Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Nothing less than victory

- By Elan Journo

Hamas's massive surprise attack by land, sea and air has been likened to Israel's Pearl Harbor moment. How could this have happened, anguished Israelis are asking, given the country's outstandin­g military strength?

The evident failures of military preparedne­ss and intelligen­ce are stunning. But there's another, overlooked failure that runs deeper — the failure to acknowledg­e Hamas's actual nature and goals, and to act accordingl­y.

By its own statement, Hamas exists to end Israel's existence. The Islamic totalitari­an group rose to prominence and gained a loyal following precisely because of its uncompromi­sing, brutal dedication to wiping Israel off the map. No “peace process” is possible with such an enemy — only a decisive victory that eliminates Hamas.

Many have denounced Israel for its heavy-handed military responses to past Hamas attacks. But in fact Israel's responses, reinforced by U.S. and internatio­nal pressure, were insufficie­ntly assertive.

Israel failed to heed a crucial lesson of history, which I discuss in “What Justice Demands: America and the Israeli Palestinia­n Conflict.” The lesson is that wars end when one side is deterred, permanentl­y, from taking up arms; when it is rendered non-threatenin­g; when its morale is shattered.

What does that look like? It's the day when followers of the Palestinia­n cause give up on their desire to liquidate Israel, when they put down their knives and suicide belts and rocket launchers, when they accommodat­e themselves to Israel's continued existence. That means not simply a destroying

Hamas's rocket launchers, not simply capturing or killing its top leadership, not simply uprooting its militant infrastruc­ture, while leaving a remnant to nurse the hope of winning the next round. It means a profound mind-shift. It means forcing the enemy to give up on its militant goals.

Despite being militarily superior, however, Israel chose not to defeat Hamas, but only to degrade its capabiliti­es. Repeatedly. The Oct. 7 war is in part a result of this tragic pattern.

When Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in 20056, it was well-positioned to pursue its jihad against Israel. Hamas trained fighters, many of them teens, and amassed weapons. Using tunnels to bypass Israeli border controls on the passage of goods in and out of Gaza, they smuggled in weapons and rockets. Adopting a well-practiced technique, pioneered by the so-called moderate Palestinia­n factions years before, the Islamists concealed their arsenal in densely populated neighborho­ods, particular­ly inside mosques and schools. What began as spo

radic rocket attacks from Gaza climaxed into a fullscale war. From 2007 to 2008, more than 5,700 rockets had been fired at Israeli neighborho­ods and towns.

To quell such attacks, Israel deployed air and ground forces in Operation Cast Lead, or what became known as the Gaza War of 2008–09. Israel's retaliatio­n sought to “mow the grass,” weakening the Islamists militarily, not uprooting them.

By 2012, the Islamists rearmed and renewed their attacks, triggering another, briefer war. Israel again chose not to defeat them.

Then in 2014, amid continuing rocket and mortar attacks, Israel retaliated with air strikes and ground forces. During that 50-day war, Hamas and its allies fired more than 4,500 rockets and mortars — many of them longer-range missiles, putting most of the country within range.

They had built a network of tunnels designed for smuggling weapons in — and for launching armed raids on Israeli neighborho­ods. The aim of Israel's Operation Protective Edge was to halt the rockets, impair the Islamists' military infrastruc­ture (launching sites, munitions factories, arms warehouses), and destroy the tunnel network. That's it.

In 2021, when Islamists fired rockets into Israel, what was the response? Another round of diminishin­g Hamas's capabiliti­es, leaving it and other Islamists to rebuild their arsenal.

Witness the unpreceden­ted attack launched on Oct. 7.

And all the while, Israel continued to provide electricit­y and water to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip. It also occasional­ly relaxed the socalled blockade around that enclave, designed to prevent the Islamists from acquiring cash and weapons to fight on. Talk about empowering your own destroyers.

Why hasn't Israel used its superior military power to defeat Hamas? A major factor is that Israel's leaders themselves lack the moral confidence to act resolutely to protect the individual rights of their citizens. Evidence of this can be seen in Israel's continual bowing to pressure from Washington and the UN to “de-escalate” and to show “restraint.” This is rooted in the moral idea that one must turn the other cheek, that it's wrong to pursue one's self-interest, that a powerful, wealthy victim must appease a less-powerful, have-not aggressor.

Hamas's savagery has ignited worldwide outrage, at least for the moment, and perhaps this time, the war will unfold differentl­y. Israelis are resolved to fight back.

Ending the pre-Oct. 7 pattern requires a rethinking of the moral assumption­s that have prevented Israel from fully defending the lives and freedom of its population. What Israeli leaders need now is the independen­t, self-confident recognitio­n that it's morally right to seek the defeat of Hamas, regardless of the foreseeabl­e criticism and calls for “restraint.”

In its retaliatio­n, Israel should seek nothing less than victory over its enemy.

 ?? PHOTOS BY FRANCISCO SECO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mourners gather around the grave of May Naim, 24, during her funeral in Gan Haim, central Israel, on Wednesday. Naim and at least 260 more Israelis were killed by Hamas terrorists on Saturday at a rave near Kibbutz Re'im, close to the Gaza Strip's separation fence with Israel as the terrorist Hamas rulers of the territory carried out an unpreceden­ted, multi-front attack that killed more than 1,000Israeli­s.
PHOTOS BY FRANCISCO SECO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mourners gather around the grave of May Naim, 24, during her funeral in Gan Haim, central Israel, on Wednesday. Naim and at least 260 more Israelis were killed by Hamas terrorists on Saturday at a rave near Kibbutz Re'im, close to the Gaza Strip's separation fence with Israel as the terrorist Hamas rulers of the territory carried out an unpreceden­ted, multi-front attack that killed more than 1,000Israeli­s.
 ?? ?? Israeli soldiers carry the flag-covered coffin of Maj. Tal Cohen during his funeral at the Givat Shaul cemetery in Jerusalem on Tuesday. The latest Israel-Palestinia­n war reverberat­ed around the world Tuesday, as foreign government­s tried to determine how many of their citizens were dead, missing or in need of medical help or flights home.
Israeli soldiers carry the flag-covered coffin of Maj. Tal Cohen during his funeral at the Givat Shaul cemetery in Jerusalem on Tuesday. The latest Israel-Palestinia­n war reverberat­ed around the world Tuesday, as foreign government­s tried to determine how many of their citizens were dead, missing or in need of medical help or flights home.

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