Messages sent to mediators by Hamas leader
in Gaza Yahya Sinwar show that as far as he’s concerned, the more
civilians die in Gaza the better.
He sees such deaths as working “to his advantage,” The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.
The Journal reviewed “dozens of
messages” Sinwar sent to ceasefire negotiators and others in which “he’s
shown a cold disregard for human life and made clear he believes Israel
has more to lose from the war than Hamas.”
“We have the Israelis right where we want
them,” said Sinwar in a message sent recently to Hamas officials looking
to make an agreement via Qatari and Egyptian mediators.
In one message to Hamas leaders in Doha,
the Hamas leader, citing civilian deaths in national-liberation
conflicts in Algeria, said, “these are necessary sacrifices.”
In an April 11 letter, he told Hamas
political leader Ismail Haniyeh, who lost three sons to an Israeli
airstrike during the war, that their deaths would “infuse life into the
veins of this nation, prompting it to rise to its glory and honor.”
Sinwar’s strategy appears to be to outlast Israel, win a permanent cease-fire and “declare a historic victory,” the Journal reported.
If a ceasefire isn’t reached, Sinwar
calculates that Israel still loses as it will have no choice but to rule
the Gaza Strip, only to be bogged down in a Hamas-led insurgency.
He was thinking along these lines at least
six years ago, telling a journalist in 2018, “For Netanyahu, a victory
would be even worse than a defeat.”
During that time, Hamas had organized the “March of Return”
protests along the Gaza border, forcing Israeli soldiers to fire on
demonstrators who threatened to breach the security barrier.
“We make the headlines only with blood,” Sinwar said in the interview. “No blood, no news.”
In February, during a push for a
ceasefire, Sinwar sent a message to Hamas officials telling them to
avoid concessions and push for permanently ending the war as “high
civilian casualties” would place global pressure on Israel, the Journal reported.
Sinwar’s calculations so far have proven
correct as western countries, including Israel’s closest ally, the
United States, have largely condemned Israel over the war’s civilian
death toll.
U.S. President Joe Biden has been pushing
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a permanent ceasefire.
Netanyahu has so far resisted.
On Monday, the United Nations Security Council passed a U.S.-drafted resolution for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and the immediate release of the remaining Israeli hostages.
Israel representative to the United
Nations Reut Shapir Ben-Naftaly said at the vote that it was the
“genocidal jihadists who started this war” and “blame must be placed
where it belongs.” Yet, Hamas has never been held responsible, she
added.
She stressed that Israel will free the
hostages and dismantle Hamas’s terrorist capabilities. “Once these goals
are met, the war will end,” she said.
In an Oct. 30
address to the nation, Netanyahu warned western nations of the dangers
of failing to hold Hamas to account for its cynical use of civilian
casualties.
Hamas must be held “responsible for the
double war crime it commits every day by deliberately targeting Israeli
civilians while using Palestinians civilians as human shields,” he said.
“Because as long as Hamas’s use of
Palestinian human shields results in the international community blaming
Israel, Hamas will continue to use it as a tool of terror, and so will
others,” he said.
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