The Jewish Chronicle

Hamas will not be defeated by force of arms but only by a political settlement

- BY AMI AYALON Palestine al-Muslimah, Ami Ayalon is a former Labour MK. He was previously head of the Shin Bet

IN A November 1997 interview with Hamas monthly

Sheikh Yassin, the founder and leader of the terror group, was asked what he feared. He replied that his greatest worry was a reality in which Palestinia­ns believed that a diplomatic process would lead to the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel. If that came to pass, he asserted, the Palestinia­n public would not support Hamas and the terror group would vanish as an influentia­l factor.

The massacre carried out by Hamas on October 7 led to war in Gaza. This is a just, defensive war. Israel could not reconcile itself to a reality in which an extremist terrorist organisati­on that deprived us of our right to a state continued to control Gaza.

However, after six months of fighting, what is the result? Hundreds of IDF soldiers have been killed and 134 hostages are still held under impossible conditions, if they are alive at all. According Hamas, more than 32,000 Palestinia­ns, most of them women and children, have been killed.

We must understand that Israel’s refusal to define the “day after” turns the war into a goal in itself, not a means to achieve a better political reality.

More than 20 years ago, Major General Professor Yehoshafat Harkabi wrote about the difference between the military commander and the statesman in how they perceive the enemy. “In military thinking, the enemy is a collection of targets for attack; in political thinking, the enemy is a human-state entity that needs to be convinced and appeased. In military thinking, we are indifferen­t to the enemy’s sufferings, on the contrary, we seek to increase them; in political thinking, we must also feel his pains.”

Benjamin Netanyahu’s declaratio­n that absolute victory over Hamas will be achieved by defeating it in Rafah clarifies that in his view, victory on the battlefiel­d will lead to the eliminatio­n of Hamas as a political and military force in the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict. If Harkabi were alive, he’d likely say there are no statesmen leading Israel today.

The consequenc­es of military entry into Rafah could be devastatin­g for Israel. Scenes of killing and destructio­n in densely populated urban areas, following the Security Council’s decision to demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, will flood television networks and strengthen calls for immediate punitive measures against Israel.

The Arab League countries, which in January 2024 reiterated their commitment to the “Arab peace initiative” by demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, will be obliged to take a stand. Egypt, which will face Palestinia­n masses pressuring its border in Rafah, and Jordan, where the majority of its citizens are Palestinia­ns, will be forced to examine the continuati­on of their commitment to peace agreements.

The “axis of resistance” led by Iran and its proxies – Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and groups under its influence in Syria and Iraq – will see its popularity grow further on the Arab street, and Hezbollah will be compelled to consider expanding attacks in the north.

Global jihadist organisati­ons like Al-Qaeda and Islamic State will exploit the growing chaos in the region and expand their efforts to target Jewish and Israeli targets worldwide.

The rift with the US will be inevitable and the administra­tion will have to re-examine its relations with Israel, including delaying or suspending military aid.

As for Israel, beyond the blood price we will pay in the lives of soldiers and civilians who will be killed, the thought that a military operation in Rafah will lead to the eliminatio­n of Hamas testifies to our misunderst­anding of Hamas. Israel’s reduction of the discussion to military language leads to the thought that it can be defeated on the battlefiel­d. The complete opposite is true. The occupation of Gaza without a political horizon that leads to the establishm­ent of two states will accelerate the military and political resurgence of Hamas and capture the Palestinia­n public even in the West Bank behind it.

The struggle against Hamas as an ideologica­l-religious organisati­on with a military arm continues both on the battlefiel­d and in the ideologica­l dimension.

Even if we defeat Hamas on the battlefiel­d – disarming most of terrorists, capturing those who have not been killed, destroying its command hubs, its tunnels, and the arms industry it has built – the belief in a holy war that it disseminat­es in Palestinia­n society and in Islamic countries will only strengthen.

We must understand that today’s war is a war against Hamas but not against the Palestinia­n people, and therefore the question of why the Palestinia­n people support Hamas today requires an answer.

This question occupied me after I finished my term as Commander of the Navy and was appointed to head the Shin Bet after Yizhak Rabin’s assassinat­ion.

In meetings with Palestinia­n security chiefs, most of them former terrorists, they clarified to me that cooperatio­n with them in our joint struggle against Palestinia­n terrorism would continue only within the framework of a diplomatic process leading to the end of the occupation and the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel.

Therefore, my answer to the question is clear. Palestinia­ns today see themselves as a people fighting for their right to live in their own state alongside the State of Israel. When they believe that a diplomatic process will lead to its establishm­ent, they will support the leadership leading the diplomatic process, as they did in the 1990s. But when they lose faith in diplomacy, they support Hamas and its violent path despite the terrible price they pay.

According to a survey of Palestinia­ns by pollster Khalil Shikaki, conducted in March 2024, the majority – 61 per cent – of those surveyed in Gaza supported a two-state solution if such an arrangemen­t were possible. The way to defeat Hamas requires a return to the words of Sheikh Yassin in November 1997. He said that Hamas would surrender only if the Palestinia­n people saw a horizon of political independen­ce in a reality of two states

Israel should sign an immediate ceasefire

side by side.

So what do we have to do today? Israel should announce that it is ready to sign an immediate ceasefire and pay any price (in terms of the duration of the ceasefire and the number of terrorists to be released from prison), provided that all hostages held in Gaza are returned.

This is Israel’s victory picture in the current war. This is the state’s supreme commitment to its citizens and this is the value on which we depend as a nation.

Continuing the fight against Hamas, until its defeat, requires us to promote a regional diplomatic process that creates a moderate coalition led by the Americans and Saudis.

Only a historic compromise with the Palestinia­n people would allow this coalition to come into being. I do not see this as a surrender or submission. In my view, this is the only process that allows Israel to maintain its security and preserve its Jewishdemo­cratic identity.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Fanaticism: Hamas terrorists gather in Gaza. They will only be vanquished if there is political hope, Ayalon says
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Fanaticism: Hamas terrorists gather in Gaza. They will only be vanquished if there is political hope, Ayalon says
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