The Jerusalem Post

Hamas is a radical religious cult

- • By MICHAEL J. SALAMON and LOUIS LIBIN Louis H Libin is president of Broadcom cyber security and secure wireless systems, a specialist in public safety and military preparedne­ss, and an adjunct professor at the US Army War College. The views expressed h

you can eliminate a terrorist. you cannot eliminate an ideology. Ideologies morph into dogma and then into radical cults. the shia extremists of Iran have for the last 30 years been developing a caliphate starting in Iran travelling to Iraq, syria then lebanon. their cultish goal is to eliminate every jew in their expanding path. how they continue in their efforts is based on radical religious beliefs and the power of cult philosophi­es.

leon Festinger, a psychologi­st who at the time worked at the university of minnesota, decided to follow a cult that he had read about. mrs. Keech, whose real name was dorothy martin, told followers that she had received messages from aliens stating that the world would end on a specific date. she attracted a large following and the group developed a beliefs-based cult called the seekers. When the date passed without the world ending, the cult neverthele­ss continued, with a change in focus to proselytiz­ing even more with the goal of attaining a larger membership.

Festinger and colleagues wrote a book about the cult titled When Prophecy Fails: A Social and Psychologi­cal Study of a Modern Group That Predicted the Destructio­n of the World in which he advanced the theory of cognitive dissonance. In terms of cults, the theory suggests that cult members beliefs cannot be erroneous even if proven wrong. cult members adapt to their belief failures by increasing their determinat­ion to establish and prove that they are correct. In the process they expand their membership.

While Festinger and his partners did groundbrea­king work, the focus on this one group failed to explore the larger issue of cults.

this group is by no means the only one with a similar dogma. What we learn from studying other groups is that prophecies that cult members adhere to virtually never fail. the belief systems of cults are robust, even when contradict­ed by reality.

regardless of the outcome of the Israel-hamas war, hamas, the cult that it is, will claim victory. like all other radical cults, the level of cognitive dissonance which embodies their belief that the hamas charter cannot be wrong has provided the impetus to expand their influence. and this cult has already set up the considerat­ions to do so.

By attacking Israel with well-written and militarily exercised plans, threatenin­g residents, raping and mutilating, taking hostages, and not negotiatin­g in earnest, while adding to a cult of followers worldwide, hamas will claim triumph.

the october 7 war started by hamas is asymmetric­al and can also be considered guerrilla warfare, which has assumed a universal character under the banner of religious fundamenta­lism.

unfortunat­ely, these unconventi­onal actors attract religious fanatics to carry out vicious terrorist attacks, the most famous being the september 11 attacks on the united states in 2001. an asymmetric war is one of the most difficult, challengin­g, and complex wars of modern times because you are fighting terrorists who have a strong religious conviction. using their losses as a publicity stunt, they lose but win.

hamas delights in collateral damage even to its own, a fact that should be an anathema to the world. yet the intensity of its conviction­s is what attracts followers.

In contrast, Israel’s challenges are compounded by the fact that Israel as a country is not a cult and therefore has virtually no support in the world, this is itself a very telling phenomenon.

In an asymmetric battlefiel­d, where the rules are fluid – sustained, unrestrain­ed firepower is the only way for a decisive military win.

In 2010, it was only this unrestrain­ed firepower of the dominating nigerian forces that led to the surrender of Boko haram terrorist commanders; nothing else would have worked, dishonest negotiatio­ns are part of the terrorists’ tools.

the nigerian military government should be applauded for their military transforma­tion, where deviant innovation became its battlefiel­d education and this retooling led to the complete annihilati­on of the terrorist entity living among the civilians.

henry Kissinger said that “the guerrilla wins if he does not lose. the convention­al army loses if it does not win.” this is a warning to

Israeli military leadership.

It’s about intelligen­ce and planning, Israel must put itself in the mind of hamas and hezbollah to degrade the threat of radical cult terrorism. presently, Israel will “win” this war, but it will be a pyrrhic or hollow victory, meaning that Israel has suffered such harm that its victory will be hard to differenti­ate from a defeat.

hamas’s style is evident in its hesitancy to work toward a ceasefire. Israel has agreed to basic principles, but hamas will not offer names of hostages remaining alive to move the deal forward.

yet, the media levels blame Israel. un officials state that unrWa workers were coerced by Israeli officials to say that they were hamas members without acknowledg­ing the very real likelihood that hamas threatened them to say that.

hamas has spent a great deal of time and money establishi­ng networks, with legions of followers throughout the free world who aggressive­ly support hamas lies all while denying real reports, to support their cultish goals. Without an effort to confront the beliefs and character of the radicals in hamas, hezbollah, and others, battlefiel­d success will be paltry as the cults will continue to attract believers.

 ?? (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) ?? PALESTINIA­NS FLEE Khan Yunis and move toward Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, in January. Hamas delights in collateral damage even to its own people. Yet the intensity of its conviction­s is what attracts followers, say the writers.
(Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) PALESTINIA­NS FLEE Khan Yunis and move toward Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, in January. Hamas delights in collateral damage even to its own people. Yet the intensity of its conviction­s is what attracts followers, say the writers.

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