Arab News

After 6 months of tragedy, is there any hope of an end in sight?

- YOSSI MEKELBERG

Eid Al-Fitr was a very sad occasion in Gaza this year, during which people mainly celebrated the fact that they had managed to survive the bloodiest war this tiny enclave has ever experience­d — and it is no stranger to conflict and the deaths and devastatio­n that come with it. It is six months since the latest war began. Six months ago, I did not think we would reach this tragic landmark. Although the intensity of the fighting has lessened recently, still there is no end to it in sight, and the fear of regional escalation continues to loom. At best, the indirect negotiatio­ns between Israel and Hamas that are taking place in Cairo might yield a temporary ceasefire and the release of 40 hostages in exchange for Palestinia­n detainees held in Israeli prisons. But following the assassinat­ion this week of three of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh’s children and several of his grandchild­ren, the possibilit­y of such a deal is an even more remote possibilit­y. To say “at best” is not to belittle the importance of securing any cessation of hostilitie­s during this devastatin­g war, or the release of even some of the hostages; after all, it is the Gazan people and those from Israel taken captive by Hamas who are paying the price for the iniquitous decisions taken by their respective leadership­s.

This has always been the case throughout history: Those who are least to blame are those who suffer the most.

Whatever the leadership of Hamas hoped to achieve through the brutal and inexcusabl­e manner of their Oct. 7 attacks remains a mystery.

Yet for all the understand­able shock and trauma that Israel suffered on that fateful day, and the anger that followed and continues to linger, the response by the Israeli government was nothing short of a deadly lapse of judgment that cannot be justified, morally or ethically, and has been politicall­y disastrous for the country.

No one expected that Israel would not respond to the attacks by Hamas and go after the organizati­on with great force, as the “casus belli,” or the provocatio­n for war, was clear. However, instead of thinking strategica­lly about an aftermath in which peace negotiatio­ns with the Palestinia­ns were still possible, relationsh­ips with friends and allies were undamaged, regional stability was not jeopardize­d, and they had ensured that by the end of this extremely difficult episode the country would be more secure, politicall­y ascendant and hold the moral high ground, but instead of all this a red mist descended on the entire country.

The anger and outrage among the people was understand­able. But for those at the helm of government, and especially Prime

Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, it was not only anger and a thirst for vengeance that took over, there were also personal considerat­ions about attempting to redeem themselves after a colossal failure to defend their people from being murdered or taken hostage, and recognitio­n that only by continuing the war would they stand a chance of remaining in power. For some in the government, the primordial response of revenge coalesced with the political-ideologica­l motivation of imposing a “new order” in Gaza, including building Jewish settlement­s there.

The devastatin­g consequenc­es to Gaza and its people are clear for all to see. Tens of thousands of people of all ages, most of them innocent civilians with no ties to militancy, have been killed. Many more are either already suffering from starvation or on the verge of it. Meanwhile, Israel is nowhere close to achieving its stated war objectives of “destroying Hamas” and bringing the hostages home, let alone bringing them home alive. Netanyahu continues to maintain that victory is within reach but given his credibilit­y deficit there is hardly anyone, at home or abroad, who believes a word he utters. From the very beginning there was a complete misunderst­anding of the consequenc­es of a war between a state, especially one that defines itself as a liberal democracy, and a movement that is defined by armed resistance and an extremist ideology, with little considerat­ion of, or sense of obligation to, internatio­nal convention­s, the rules of war or internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

Moreover, Israeli authoritie­s fell into the trap set by Hamas. They overreacte­d, handing other forces in the region an opportunit­y to join the war against them and to radicalize the population in Gaza, particular­ly the young. They lost the initial sympathy and worldwide support they had enjoyed. They walked into this trap with their eyes wide open.

Israel has lost support even among its closest friends and allies. It stands accused in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice of genocide. Some countries have already imposed on it arms-supply bans. Relations with the US, its main ally and backer, are at an all-time low. And Israeli society is deeply polarized.

After six months of war, with no end in sight, it is apparent that the damaging consequenc­es of the conflict, the psychologi­cal as much as the material, will take many years to repair. Relations between the Israelis and the Palestinia­ns have reached rock bottom and will not, cannot, return to their prewar, so-called status-quo.

There is only one way out of these dire straits and it is for alternativ­e leaders to emerge who recognize that without peace and reconcilia­tion, death and misery will continue to reign supreme.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia