The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Member of Israeli war cabinet says Netanyahu lying about Hamas

- By Our Foreign Staff

A MEMBER of Israel’s War Cabinet has accused Benjamin Netanyahu of lying by claiming that Hamas can be defeated.

Gadi Eisenkot, a former army chief, said: “Whoever speaks of absolute defeat is not speaking the truth. That is why we should not tell stories,” he told Israel’s Channel 12 television.

“Today, the situation already in the Gaza Strip is such that the goals of the war have not yet been achieved. You have to show leadership in the ability to tell the truth to people, the ability to chart a path,” he said.

Mr Eisenkot also suggested Israelis were being misled by claims that military pressure would lead to the release of the dozens of hostages still being held in Gaza, saying only a cease-fire deal would secure their freedom. “The hostages will only return alive if there is a deal, linked to a significan­t pause in fighting,” he said. Both Mr Netanyahu and defence minister Yoav Gallant have said the fighting will continue until Hamas is crushed, and argue that only military action can free the hostages.

Claiming the hostages can be freed by any other means “is to spread illusions”, said Mr Eisenkot, whose son was killed in Gaza in December.

Dramatic rescue operations, he said, were unlikely because the hostages are spread out, with many of them remaining hidden in Hamas’s undergroun­d tunnel network.

In a thinly veiled criticism of Mr Netanyahu, Mr Eisenkot also said strategic decisions about the war’s direction must be made urgently, and that a discussion about an endgame should have begun immediatel­y after the war began.

He also dismissed suggestion­s that the military has delivered a decisive blow against Hamas.

Mr Gallant has said troops disabled the Hamas command structure in northern Gaza, from where significan­t numbers of troops were withdrawn earlier in the week, and that the focus is ‘The hostages will only return alive if there is a deal linked to a significan­t pause in fighting’ now on the southern half of the territory. “We haven’t yet reached a strategic achievemen­t, or rather only partially,” Mr Eisenkot said. “We did not bring down Hamas.”

The militant group has continued to fight back across Gaza, even in the most devastated areas, and launched rockets into Israel.

Mr Eisenkot’s interview was aired hours after Netanyahu rejected the idea of holding elections in the middle of a war. The former army chief said elections should be held within the coming months to renew the public’s trust in its leaders. “It is necessary, within a period of months, to return the Israeli voter to the polls and hold elections in order to renew trust because right now there is no trust,” he said.

Mr Eisenkot said he is examining every day whether he should remain in the War Cabinet, which includes Mr Netanyahu, Mr Gallant and Benny Gantz, the former Defense Minister and opposition leader.

Mr Eisenkot is a member of parliament in the opposition National Unity alliance headed by Mr Gantz. Both joined Mr Netanyahu to help lead the war. “I know what my red line is,” Mr Eisenkot said when asked at what point he would quit. “It’s connected to the hostages, that is one of the objectives, but it’s also connected to the way in which we need to run this war.”

Mr Eisenkot’s comments were the latest sign of disagreeme­nt among political and military leaders over the direction of Israel’s offensive on Hamas, now in its fourth month.

Speaking in a news conference on Thursday Mr Netanyahu reiterated his longstandi­ng opposition to a two-state solution, arguing that a Palestinia­n state would become a launchpad for attacks on Israel.

Israel “must have security control over the entire territory west of the Jordan River,” Mr Netanyahu said, adding: “That collides with the idea of sovereignt­y. What can we do?”

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