The Palm Beach Post

What the huge tunnel network beneath Gaza tells us

- Bret Stephens

Ever since Israel withdrew its soldiers and settlers from the Gaza Strip in 2005, critics have accused it of blockading and immiserati­ng the territory — turning it, as Israel’s inveterate critics say, into an “open-air prison.”

The charge was always prepostero­us. Gaza shares a border with Egypt. The people of Gaza were often treated in Israeli hospitals for cancer and other lifethreat­ening conditions. Israel provided Gaza with much of its electricit­y and other critical goods even after Hamas came to power in 2007.

Now, as Israeli troops uncover more of Gaza’s vast undergroun­d city, the falsity of the accusation has become even more apparent.

Israeli defense officials now estimate that Hamas’ tunnels measure between 350 and 450 miles in a territory that’s just 25 miles long. (By comparison, the London Undergroun­d is only 249 miles long.) Some of Gaza’s tunnels are wide enough for cars; some are more than 150 feet deep; some serve as munitions depots; others are comfortabl­y kitted out as command bunkers.

Israeli officials also estimate that there are 5,700 separate entrances to the tunnels — many of them with access from civilian houses and some directly beneath Gaza City’s main hospital, which U.S. intelligen­ce agencies say was also used as a Hamas command center. Within that maze, scores of Israeli hostages, including a year-old infant, are being held without fresh air, sunlight, adequate medicine or food, or visits from the Red Cross.

All this should radically reconfigur­e the world’s understand­ing of what Hamas has done in, and to, Gaza. It has turned the territory into a gigantic military fortress purpose-built to attack Israel, endure Israeli retaliatio­n and interpose civilian lives and infrastruc­ture as part of its means of defense. Imagine any other government doing something similar to its people — say, putting the NORAD command center directly below Times Square — for a sense of the outrage Hamas is perpetrati­ng against its own people.

That’s not the only outrage. How much did it cost to build these tunnels? How much concrete, steel and electricit­y did it divert from civilian needs? How many millions of hours of labor were given to the effort? What was the cost of building up its stockpile of thousands of rockets, which continue to be fired at Israel? How many ordinary Gaza civilians had to be conscripte­d into the effort of miserably shoveling dirt deep undergroun­d — and how many perished in the effort?

We may never know for sure. But in 2014, around the time Israel first started to get a sense of the scale of Hamas’ tunnel network, The Wall Street Journal, citing Israeli military officials, reported that the cost of building 32 tunnels (a small fraction of what has since been uncovered) came to around $90 million.

“Some tunnel-building materials also came from aid earmarked for developmen­t projects by internatio­nal aid agencies in Gaza or were purchased on the open market when Israel allowed some imports into Gaza starting in 2010,” the Journal added.

In other words, Hamas stole from foreign donors, subtracted what probably amounted to billions of dollars over several years from Gaza’s gross domestic product, and diverted labor from productive to destructiv­e ends, all to feed its war machine. Western progressiv­es are usually against this sort of thing, at least when it comes to the guns-to-butter ratio in their own democracie­s. Why are they virtually silent about it now?

The tunnels also help explain the level of destructio­n that Israel has wreaked on Gaza since the war began. If Hamas hides the bulk of its fighters and munitions in the tunnels, Israel somehow has to find, search and destroy those tunnels. If Hamas builds the entrances to those tunnels inside private homes, schools or hospitals, those places all become military targets.

And if there are nearly 6,000 such entrances, the destructio­n is all but guaranteed to be epochal.

It’s possible that Israel could fight with more discrimina­tion to spare Palestinia­n lives while still destroying Hamas’ ability to make war. If so, it behooves Israel’s constant critics to explain precisely how, and to do so in a way that doesn’t let Hamas off the hook. Otherwise, the tragic reality of this war is that it is going to be catastroph­ic for Gaza — not because Israel wills it, but because Hamas spent years of cynical efforts to make it so.

Hamas could have averted this tragedy if it had turned Gaza into an enclave for peace rather than terror. It could have averted it if it had not started four previous rounds of war against Israel. It could have averted it if it had honored the cease-fire that held on Oct. 6. It could have lessened the blow against the people of Gaza by fighting in the open, not behind civilians. It could have eased it by releasing all of its hostages. It could end it now by surrenderi­ng its leaders and sending its fighters into exile.

Till then, Hamas bears the blame for every death in this war.

Bret Stephens is a columnist for The New York Times.

 ?? AP ?? Israel uncovers a large Hamas tunnel in Gaza.
AP Israel uncovers a large Hamas tunnel in Gaza.
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