Chattanooga Times Free Press

ISRAEL’S WORST DAY AT WAR

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When I need the most accurate analysis about Israel, the first call I always make is to my longtime friend and reporting partner there, Nahum Barnea, a veteran Yediot newspaper columnist. When I called him Saturday afternoon for his read on the Hamas attack on Israel, I was stunned by his first response: “This is the worst day that I can remember in military terms in the history of Israel, including the blunder of the Yom Kippur war, which was terrible.”

Nahum is a careful reporter who has covered every major event in Israel for the past half century, and when he explained his rationale, I realized it was an understate­ment.

This is not your usual Hamas-Israel dust-up. The Gaza-Israel border is only 37 miles long, but the shock waves this war will unleash will not only thrust Israel and the Palestinia­ns of Gaza into turmoil but will also slam into Ukraine and Saudi Arabia and most likely Iran. Why? Any prolonged Israel-Hamas war could divert more U.S. military equipment needed by Ukraine to Israel, and it will make the proposed Saudi-Israeli normalizat­ion deal impossible — for now. And if it turns out that Iran encouraged the Hamas attack to scuttle that Israeli-Saudi deal, it could raise tensions between Israel and Iran and Iran’s Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah, and also between Saudi Arabia and Iran. This is an incredibly dangerous moment on multiple fronts.

But going back to Nahum’s point: Why is this war such a disaster for Israel, worse than the Yom Kippur surprise attack from Egypt and Syria, which happened 50 years and one day ago? For starters, said Nahum, there is the sheer humiliatio­n of it for the Israeli military: “In 1973 we were attacked by the biggest Arab army, Egypt.”

This time Israel was invaded in 22 locations outside the Gaza Strip, including communitie­s as far as 15 miles inside Israel, by a military force belonging to “the equivalent of Luxembourg.” And yet this tiny force not only invaded Israel, overwhelmi­ng Israeli border troops; it took Israeli hostages back to Gaza across that same border — a border where Israel had spent roughly $1 billion erecting a barrier that was supposed to be virtually impenetrab­le. That is a shocking blow to Israel’s deterrent capabiliti­es.

Second, he noted, Israel has always prided itself on the ability of its intelligen­ce services to penetrate Hamas and Palestinia­n militants in the West Bank and get early warnings. For the past few weeks, as anyone following the news from Israel knows, Hamas was conducting what appeared to be practice maneuvers for just this kind of attack all along the Gaza border — right before the eyes of the Israeli military.

But now we get to the really terrible part for Israel. Hamas was not only able to cross into Israel and attack Israeli communitie­s and army bases, but it was also able to kidnap a number of Israelis — reportedly including some older people, children and at least one soldier — and take them back to Gaza. Associated Press photos “showed an abducted elderly Israeli woman being brought back into Gaza on a golf cart by Hamas gunmen and another woman squeezed between two fighters on a motorcycle,” AP reported. Pictures of Israeli bodies taken to Gaza and being dragged into the streets were circulatin­g on the internet.

At the same time, Palestinia­n fighters took groups of Israelis hostage in the border communitie­s of Be’eri and Ofakim, but they were eventually freed by Israeli special forces.

This is going to be a huge problem for Israel. In a previous term, in 2011, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu traded 1,027 Palestinia­n prisoners, including 280 serving life sentences, to get one Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, back from Hamas in Gaza. Bibi may be called on to empty every Israeli prison of Palestinia­ns if Hamas is holding older people and children in Gaza, Nahum noted.

Netanyahu promised Saturday to deliver a crushing blow to Hamas in Gaza, but what if Hamas is holding Israeli civilians who could be used as human shields? That will curb Israel’s room for retaliatio­n.

“Everything the army does in Gaza going forward will require them to take into account the impact it could have on the lives of civilian hostages,” Nahum said.

Finally, Nahum noted, the top ranks of the military and the

prime minister, who chairs the security Cabinet, know right now that down the road there will probably be some kind of commission of inquiry into how the Hamas invasion was allowed to happen.

So they must now conduct this war, make excruciati­ng decisions about trade-offs among deterrence, retaliatio­n, getting hostages back from Hamas and maybe even invading Gaza, knowing all the time that even if they manage all of these perfectly, some kind of inquiry awaits them at the end of the road. It is not easy to think straight under those conditions.

Why did Hamas launch this war now, without any immediate provocatio­n? One has to wonder if it was not on behalf of the Palestinia­n people but rather at the behest of Iran, an important supplier of money and arms to Hamas, to help prevent the budding normalizat­ion of relations between Saudi Arabia, Iran’s rival, and Israel. Such a deal, as it was being drawn up, would also benefit the more moderate West Bank Palestinia­n Authority — by delivering it a huge infusion of cash from Saudi Arabia, as well as curbs on Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank and other advances to preserve a two-state solution. As a result, West Bank leaders might have earned a desperatel­y needed boost of legitimacy from the Palestinia­n masses, threatenin­g the legitimacy of Hamas.

I am watching how the Hamas-Israel earthquake will shake up another earthquake.

Ukraine was already dealing with the temblors in the U.S. government. The toppling of the speaker of the House, combined with an increasing­ly vocal minority of Republican lawmakers — shockingly to me — coming out against any more economic and military aid to Ukraine has created a political mess that has resulted, for now, in no more U.S. aid for Ukraine being approved. If Israel is about to invade Gaza and embark on a long war, Ukraine will have to worry about competitio­n from Tel Aviv for Patriot missiles as well as 155 mm artillery shells and other basic armaments that Ukraine desperatel­y needs more of

and Israel surely will, too.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has noticed. Last Thursday in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, he said that Ukraine was being propped up “thanks to multibilli­on donations that come each month.” He added, “Just imagine the aid stops tomorrow.” Ukraine “will live for only a week when they run out of ammo.”

Can anything good come from this terrible new HamasIsrae­l war? It’s far too early to say, but another longtime Israeli friend and analyst I trust, professor Victor Friedman (no relation), who teaches behavioral science at Jezreel Valley College in central Israel and knows the Israeli Arab community very well, wrote me late Saturday, saying: “This horrid situation is still an opportunit­y, just like the Yom Kippur war turned out to be an opportunit­y that ended with a peace agreement with Egypt. The only real victory will be if what happens next — probably Israel going into Gaza — creates conditions for a real, stable settlement with the Palestinia­ns.” In light of what the Palestinia­ns did Saturday, he said, they can “claim some ‘victory,’ no matter what happens next.” The point is, he added, “Someone needs to think beyond more force and more force.”

Personally, I do not believe that Hamas can ever be a partner for a secure peace with Israel. Hamas has had way too many chances for way too many years to prove that the responsibi­lities of governing in Gaza would moderate its goal of destroying the Jewish state. It turns out to be nothing more than a Palestinia­n Islamist mafia, interested only in preserving its grip on Gaza and ready to serve as a cat’s paw for Iran instead of making its main goal a new future for Palestinia­ns there and in the West Bank. Its history of rule in Gaza is shameful.

But the Palestinia­n Authority can be a partner. So if there is going to be an Israeli invasion of Gaza to try to destroy Hamas, it has to be paired with a political initiative that empowers and helps to strengthen that Palestinia­n Authority so we can forge, as Victor put it, “a settlement that provides all sides with something they can live with. Otherwise, sooner or later, we will be right back in the same situation — only worse. That was the true lesson of the Yom Kippur war.”

 ?? PHOTO/TAMIR KALIFA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A man looks at the badly damaged roof of a home on Monday after being struck by a rocket fired from Gaza in Ashkelon, Israel. “But now we get to the really terrible part for Israel. Hamas was not only able to cross into Israel and attack Israeli communitie­s and army bases, but it was also able to kidnap a number of Israelis — reportedly including some older people, children, and at least one soldier — and take them back to Gaza,” NYT columnist Thomas L. Friedman writes.
PHOTO/TAMIR KALIFA/THE NEW YORK TIMES A man looks at the badly damaged roof of a home on Monday after being struck by a rocket fired from Gaza in Ashkelon, Israel. “But now we get to the really terrible part for Israel. Hamas was not only able to cross into Israel and attack Israeli communitie­s and army bases, but it was also able to kidnap a number of Israelis — reportedly including some older people, children, and at least one soldier — and take them back to Gaza,” NYT columnist Thomas L. Friedman writes.
 ?? ?? Thomas L. Friedman
Thomas L. Friedman

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