The Guardian (USA)

‘It will be slow, very hard’: can Israel achieve its aims in Gaza invasion?

- Julian Borger in Ashkelon

The huge force that Israel has amassed along Gaza’s border over the past three weeks began to roll forward on Friday night, accompanie­d by a barrage of airstrikes and the pounding of artillery.

The Israel Defence Forces called it “an expansion” of ground operations, but a spokespers­on for the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, went further, describing it as the beginning of the “turnaround” against Hamas.

“Hamas will feel our anger tonight,” the spokespers­on, Mark Regev, told MSNBC.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Friday night’s incursions into Gaza marked the start of a major ground offensive, or its precursor, a ratcheting­up of presssure on Hamas. Whatever the tactical nature of the operation, the impact on Gaza’s population of 2.3 million will undoubtedl­y be to worsen the devastatio­n wrought by the past three weeks of airstrikes.

Netanyahu has been cagey about the nature of the campaign in Gaza. He gave a speech on Wednesday night that sounded like a rallying cry for a ground assault, but it was carefully drafted, committing to nothing specific.

Whatever happens, Netanyahu – down in the polls and widely blamed for allowing the 7 October attack by Hamas – is making sure he does not take sole responsibi­lity for whatever comes next.

“There is one group that supports a ground operation and one that is less enthusiast­ic,” said Alon Pinkas, a former Israeli diplomat. “It’s not just the military versus Netanyahu. The division is within the war cabinet and within the military.”

There has been no shortage of reasons to delay the assault. Many in the

security establishm­ent, supported by the Biden administra­tion, have wanted to give more time to efforts to extricate more than 200 hostages from Gaza.

The US also reportedly needed breathing space to bring in more munitions to defend its bases in the region in anticipati­on of a backlash from its enemies and their backers in Tehran. The IDF, meanwhile, is using the time to train reservists in urban warfare and top up their arsenal.

The plight of the 2.3 million Palestinia­ns trapped in Gaza does not seem to have been a factor in the pause. Only a thin dribble of aid has been allowed in so far, the small relief convoys have brought no fuel to power hospitals or the water system, and the bombardmen­t of Gaza, north and south, has been maintained.

‘The Americans have doubts’ their

The pause has given Israel time to reconsider its war aims and its ability to achieve them. The initial impetus to charge into Gaza was based on a desire for quick retributio­n and the generals’ quest for redemption in the eyes of the population after the appalling lapse of 7 October.

US military leaders were reportedly shocked at the vagueness of Israeli planning for the offensive, the blithe optimism about the urban warfare it faced, and the wishful thinking about Gaza’s long-term future post-Hamas.

“The Americans have their doubts,” Pinkas said. “And what they are questionin­g is the quality of Israeli decisionma­king. I think they are looking at gross incompeten­ce on several levels here.”

The US was sufficient­ly concerned to send a Marine lieutenant general, James Glynn, and a team of urban warfare experts to sit alongside their counterpar­ts.

It is an unpreceden­ted melding of the US and Israeli militaries, with profound implicatio­ns for both. It becomes much harder for Israel to act independen­tly of the US – a calculated decision by Netanyahu, his critics say, to give him someone else to blame when things go wrong.

The Biden administra­tion believes being inside the room will give it more of a restrainin­g influence, but that has not been the case in Gaza and makes it impossible for the US to sidestep shared responsibi­lity for the civilian death toll.

Meanwhile, Israel’s war aims have come into sharper focus. The military leadership realises that “destroying” Hamas – as an ideology and an affiliatio­n – is impossible. In his speech on Wednesday, Netanyahu defined the goal as “destroying its military and governing abilities”. Those are two very different, and very difficult, goals, each with substantia­l complicati­ons.

“These two objectives cannot be achieved without the ground offensive,” said Shlomo Brom, a former general and director of IDF strategic planning. “So that’s why I believe that the government already decided on the ground campaign.”

‘It is hard to imagine a more challengin­g context’

While Hamas has ruled the entire Gaza Strip, the IDF believes the bulk of its military infrastruc­ture – its “centre of gravity”, was how one general put it – is in the north.

That is why the Palestinia­n civilian population in northern Gaza, more than 1 million people, were ordered south of the Wadi Gaza River, which bisects the strip. The IDF plans to hold ground in the north long enough to destroy Hamas’s heavy weaponry and the tunnel network it has spent 16 years building. The southern half will not be spared bombing, as the people there have discovered, and the IDF is expected to mount “search and destroy” attacks aimed at Hamas members, civilian and military.

Holding the north will be hard enough. “It will be slow, very hard, and will require a great deal of preparatio­n if we want to minimise our own casualties,” Brom said.

The Americans have come with cautionary tales from battles such as Falluja and Mosul in Iraq, or Raqqa in Syria, of how hard it is to fight in densely populated areas. In Gaza the military problems will be multiplied by Hamas’s extensive network of tunnels.

“It is hard to imagine a more challengin­g context for operations than Gaza City,” said David Petraeus, the US general who led US forces in Iraq and Afghanista­n and went on to become CIA director.

“Urban operations are always very difficult, but those in this case likely will be fiendishly so – with snipers, suicide bombers, 300 miles of tunnels, and improvised explosive devices, against terrorists who do not wear uniforms, know the area intimately, will use civilians and hostages as human shields, and have been preparing for this fight for months, if not years,” Petraeus said.

A report earlier this month by the Washington Institute for Near East

One option discussed between US and Israeli officers was a series of limited incursions targeting bits of Gaza at a time, on “search and destroy” missions. On the other end of the scale, some warn that the IDF will have to occupy the whole of the Gaza Strip for a time to do the job properly. Whatever option is chosen, Israel’s defence minister, Yoav Gallant, has said Israel has no intention of occupying the territory permanentl­y.

Once Israeli forces enter Gaza, however, it may be hard for them to leave and still claim to have succeeded. That will depend on the ultimate political aims of the war, which appear to be the haziest part of the whole plan.

“Let’s assume that we invade Gaza and succeed in destroying most of the military capabiliti­es of Hamas,” Brom said. “One thing that’s clear is that Israel doesn’t want to return to being the government in Gaza indefinite­ly. So it will wish to transfer the government to someone else. And there is a lot of thinking going on about who this will be.”

An Israeli general spoke hopefully in private of regional powers stepping in with investment to rebuild Gaza, and somehow overseeing a transition to a non-Hamas regime, possibly the Palestinia­n Authority.

It is hard to imagine who would send in peacekeepi­ng troops after an Israeli invasion, and the authority is weak and discredite­d in the eyes of much of the population. It is highly unlikely that it would want to return to power in Gaza on the back of Israeli tanks.

For the Arab world, it could conceivabl­y be a moment of leverage to demand a return to a real two-state solution.

That would involve the dismantlin­g of settlement­s and the complete reversal of Netanyahu’s political project of destroying the two-state solution as a reality and as an idea. It was in pursuit of that project that Netanyahu, boosting the standing of Hamas in Gaza, sliced up the West Bank with settlement­s and gave radical settlers free rein to prey on the Palestinia­n inhabitant­s.

It is this project that has led Israel to its current security crisis. Finding a way out of it would involve a complete change of direction.

“There will be political implicatio­ns as a result of the disastrous failure to government policies. So I hope that there will be political change,” Brom said.

There is little wonder in Israel, then, that Netanyahu has had his foot firmly, albeit surreptiti­ously, on the brakes. The logic of Israeli success requires him to relinquish power, while failure means a bloody morass in Gaza and perhaps the West Bank too, with the very real possibilit­y that whatever comes next will be worse than what came before.

Nimrod Novik, who served as a foreign policy adviser to Shimon Peres when he was prime minister, said: “History tells us that when one extreme version disappears, the successor tends to be a lot more extreme and violent than the one it replaces.”

Dan Sabbagh contribute­d to this report

he told me: “Before the final it was eerie. On the bus to the ground I had my little Walkman on. I was listening to Hymn of the Big Wheel by Massive Attack. It’s a beautiful song, with a slow and hypnotic beat, and a high voice [belonging to the great Jamaican singer Horace Andy] sings this line over and over: “And the big wheel keeps on turning …”

“I could see people walking to the ground, carrying the new flag and banners telling Lomu he had ‘A Small Problem’. Time seemed to slow and I got goosebumps. Just before the game Chester Williams [South Africa’s only player of colour] said: ‘You hold him James, and the rest of us will pull him down.’”

On the pitch, Mandela stopped in front of Small. He offered a curious smile, as sweet as it was grave. “And then,” Small told me, “Mandela laughed. He was thinking: ‘Shame! This poor guy is marking Lomu.’ Mandela took my hand and said: ‘You’ve got a big job today, Mr Small.’”

The game was rarely scintillat­ing. Yet it was impossible to look away. It held us in a grip so tight there were times you had to tell yourself to breathe. Lomu could not break through. He kept being hit by one green wave after another.

“Lomu is down!” the commentato­rs screamed as if Muhammad Ali himself had finally fallen. “Lomu is down!”

The game was tryless and at full time the old foes were shackled together, 9-9. Before extra time began the mostly white crowd joined a black choir singing on the edge of the pitch. A black workers’ song, Shosholoza, became a South African rugby hymn.

Pienaar and the Springboks rose to their feet, the captain in the middle of a circle as he urged his players to lift themselves for another 20 minutes. And, still, Shosholoza rang out as if one song and one game of rugby could change everything.

After swapping penalties the exhausted teams still seemed inseparabl­e, 12-12. But there was one crucial difference. If the score remained unchanged New Zealand would win the World Cup as they had a better disciplina­ry record.

Then, just before the very end, Joost van der Westhuizen passed to Joel Stransky. The All Blacks closed him down but Stransky went for the drop goal. The ball began its spiralling climb. We rose with it. We were in the air as the ball passed through the highest points of the poles.

“It’s over,” a broken voice cried out. “It’s over.”

Finally, it really was over, 15-12 to South Africa. Pienaar was on his haunches, fingers squeezing his nose as if he might push back the tears.

Mandela, the country’s inspiratio­nal mentor and great moderator, spoke to Pienaar just before he presented the trophy. “Thank you for what you have done for South Africa,” Mandela said. Pienaar looked at his elderly president. “We could never do what you have done for South Africa,” he replied.

Then, Pienaar lifted the World Cup. His eyes closed and his arms straighten­ed. Mandela shook his own arms in delight.

The Springbok captain was asked about the “tremendous” backing his team had received from 65,000 supporters. Pienaar shook his head: “We had 43 million South Africans today.”

Now, 28 years later, New Zealand and South Africa are locked together again as their rivalry resumes. Mandela is dead, as are Lomu and Small. Other Springboks from that momentous final – Van der Westhuizen, Williams and Ruben Kruger – have also died.

The world feels very different. In some ways it feels a far worse and more dangerous place. But South Africa, the reigning world champions, have an inspiratio­nal black captain in Siya Kolisi and a side that truly represents every corner of that vast and complex country. The All Blacks retain their majestic aura. And so, in Paris, South Africa and New Zealand meet again, as the big wheel keeps on turning.

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