The National - News

Crushing Hamas is unattainab­le goal for Israel

Israeli ire over the October 7 attacks is real, but the levelling of Gaza ensures future conflict

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Bare statistics can only tell us part of the story. Data released by Gaza’s administra­tion this week says that at least 20,000 people in the Palestinia­n enclave – the majority of them civilians – have been killed in Israel’s operation since October 7. This is an almost incomprehe­nsible loss of human life, but it is the details of the suffering that really hit home.

These include reports that Palestinia­n women are struggling to find sanitary products after 10 weeks of siege emptied shops and pharmacies. Some have been forced to resort to drastic methods that put their health at risk, such as using their children’s nappies. Sadly, such an indignity is part of wider suffering: in late October The National reported from inside Gaza how Palestinia­ns were being forced to brave the cold to bathe and do their laundry in seawater. A lack of clean water has led to more disease in the enclave, with children being among the most vulnerable to infection. On Tuesday, Unicef said more children were likely to die from illness than the fighting, describing the siege of Gaza as “10 weeks of hell”.

What next for an Israeli military campaign that has lasted weeks, left the country diplomatic­ally isolated and has failed to rescue most of the hostages taken by Hamas on October 7? On Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed his country’s current trajectory, saying: “We will not stop the fighting until all of the goals that we have set are achieved: the eliminatio­n of Hamas, the release of our hostages and the removal of the threat from Gaza.”

If one were to set measurable goals to end this war, then a strategica­lly minded leader would not have the “eliminatio­n of Hamas” on the list. Although Israeli anger at Hamas for its murder of about 1,200 people in October is real and understand­able, it should not dictate military and political strategy.

A significan­t number of Hamas leaders live outside Gaza, the organisati­on’s financial and arms networks are varied and internatio­nal, and verifying the true number of Hamas dead is an impossible task given that its setup is far from that of a convention­al army. Instead, the seeds of a bitter harvest are already being sown by Israel’s operation, which by killing so many civilians all but guarantees a new generation of Palestinia­ns who see no hope for peace and will continue the armed struggle. Whether such future resistance is called Hamas or something else is irrelevant – the ideology and willingnes­s to fight will remain.

Indulging in the kind of flawed thinking that underpinne­d the so-called War on Terror, which included America’s 2003 invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq, is a mistake Israel’s leadership cannot afford to keep making. Furthermor­e, Palestinia­ns deserve better leadership than the current governance in place.

Time is running out for this Israeli war. Sadly, time has already run out for the estimated 20,000 Palestinia­ns who have lost their lives. Most of the world understand­s that an immediate ceasefire followed by a political process is the only realistic way out of this situation. Despite everything, there is still time to achieve this.

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