The enormous demonstrations in Israel
against Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, might be giving
people outside the country the impression that the public is generally
against him because of his conduct of the war and that his days in
office are therefore numbered.
What’s more likely is that the Israeli left is in the process of destroying itself once and for all.
Israelis are being increasingly maddened
by grief and horror over the unconscionable fate of the hostages trapped
in the hell holes of Gaza. Last week’s cold-blooded murder of six of
these captives by Hamas savages has tipped many Israelis over the edge.
The demonstrators’ demand for an immediate
ceasefire deal to release the hostages is not only ludicrous to the
point of near derangement but also poses a direct threat to Israel’s
security and indeed existence—precisely the outcome that Hamas intends
through its diabolical manipulation of the hostages’ plight.
The demonstrators are backed by assorted
military and intelligence types in a treasonous attempt to lever
Netanyahu out of office by creating division and demoralization while
Israel is fighting for its life. Their core claim is that Netanyahu is
prolonging the war and condemning the hostages to death solely to
appease the extremists in his coalition and thus remain in power.
What Netanyahu’s opponents fail to grasp
is that, even if the prime minister is as opportunist as he is
portrayed, his conduct of the war has overwhelming public backing.
The majority of Israelis insist that Hamas
be defeated once and for all. After the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks and
atrocities in southern Jewish communities, they demanded that Israel
should never again be content with repeatedly inflicting “serious blows”
on Hamas only for it to resume its murder offensives within a few
months.
Of course, everyone desperately wants the
hostages brought back home. But the idea that the ceasefire deal would
achieve this is sheer fantasy.
Only a few of them would be released in
the first phase. Hamas would then use the ceasefire to regroup and
rearm, spinning out the continuing negotiation farce to keep the rest of
the hostages trapped and thus retain control of the Gaza Strip.
It would only ever release all the
hostages (if at all) with Israel’s total surrender. That’s what those
calling for an immediate ceasefire deal are actually promoting.
The only way to save the hostages is
through military pressure. That’s one reason why it’s imperative for
Israel to retain control of the Philadelphi corridor, the area of Gaza
that borders Egypt.
The importance of this corridor cannot be
exaggerated. Israel’s capture of it has uncovered deep below its surface
an extensive infrastructure of giant tunnels into Egypt—thus revealing
the principal route through which Hamas imported its rockets, rocket
launchers, vehicles and ammunition.
Hamas needs to control Philadelphi in
order to resupply itself. Without that, it will be finished. That’s why
it’s insisting that there will be no deal while Israel remains in
control.
The vast majority of the military and
security officials who belong to the authoritative Israel Defense and
Security Forum are adamant that Israel must not cede control of the
corridor. The forum’s chairman, Brig. Gen. Amir Avivi, said this week
that tens of thousands of rockets and thousands of Nukhbah terrorists
were waiting inside Sinai to go into Gaza through Philadelphi.
Even if Israel made only a short retreat,
these troops and equipment could be brought in within a week. Egypt had
made billions from the smuggling trade into Gaza and wants to continue.
Moreover, said Avivi, only 30 out of more
than 100 hostages were slated to be released in the first phase of the
deal—and Hamas reportedly planned to take the rest of them through the
Philadelphi tunnels to Sinai and then to Iran.
Yet the corridor has suddenly become a
weapon to be used against Netanyahu, who is accused of inflating its
importance in order to scupper a ceasefire deal and hostage return.
In a security cabinet row, Israeli Defense
Minister Yoav Gallant reportedly called Philadelphi “an unnecessary
constraint that we’ve placed on ourselves.” Gadi Eizenkot, former chief
of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, said it wasn’t strategically
important. Former Defense Minister Benny Gantz said Israel could return
to the corridor if it deemed it necessary once the hostages were home.
Other arguments have included getting Egypt to safeguard Philadelphi against Hamas and using electronic sensors to monitor it.
This is all utterly delusional. For two
decades, Egypt was complicit in the construction and use of the
Philadelphi tunnels; entrusting it with Israel’s security would be to
put the fox in charge of the henhouse. Israeli reliance on electronic
sensors was one of the reasons the Oct. 7 pogrom happened.
As for the IDF returning to the corridor
after it pulled out, the same argument was used by Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon in the 2005 disengagement from Gaza when he pulled
Israel out of Philadelphi—the issue over which Netanyahu resigned from
that government. Just as international pressure meant the IDF never went
back in despite the subsequent barrages from Gaza, so a return to the
corridor would now be a total non-starter.
Despite the thousands on the streets, most
Israelis get this. In one opinion poll, 79% agreed that Israel needed
to control Philadelphi permanently to prevent weapons smuggling from
Egypt to Gaza. When asked more emotively whether Israel should control
Philadelphi “even at the expense of a hostage deal,” more respondents
said it should than those who balked at preventing a hostage deal.
Gantz, Eizenkot and Gallant are part of a
military and security establishment whose morally and intellectually
bankrupt “conceptziya” brought about the Oct. 7 catastrophe in the first
place.
Netanyahu, too, was part of that same
establishment and in due course must be held to account for the heavy
responsibility he bears.
However, those who aren’t blinded by a
pathological hatred of him can see that he is holding off intense
American pressure to pull out of Philadelphi, just as they can also see
that America itself bears a significant measure of responsibility for
the hostages’ fate.
The Biden administration forced Israel to
proceed in Gaza far more slowly than the IDF judged necessary to defeat
Hamas and thus save the hostages. Worse, for three months, the
administration stopped Israel from entering Rafah—below which the six
hostages were murdered last week. If Israel had been free to proceed at
its own pace, those six captives and many others might have been saved.
Whatever happens to Netanyahu, the left
will almost certainly discover that, for the second time, it has made a
terrible strategic error.
The first such error was the 1993 Oslo
Accords, which gave the Palestinians political power and status—with the
Americans even training their police—on the assumption that they
intended to live in peace alongside Israel.
This was a victory of fantasy over
reality. The eventual result was more than 1,000 Israelis murdered in
the five-year intifada from 2000 to 2005, and an enduring culture of
indoctrination and incitement that today has turned Judea and Samaria
into another genocidal front for Iran.
The catastrophic Oslo “conceptziya” caused
the Israeli elites to ignore the clear evidence of Islamic holy war by
the Palestinians and to believe that Israel could keep a lid on
potential trouble. They believed that their enemy was not genocidal
Palestinianism. It was Netanyahu.
That’s also why they spent most of last
year fighting judicial reform. And the same people are now sickeningly
weaponizing the hostages to the same end—to remove Netanyahu from power.
You don’t have to be a Netanyahu fan to be revolted, frightened and
enraged.
The effect of the Oslo nightmare was to wipe out the left’s chances of
gaining political power. The public’s revulsion and anger that these
same types of people have been doing the work of Hamas for it by
promoting Israel’s surrender means that this terrible betrayal won’t be forgotten or forgiven. It will be the Oslo effect on steroids.
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