The Jerusalem Post

US upgrades Netanyahu

- • By CHUCK FREILICH Follow him on X: @ chuck_freilich.

Israelis can take pride. Our prime minister has gone up in the estimation of our American allies.

Whereas unnamed officials in the Biden administra­tion famously deemed the prime minister a “chicken sh**,” President Biden has privately called him merely an “a**hole.” This is hardly a term of endearment, but it’s a small improvemen­t, and American English has room for far worse. Whether or not these terms truly reflect the prime minister’s character, the strategic document he issued almost in secret a few days ago, titled “Day After Hamas,” is really little more than horse excrement.

Nearly five months after the war broke out, under the prime minister’s (malfeasant) tutelage, Israelis are entitled to finally hear from him about his strategy for the post-war period. They have endured and sacrificed enough for this to be a reasonable expectatio­n, and sufficient time has passed. Now, apparently bowing to both domestic pressure and especially demands from Washington rather than to any sense of duty, the prime minister has finally presented a “plan.” It is, however, a totally one-sided military document that presents all of Israel’s maximalist positions. In and of themselves, most, albeit not all, of the positions are justified. In their entirety, they are not only unacceptab­le to the Palestinia­ns but to the US as well, and the absence of any diplomatic vision for the future is especially glaring.

According to the prime minister, the IDF will continue fighting until the hostages have been returned, Hamas’s military and government­al capabiliti­es

have been destroyed, and the long-term threat it poses to Israel has come to an end. To this end, Gaza is to be completely demilitari­zed, and Israel will retain indefinite freedom of military action in Gaza, exercise control over the Rafah corridor, and establish a buffer zone along the border. Civil administra­tion is to be based on Gazans with administra­tive experience but with no ties to states or organizati­ons that support terrorism.

As for the prime minister’s vision for the future, reconstruc­tion of Gaza is to begin only after it has been demilitari­zed and a comprehens­ive de-radicaliza­tion program of all religious, educationa­l, and welfare institutio­ns has begun.

In other words, shortly before the Messiah arrives. Moreover, Israel is to maintain security control over the entire area west of the Jordan River (the West Bank and Gaza), rejects internatio­nal attempts to dictate the outcome of negotiatio­ns, and opposes unilateral recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n state.

What this means in plain English is open-ended military control of Gaza and de facto annexation of the West Bank. It reflects a refusal to face a harsh but simple reality: There are only two realistic sources of governance in Gaza after the war: Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority (PA). A resumption of Israeli control over 2.3 million hostile Gazans is exactly what Hamas wants and would

hand it its greatest military victory. It would ensure that Israel becomes mired in a never-ending quagmire, one that saps its national vitality and military strength, undermines what’s left of its internatio­nal standing, and, most importantl­y, deems it a one-state reality. National security decisions are often simply a choice between bad options. Resumption of control by a “revitalize­d” PA would be the best of them.

Attempts to find “technocrat­ic” leaders in Gaza, unaffiliat­ed with Hamas or other terrorist entities, are doomed to fail. Even technocrat­ic leaders require overall political direction, which can come either from the PA or Hamas, and there are not many technocrat­s in Gaza who fit the bill to begin with. In the absence of the PA, these technocrat­ic leaders would become, at best, a front for Hamas. For those with long memories, the attempt to find such untainted officials is reminiscen­t of Israel’s vacuous attempts to avoid dealing with the PLO in the 1970s by trying to establish “village associatio­ns” in the West Bank.

SO MUCH for Lala Land.

What we need now is serious policy and a true vision for the “day after.” After months of brutal fighting and at a heavy cost, the IDF has handed the government a significan­t military victory in Gaza. As it stands at present, this success constitute­s a fundamenta­l change in the situation that can pave the way for new opportunit­ies. The achievemen­t will be even greater if and when we complete the job in Rafah, an extremely difficult, painful, and essential move. Either way, Hamas will continue to exist as a military and political organizati­on, but it will cease to be the governing body in Gaza, and its ability to cause Israel significan­t harm will be greatly diminished, at least for the foreseeabl­e future.

Military success, critical though it is, is not sufficient. All major military operations must be founded on a political strategy, in the absence of which the IDF’s hard-won military achievemen­ts will be squandered and the lives of our soldiers sacrificed in vain.

The prime minister fully understand­s this, but he has other strategic priorities, none more important than staying in power to avoid legal jeopardy and an end to his less-than-illustriou­s reign. His so-called vision for the day after is long on what Israel will not agree to but silent on what it seeks for the future. Rather than a forward-looking strategic vision, it is little more than a campaign platform. It may shore up his coalition and satisfy the right, at least for now, but it does little to advance Israel’s position.

The American plan for creating a new regional order, based on the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state, normalizat­ion with the Saudis, and an antiIran axis comprised of Israel and the Sunni states, is certainly ambitious and probably unrealisti­c. It does, however, provide a road map for going forward and hope for a better future. Instead of presenting at least some indication of Israeli flexibilit­y, some willingnes­s to join the bandwagon, and an attempt to achieve a transforma­tion of Israel’s strategic circumstan­ces and strengthen the already-fraught relations with our foremost ally, the prime minister has once again positioned Israel as the rejectioni­st side.

The Palestinia­ns, in contrast, who famously never miss an opportunit­y to miss an opportunit­y, appear to be taking advantage of this one. The PA prime minister, Mohammad Shtayyeh, has submitted his cabinet’s resignatio­n to President Abbas, and the latter has already named the putative leader of the new “technocrat­ic” government in both the West Bank and Gaza. The various Palestinia­n factions, including Hamas, are scheduled to meet in Moscow in this regard.

Of far greater strategic importance to the prime minister, however, the threats to the longevity of the worst coalition in Israel’s history have been deferred once again, and with them the risks to its well-being.

Nothing is more important. Never before has “l’etat, c’est moi” been so true, more reprehensi­ble, and more tragic. We, the people, have had enough of this bull manure. We demand a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.

The writer, a former deputy national security adviser in Israel, is a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS). He is the author of Zion’s Dilemmas: How Israel Makes National Security Policy; Israeli National Security: A New Strategy for an Era of Change; and Israel and the Cyber Threat: How the Startup Nation Became a Global Superpower.

 ?? (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets with US President Joe Biden in Tel Aviv in October.
(Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets with US President Joe Biden in Tel Aviv in October.

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