The Jewish Chronicle

Does anybody know what is really Y going on with Israel and Hamas?

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THE POLICE wouldn’t let Asaf Weiss get home. He had been on his way to a wedding when he heard that there was about to be a curfew at 8pm in his home town, Lod. But as he parked his car, police blocked him. Despite the companies of Border Police that had been sent to the town, just 15 minutes from Tel Aviv, the previous evening, rioting was still going on for the third night running.

For the first two nights it had been mainly local Arab residents. Angry at the clashes between police and Palestinia­n youths at al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, and emboldened by the Hamas rockets launched towards Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, they had gone on the rampage, setting fire to synagogues and Jewish schools and dozens of cars. One of the rioters was shot dead by a Jewish resident.

But on Wednesday night, there were reinforcem­ents. And not just of police. Asaf Weiss knew what was happening. “These are settlers, b ****** s, who have come here to take advantage of the situation and make provocatio­ns,” he said. “They’re just trying to ruin things for everyone. They came in a convoy from the West Bank to heat things up.”

Some had come from as far away as the Golan Heights to “stand up for our Jewish brothers,” as they put it. The curfew had turned into a sad joke as the two sides stoned each other outside Lod’s main mosque.

The third night of riots, in Lod and a dozen other towns across Israel, was a free-for-all, with Jewish and Arab gangs targeting each other’s neighbourh­oods and lynching drivers on the roads.

Israel has descended to its worst internal chaos since the Second Intifada in October 2000, when 13 Arab-Israeli rioters were shot dead by police. It’s a nasty spasm of violence which may be less deadly than the rockets flying over from Gaza in the short-term, but which poses a much graver danger to Israeli society.

HAMASOLOGI­STS WRONG?

l Three months ago, a very senior Israeli officer was wrapping up his posting before promotion. For years, he had been one of Israel’s chief Hamas-watchers and he wasn’t shy in the least about sharing his views on the enemy.

Hamas, he said confidentl­y, was “deterred.” It had made a choice for the time being to use more diplomatic avenues to secure its rule in Gaza. Yes, it was still working hard on enlarging its arsenal with more and bigger rockets, as well as drones, but those were unlikely to be put to use in the near future. It had even given up the “marches of return” every Friday to the borders of Gaza when the internatio­nal media stopped paying them any attention.

The Hamas chieftain in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, he said — once a terrorist serving a life-sentence in an Israeli prison — was now more focused on “state building”.

This was very much the consensus within Israel’s intelligen­ce community. Until Monday evening, that is. Hamas preferred to wait patiently for the departure of 85-year-old Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas before making its move for leadership. Sinwar saw himself as a future president. Not a warlord.

So were the Hamasologi­sts wrong? Why did Sinwar take the risk of losing all he has achieved in the nine years since he was released in the Shalit prisoner exchange by firing those rockets on Jerusalem? Was it even Sinwar calling the shots?

There are multiple theories. The simplest is that Sinwar has lost control of Gaza to his old comrade, now rival, Mohammed Deif, leader of the military wing and survivor of countless Israeli assassinat­ion attempts.

Another theory is that Sinwar, under pressure after barely winning re-election in Hamas’ internal polls two months ago, felt pressured to make a grand gesture to the Palestinia­n public over al-Aqsa.

Or that, frustrated by the cancellati­on of the Palestinia­n parliament­ary elections by President Abbas two weeks previously, this was Hamas’ alternativ­e campaign.

And then there’s a still more intriguing theory: Hamas is running out of money.

Government­s across the world, including in Britain, have cracked down on its sources of finance and so Hamas is now looking to Tehran for money. The Iranians currently prefer the smaller, more pliable Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad and give it more

Sinwar, he said, was more focused on ‘state building’

freely, estimated to be tens of millions of dollars annually. By proving their worth as an aggressor to Israel, Hamas hope to get a bigger chunk of Iran’s Gaza budget. All plausible

theories. But can anyone explain how Israel was caught unawares?

HI-TECH WARFARE

If the intelligen­ce community was

caught napping, another section of Israel’s security establishm­ent wasn’t. The boffins were ready for this. Most of the details are still confidenti­al, but this is Israel’s most high-tech war ever.

It’s not just the F-35 stealth bombers that took part in the 80-aircraft strike on 150 rocket-launch sites on Tuesday night. They may be flashy kit, but it’s not as if Hamas has radar sites that need evading. It’s the much less glamorous developmen­ts that make the difference. For example, having one method of communicat­ion between the electronic systems of ground forces, aircraft and intelligen­ce-gathering units. Or collecting every bit of informatio­n – visual, electronic, signals – into one database that can produce accurate coordinate­s for an immediate strike or an Iron Dome intercepti­on.

The IDF and Israel’s defence manufactur­ers pride themselves on tightening the “sensor-to-shooter” process to a matter of seconds. Some of that tech is already being used by other armies, including Britain’s Royal Artillery Corps. It enabled the eliminatio­n of 16 senior Hamas commanders in separate locations on Wednesday morning in a tightly controlled series of simultaneo­us strikes from “aerial platforms.”

It would be useful if the country’s political leadership could have a bit of that as well. The knowledge, not the assassinat­ions.

On Tuesday, Yisrael Beitenu leader Avigdor Lieberman decided to take to the airwaves.

“Politics isn’t interestin­g right now,” he announced. He went on to lambast the Netanyahu government for bringing Israel to this dire situation. The next day, it was Naftali Bennett himself who, in a “special statement”, attacked Likud for “changing from a ruling party to a party that failed in running the country and led us in its carelessne­ss from failure to disaster”. He added that his party, Yamina, would of course “totally back all the government’s steps in returning security. Without connection to political calculatio­ns.” But the message was clear.

Bennett and Lapid are not going to back down.

Lapid still has three weeks left of his mandate to form a government, and they plan to emerge from this period with a government, even if the rockets keep flying. “This is a crisis, no question,” said a negotiator for one of the parties. “It makes it harder to seal the coalition agreements. But with this coalition of rightwinge­rs and leftists and Arabs, there’s going to be crises all the time anyway. So we may as well have one now for practice.”

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 ?? PHOTO: ALAMY ?? Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar
PHOTO: ALAMY Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar

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