The National - News

The Israel-Gaza war has already gone regional

▶ The Israeli military’s repeated cross-border strikes ultimately make the country less secure

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Amid the continuing war in Gaza, many are concerned about the risk of the violence engulfing even more countries. “Metastasis­e” was the word used by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken during his meetings with regional leaders this week to describe the risk of wider conflict.

The reality is that a regional conflict is already under way, and it is Israel’s military carrying out the lion’s share of cross-border attacks, with no regard for the sovereignt­y of other states. The Israeli operation in southern Lebanon on Monday that killed Wissam Tawil – a commander in Hezbollah’s elite Radwan force – was the latest in a string of strikes in neighbouri­ng countries.

The stakes had already been raised by the Israeli drone strike of January 2 that killed senior Hamas figure Saleh Al Arouri and six other militants in Beirut. That assassinat­ion led the leaders of Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad to tell Egyptian mediators that any further negotiatio­ns with Israel were off.

Less than a week before that operation, Syria’s official news agency said Israel carried out two air strikes on its territory in 24 hours, including one on Damascus airport, which killed up to 11 members of Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps.

This is far from the first time that Lebanon and Syria have been bombed by Israel. They are both unstable countries, riven with domestic problems and home to militant groups and proxies outside of government control. In the case of Syria, Israel continues to directly occupy part of its territory, the Golan Heights. By repeatedly bombing targets in both countries, Israel’s forces are increasing the likelihood of an uncontroll­able escalation.

Israel’s argument is that such cross-border strikes are intended to bolster its security by removing dangerous enemies, even though it is often civilians who carry the brunt of these attacks. There is no disputing the fact that Hamas and Hezbollah are implacably opposed to Israel’s existence, and both groups have targeted Israeli civilians. But it is the continuing and disproport­ionate Gaza operation – and the repressive occupation of the West Bank – that is the ultimate source of danger for Israelis at home and abroad.

This is not to let other actors off the hook. The leadership­s of Hamas and Hezbollah know there will be retaliatio­n for their attacks against Israel yet they remain unconcerne­d for the lives of Palestinia­n and Lebanese civilians who are inevitably caught in the crossfire, instead factoring them into a cold political calculus. Elsewhere, Yemen’s Houthi rebels claim to be acting in solidarity with Gaza but by attacking and seizing ships in the Red Sea they have militarise­d one of the world’s most important waterways.

The longer the fighting in Gaza goes on, the greater the chance there is of a regional escalation. Similarly, high-stakes attacks by Israeli forces on neighbouri­ng territory also fan the flames of war. An immediate ceasefire in Gaza is the key to breaking the chain of events that could lead to a major miscalcula­tion, in addition to the fact that it is the only way to stop the suffering of more than two million Gazans.

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