inebriated. At first, partygoers heard a loud explosion, which they took to be another sporadic rocket attack on southern Israel. But then the explosions grew louder and constant, and kept going for about five minutes. The music stopped, and the police protecting the 4,000 or 5,000 ravers began pushing everyone to leave.

By then, the terrorists were approaching in pickup trucks bearing Hamas military markings.
Shooting began. Many were executed on the spot. 260 bodies have been found, so far, on the site of the rave.

Many of the young men and women started running in the flat expanse of the western Negev desert. Faced with the spectacle of kids fleeing for their lives on a largely flat surface, the terrorists began rounding up the rest of their victims.

Others were captured and bound and kidnapped. “I saw videos with a male getting held by a group of Arab kids. Like, they’re like 16, 17,” one survivor recalled. “They’re kids, but they’re young men already, and they’re holding this guy, and he looks as his girlfriend is being mounted on a bike and driven away from him. God knows what she’s going to experience … Women have been raped at the area of the rave next to their friends bodies, dead bodies.”

Several of these rape victims appear to have been later executed. Others were taken to Gaza. In photographs released online, you can see several paraded through the city’s streets, blood gushing from between their legs.

The only thing I want is a weapon. I want something to protect us.

One survivor who’d returned to the scene later in the day to look for his friends spoke, in a breaking voice, of what he’d seen. Of the bodies, mainly of young women, lying cold and mutilated. Of scantily clad corpses, many of whom appeared to have been shot at point-blank. Of cars, perforated by bullets or blown up by grenades.

Some of the lucky ones ran to a nearby wadi, seeking shelter amid the shrubbery. “I felt like they were shooting right above our heads,” one survivor recalled. “I dove into a bush … It felt like the shooting was coming from 180 degrees, all around us. I understood we’re going to be there for at least a couple of hours. And I had nothing on me. And I was like, the only thing I want is a weapon. I want something to protect us.” Eventually, he and his friends, some of them barefoot, decided to risk it and try to reach safety, walking close enough to the road to see it but not so close so that they might be seen. “I said, if we see like army or police cars, we’re going to go to the road. Otherwise, we’re going to stay away. When we saw police and army cars, we knew that it’s a safe place.”

Later, when the gruesome attack was finally over and IDF soldiers managed to subdue the attackers, they searched these trucks and found RPG launchers, high-end communications devices, assorted AK-47s and other mostly Soviet-made weapons, along with numerous copies of the Quran.

(End)
………………
2023年10月11日追記

(https://www.facebook.com/ikuko.tsunashima)

(https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2023/10/why-wasnt-israel-prepared-for-hamass-assault/?fbclid=IwAR3y_yDW1aGRucDTeq)

かつて世界最強だと言われたIDFも、最近では縮小され、規律が緩んできた、との指摘。

(転載終)

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対ハマース

Middle East Forum (https://www.meforum.org/64943/israel-opportunity-to-destroy-hamas)

Israel’s Opportunity to Destroy Hamas
by Daniel Pipes
The Wall Street Journal
7 October 2023

The surprise attack on Israel by Hamas, the Islamist organization ruling Gaza, is a humanitarian horror. It is also a strategic opportunity for Israel, the U.S. and democracies everywhere.

Hamas is an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, which author Cynthia Farahat describes as “the world’s incubator of modern Islamic terrorism.” From Hamas’s origins in 1987, it has engaged in violence against Israelis, Palestinians and whoever else might cross its path. A sequence of Israeli missteps led in 2007 to its taking power in the Gaza Strip, an area the size of Omaha, Neb., with a population of two million. It imposed a totalitarian rule on Gaza similar to that of the mullahs in Iran, attempting to implement medieval strictures, oppressing its own population, and threatening to destroy Israel.

Read the rest of this article at the Wall Street Journal

(End)

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アナト・ベルコ博士の闘い

1. (https://itunalily.hatenablog.com/entry/20140709)

2014年7月9日「もう一つの種明かしを」
。。。。。。。。
2. (https://www.facebook.com/ikuko.tsunashima)

(1) 2016年10月10日
2015年5月初旬にエルサレムのクネセト内でお会いし、握手しました。ますます大活躍されています。

(2) 2016年10月13日
ベルコ博士、がんばってください!

(3) 2017年1月27日
物凄く興奮状態で喋っているアナト・ベルコ博士。彼女の右手と私の右手が握手したのは、2015年5月上旬のこと。

(4) 2017年3月19日
アナト・ベルコ博士。2015年春にクネセトでお会いして、少しお話をし、握手もしていただいた。こういう本音でストレートな議論が交わされているのだ。真剣勝負。

(5) 2017年8月31日
三つ編みが15センチくらい長くなった。

(6) 2021年10月13日
お会いしました。

(7) 2021年11月29日
(https://ja.danielpipes.org/article/12227)
ベルコ博士。
上記を訳した後の2015年5月上旬、エルサレムのクネセトでお目にかかりました。お変わりなくて…..

(8) 2022年1月15日
2015年春、エルサレムのクネセト内でお目にかかりました。
お変わりなく……。
(https://ja.danielpipes.org/article/12227)
(https://itunalily.hatenablog.com/entry/20150127)

(9) 2022年1月16日
ネゲブのベドウィンのイスラム主義化。
2015年春、中東フォーラムの研修旅行で、私は現実を知った。
ベルコ博士の怒りと叫び。
日本から注視しております。

(10) 2022年4月1日
ベルコ博士。

(11) 2022年8月7日
ベルコ博士。

(12) 2022年10月11日
ベルコ博士。

(13) 2023年2月17日
ベルコ博士ご夫妻。クネセトでお目にかかった日が懐かしい。

(14) 2023年3月7日
ベルコ博士!2015年春、クネセトでお目にかかりました。

(15) 2022年11月3日
ベルコ博士。2015年5月上旬にクネセトでお目にかかりました。

(転載終)
……………
2023年10月11日追記

(https://www.facebook.com/ikuko.tsunashima)

2023年10月11日投稿
アナト・ベルコ博士。
勇敢かつ知的な女性研究者で、ハマースのテロリストを刑務所でインタビューされ、一冊の本にまとめられました。原著はヘブライ語で、英語版の序文を書かれたのがダニエル・パイプス博士です。私は、英訳で読ませていただきました。

“The Smarter Bomb: Women and Children as Suicide Bombers” (English Edition)

私は2015年春、クネセトでベルコ博士にお目にかかり、握手していただきました。

(転載終)

Posted in Dr. Anat Berko, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment

Lessons learned

1. (https://itunalily.hatenablog.com/entry/20160721)

2016年7月21日「Elliott Abrams氏の公開講演」
。。。。。。。。
2. (https://mosaicmagazine.com/response/israel-zionism/2021/06/what-can-be-done-politically-to-weaken-hamas/?utm_source)

About the author:
Elliott Abrams is a senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and is the chairman of the Tikvah Fund.

SYMPOSIUM
ELLIOTT ABRAMS
14 June 2021

America’s interests in Gaza are threefold: to alleviate the humanitarian suffering of the Palestinians living there, to strengthen Israel’s security, and to see an end to the control of the Gaza Strip by a terrorist group increasingly allied with Iran. Hamas stands in the way of all three, and the end of Hamas control of Gaza should underpin America’s strategy in the region over the coming years. How can this be won?

Some relevant history offers the context for my argument. In 2003 Ariel Sharon announced his decision to remove Israeli settlements from Gaza, and later decided to remove Israel’s military presence as well. Sharon had come to expect nothing from peace negotiations with the Palestinian Authority, and concluded that it was time for Israel to start setting its final borders. Those final borders, he said in December 2003, would not include Gaza with its then population of 1.5 million Arabs and 7,500 Jews—Jews who needed constant, costly, and difficult protection from the IDF.

Was there ever a chance that peace and democracy would prevail in Gaza? By the time Sharon moved settlers out in 2005, Arafat was dead and there was some thought that the Palestinian Authority (PA) could rule there as it did in the West Bank—not a model democracy, but after Arafat’s death a somewhat stable place whose security forces worked closely with the United States and with Israel against terrorism. Sharon did not help the PA take over Gaza, arguing (to the Bush administration, in which I served) that the only way he could maintain political support from a divided Israel for withdrawing from Gaza was by saying it was done purely for Israeli interests and utterly without cooperating with the Palestinians. Within days, all the Israeli settlements—including valuable and productive greenhouses—had been destroyed by rioters and marauders. Within two years, Hamas had seized power, after killing, imprisoning, or driving out PA security forces.

Between 2005-2007, during the years of PA rule, the United States was much involved with Gaza—negotiating between Israel and the PA an “Agreement on Movement and Access” of people and goods going to or from Gaza, and trying to resolve disputes. But since Hamas took over, the United States has left Gaza to Israel and Egypt to handle—with some Qatari money as grease. The U.S. government will not deal with Hamas because it is a terrorist group. Israel and Egypt control goods and people moving in and out, trying to limit smuggling while permitting food, medicine, and other material in. And Egypt has been the negotiator helping end all the rounds of war between Israel and Hamas.

In the aftermath of the most recent war, and with a new U.S. president in office, more thought is being given to whether these repeated rounds of conflict are inevitable. Israel will benefit if they can be avoided, as will the Palestinians in Gaza who are killed, injured, and immiserated because Hamas chooses to attack Israel. And, as mentioned, America’s interests will also be served by a cessation of these conflicts and the weakening of an Iranian-supported terrorist group. For a brief period after Sharon announced that Israel would leave Gaza there were dreamy, utopian statements from Palestinians and even some Israelis. Shimon Peres thought Gaza could be a tourist haven and a sort of Singapore on the Med. But today the question is not how Gaza can become rich, or even how it can escape poverty. The question is how the Gaza Strip can be freed from the grip of Hamas.

That is the question worth serious debate: is it possible over time to pry Gaza from the hands of Hamas?
Will someone conquer Hamas and Gaza? I well recall the statement to me by the head of Egyptian military intelligence in 2005, as Israel prepared its exit from Gaza: “Do not worry. Hamas will not take over. Egypt will prevent it.” He may even have believed this. Even with Egypt having undergone several fundamental changes in leadership, it was no less true then as it is true now that Egypt’s government is unfriendly to Hamas but will not remove it. For its part, Israel does not wish to reconquer and rule Gaza, because that would require a long and costly war and the permanent stationing of many troops there. Moreover, Israel would then be solely responsible for the well-being of Gaza’s population.

Israel has chosen instead to deter Hamas. In May, after the most recent round of war, the former Israeli national security advisor Yaakov Amidror explained that the purpose of all the Gaza operations over the past fifteen years has been to hurt Hamas and restore quiet to people living in the south—not to topple the terror groups or conquer the Strip. Israel didn’t embark on Operation Guardian of the Walls with the goal of winning. The goal was to inflict maximum damage on Hamas’s military capabilities, in hopes of establishing deterrence. . . .

Conventional deterrence may be a way to manage this conflict, but it will not hasten its end. Nor can Hamas be “defeated” by improving life in Gaza, as if Hamas’s goals were a higher minimum wage or a lower unemployment rate. Visiting Israel in May, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said:

Across the meetings that I’ve had so far, I’ve heard a shared recognition from all sides that steps need to be taken, work needs to be done, to address the underlying conditions that helped fuel this latest conflict. The ceasefire creates space to begin to take those steps. . . . But we all know that is not enough; . . . we have to break the cycle of violence. Leaders on both sides will need to chart a better course, starting by making real improvements in the lives of people in Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank. I’m convinced that if they do, they will find willing partners in both Israeli and Palestinian civil society.

Fire the speechwriter. The “underlying conditions” did not lead to the recent conflict, unless the existence of the state of Israel is the “underlying condition” in question. That is what Hamas seeks to change. Nor is there a “cycle of violence” and Blinken should stop using that morally neutral phrase. Nor is Hamas interested in “real improvements in the lives of people” in Gaza: Hamas barely even mentioned Gaza in explaining why it attacked Israel in May.

If the conquest of Gaza by Israel is not in the cards, and neither conventional deterrence nor improving “underlying conditions” will affect Hamas’ desire to bombard Israel, what can be done over the next decade? The only possible way to remove or at least badly undermine Hamas in the long run is political: it is by reducing its level of support, building up support for alternative groups, and preventing it from ruling by sheer force. A key problem today is that there is no alternative that is more attractive to Palestinians.

Opinion polls suggest that Palestinians of Gaza would like for Hamas to be replaced. The polls taken this year before PA president Mahmoud Abbas cancelled the May 22 parliamentary election showed the unenthusiastic level of Hamas’ support. Forty percent in the West Bank and 34 percent in Gaza supported the Fatah Party, while 15 percent in the West Bank and 33 percent in Gaza supported Hamas. The former Fatah strongman Mohammed Dahlan, a Gazan by origin who was thrown out of Fatah for opposing Mahmoud Abbas and has not visited Gaza in well over a decade, had 17-percent support in Gaza. The point is that Hamas has very far from overwhelming support. In a free election it is unlikely that they would win power, even when opposed by corrupt, incompetent Fatah bosses. In Gaza, which they have controlled for fourteen years, two-thirds of the populace oppose them.

So what is to be done? First, all those promises being made by the Biden administration about helping the people of Gaza and not Hamas must be kept. Donors must ensure that their gifts do not go through Hamas or strengthen it. Instead, use NGOs that have some independence—or create new ones. Bank on the belief that most Gazans want food, medicine, hospitals, schools, and jobs more than they want Hamas. The choice put to Gazans should be stark and should be repeatedly stated publicly to them, in Arabic: Hamas can rebuild its arsenals or donors can start rebuilding Gaza. Make Hamas stand between the public and the benefits they want.

That is an essential precondition of political reform, but it is not enough. Gazans and all Palestinians must be presented with better options than Hamas or Fatah, the same choices they have faced for decades. It was a mistake in the 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections to permit Hamas to run unless it met the conditions set by the “Quartet” of the U.S., Russia, EU, and UN: namely to renounce violence, recognize Israel’s right to exist, and stand by previously signed agreements. That mistake was about to be repeated in 2021, until Abbas called off the elections for an entirely different reason: that he was going to lose. As the opinion polling previously mentioned suggests, Hamas was not likely to get a majority (in 2006, it won 44 percent of the vote to Fatah’s 41 percent) but Abbas wasn’t either. During the campaign, opposition to Abbas and his cronies arose from within Fatah and he might not even have won a plurality.

Electoral politics have been missing from the West Bank and Gaza for years, and so there was no great cost for Hamas to be excluded from elections that did not take place. But if the political system opens up and there are choices for voters to make, being excluded is a real cost and it may induce some Palestinians to break from Hamas. Its version of politics—as we see in Gaza, an Islamist dictatorship enforced with guns—cannot be undermined when its competition, as we see in the West Bank, is equally undemocratic and even more corrupt, though more secular and less brutal. The goal should be to undermine Hamas by showing Gazans, over time, that there are better alternatives than perpetual rule by an Islamist proxy of Iran, and moreover, that those alternatives are real and indeed are visible in the West Bank.

The bet is that if this is offered, Gazans will not choose to live in another Lebanon, whose population is only 22-percent Shiite but where the entire nation is controlled by Hizballah because of the threat and use of violent coercion. Hizballah is a reminder for Gazans, for Israel, and for us of what could happen if Iranian support for Hamas is not blocked and if Hamas is not attacked politically.
 
Israeli deterrence of the kind Amidror advocates will be needed for many years. But what is also needed is a long-range political strategy to undermine Hamas, whose control of Gaza appears to be opposed by two-thirds of Gazans.

What would a long-range political offensive against Hamas look like? It would mean that we promote competition among Palestinian political groups and leaders, but we exclude terrorists. That in itself means pushing for more freedom of speech and press than the Palestinian Authority under Mahmoud Abbas likes to permit. It would mean strong efforts against corruption in the PA. It would mean pressing for free elections, as long as they exclude terrorist groups and their representatives. It would mean supporting honest and able Palestinian officials, whether mayors, governors, legislators, educators, security officials, or any other sort. How? With rhetoric and gifts of prestige (through meetings at high levels with foreign officials, visits to foreign capitals, and the like) and by making sure that our and other donors’ assistance is available as often as is appropriate for such officials to allocate, so that there is an actual advantage to those who act with integrity and are rivals to Hamas. It would mean constant pressure (especially by the United States on other donors, Western and Arab) to be sure that assistance does not go through or strengthen Hamas in Gaza. It would mean the strongest possible efforts to prevent smuggling of weapons into Gaza or reconstruction of Hamas’s weapons factories and warehouses.

All this may fail, leaving Hamas in control of Gaza. It may also be that in the end, too many Palestinians will cling to the Hamas dream of destroying Israel and will support violence and terror. And it may be that Hamas cannot be defeated until there is regime change in Iran, which is today its main supporter. Israel and its allies will have to deal with all that if it proves to be true. But relying on the Palestinian Authority has failed and will fail, and Israel has no present desire to invade and conquer and (worse yet) rule Gaza. The alternative is to try politics.

Give Palestinians an open choice between Hamas and decent government without corruption and terror. It is a choice they have never had except in the few months after Arafat died. As we know from the record of the PA and Fatah since then, that would not solve the deep divisions between Israel and the Palestinians. But it may weaken the Hamas hold on Gaza, and that is an objective worth seeking. Put another way, Israel, the United States, and many Western and Arab donor countries want to see Hamas out of power in Gaza. Let’s see if Palestinians can be enlisted in achieving that objective.

(End)

Posted in Daniel Pipes, research topics, Studies related, © 2023 by Ikuko Tsunashima-Miyake | Leave a comment