Sat. Oct 12th, 2024

For 16 years, Israeli governments worked to manage the Hamas leaders in Gaza, not topple them. Better Hamas than chaos.

The carnage last weekend, when Hamas militants killed hundreds of Israeli civilians after a sophisticated breach of the border fence, has shifted official views. Now, the aim is to destroy the organization’s military capability and kill its leaders.

In announcing the formation of an emergency unity government on Wednesday night, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu referred to the Islamic State organization from the previous decade, saying, “Hamas is ISIS, and we will crush and eliminate it just as the world crushed and eliminated ISIS.”

Lieutenant Colonel Richard Hecht, a military spokesman, told reporters on Thursday: “Right now, we are focused on taking out their senior leadership, not only the military but also their government leadership.”

This is a change from the previous military policy of occasional invasions, harsh but limited, sometimes referred to as “mowing the lawn,” meaning a task to which one is required to return repeatedly.

Any operation against the militant group is destined to result in more civilian deaths and raise diplomatic dilemmas. Rulers from Saudi Arabia to the United Arab Emirates could follow if public opinion in their countries turns increasingly hostile to Israel.

A former top military officer who remains in close touch with the army, speaking on condition of anonymity, said when the war ends, Israel may set up a temporary military regime and hand Gaza over to some international force.

The head of the opposition, Yair Lapid, who didn’t join the new government with Benny Gantz, another opposition leader, said this week on French television, “The endgame is there will be no Hamas in Gaza.” His goal, he said, is for the Palestinian Authority to take over.

Israeli officials are showing no mercy for ordinary Gazans in their campaign. At least 1,350 have been killed to date.

According to Elai Rettig, an expert of the geopolitics of energy and environment at Israel’s Bar-Ilan University, a power cut will result in water shortages in a week or two. That’s likely to hinder access to health care or drinkable water for Gaza’s 2 million people, half of whom are under the age of 18.

Nearly all analysts in Israel believe ground troops are headed in after the aerial pounding. Many of the dozens of Israeli hostages and some of the soldiers seem likely to meet their deaths.

And that too is quietly discussed as a price the country is willing to pay to end Hamas’s hold on Gaza and send a broader message to the country’s enemies.

Israel’s biggest deployment of reserves in its history shows its leaders are aware how difficult it might be to crush Hamas, but eliminating it from Gaza is an even bigger task.

An Israeli cross-border operation into southern Lebanon to attack Iran-backed Hezbollah in 2006 ended in massive casualties following more than a month of fighting. Since Saturday’s attack, Hezbollah has fired into Israel every now and then.

The direness of the rhetoric is driven by the images of inhumanity on display last Saturday and the collective memory of Jews being slaughtered in the Holocaust and in pogroms a century ago. It has made many Israelis feel this is a war for their very existence, and they must show how tough they are.

Retired Major General Yaakov Amidror, who was Netanyahu’s national security adviser a decade ago, said, “We cannot go back to square one. This will take a few months. How many will be killed? Many, many. It’s up to Hamas, which operates from populated areas. This is the last time we allow Hamas to be strong enough to attack Israel.”

Asked who will rule Gaza when Israel is finished, he replied, “The people in Gaza will have to decide what is next. That is their problem.”

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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