After nearly a year of suffering and
grievous losses, most Israelis and Palestinian Arabs will likely observe
the anniversary of the war started by Hamas on Oct. 7 with sorrow. But
not everyone. An interview The New York Times conducted
with Khaled Mashaal, the head of Hamas’s “political wing,” in his
luxurious living quarters in Doha, Qatar, revealed he thinks the war has
gone just fine.
As the Times put it, Mashaal
thinks that Hamas is “winning the war” and is confident that the
genocidal Islamist organization will, despite the battering it has
received from the Israel Defense Forces, play a “decisive” role in Gaza
in the future.
It takes an extraordinary amount of
chutzpah to sit in a comfortable place of exile where you are protected
by Qatar—an ally of Iran and Hamas—while the Gulf State also pretends to
be friendly with the United States. It’s odd for a “political” leader
to be so blithe about a conflict that has, despite the inflated
statistics of civilian casualties in the Gaza Strip produced by Hamas,
certainly inflicted tremendous harm on his own people. By hiding from
the IDF in a warren of tunnels the size of the New York subway system
underneath civilian homes, they set in motion a confrontation that
guaranteed that much of the Strip would be destroyed. And Hamas itself
has been severely hurt. Reportedly, 17,000 operatives have been killed,
and all of its organized military formations are no longer
combat-effective. The same is true of its ability to send long-range
missiles into Israel.
Survival equals a Hamas victory
By any normal definition of victory or
defeat, it’s hard to argue that in the aftermath of its orgy of mass
murder, rape, torture, kidnappings and wanton destruction in Israel on
Oct. 7, Hamas hasn’t been beaten.
But Mashaal disagrees, and it’s hard to find fault in his reasoning.
While most of us have understandably
focused on the fighting in Gaza as well as the way Hezbollah terrorists
have been able to essentially de-populate a portion of northern Israel
with its indiscriminate fire on civilians, one of the key fronts in this
war is not in the Middle East. It’s in the United States.
Despite the fact that the overwhelming
majority of Americans support Israel and oppose Hamas, the political
battle over the war in Gaza has been going pretty much the way the
terrorists wanted it to. That’s reflected in Mashaal’s confidence, as
well as Hamas’s negotiating tactics and its strategy in Gaza. After Oct.
7, the terrorists have been doing nothing but playing for time. And
they expected that the time they needed to outlast the Israeli offensive
would be provided to them by Israel’s closest ally.
Biden’s flip-flops helped Hamas
At first, it seemed as if their bet would
not pay off. President Joe Biden’s initial response to the Oct. 7
massacre was to join Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in saying
that the only proper response to this atrocious crime was for Hamas to
be “eliminated.” But almost as soon as the words were out of his mouth,
Biden began to slowly back away from that position.
Over the next several months as Israel’s
counter-offensive into Gaza began, the United States played a double
game. On the one hand, Washington continued to supply Jerusalem with
munitions badly needed by the IDF; eventually, however, it was reported
that the Pentagon slow-walked its delivery to maintain leverage over the
Israelis. While America was playing the faithful ally in one respect,
Biden and his administration were soon singing a different tune about
the war.
Biden was heavily influenced by the open
revolt against a pro-Israel policy from lower-level administrators and
congressional staffers. With the Democrats’ left-wing base similarly
outraged by his initial position of stalwart backing for Israel and the
war on Hamas, he realized that it might imperil his chances of
re-election. As a result, statements about the war soon were more about
its impact on the Palestinians rather than the need to eliminate the
terrorists who committed the largest mass slaughter of Jews since World
War II and the Holocaust.
This tilt to the left would escalate as
the presidential campaign began in early 2024, with gestures from Biden
intended to appease the pro-Hamas antisemitic voters in Arab-American
strongholds like Dearborn, Mich., as well as woke left-wing activists
who falsely label Israel a “settler/colonialist” and “apartheid” state.
Rather than push back against the left’s demand for an immediate
ceasefire that would essentially save Hamas, the administration began
echoing it and pushing for a deal that would end the war at virtually
any price, even if it didn’t result in freedom for all of the Israeli
hostages still held by Hamas.
And when Israel forced Hamas’s fighters
back into their last enclave in southern Gaza, Biden and Vice President
Harris were just as vocal about demanding that Israel not enter Rafah as
the antisemitic demonstrators on America’s streets and college
campuses.
While the public pressure on Israel was
bad, even worse was the duress the administration was employing against
Netanyahu behind the scenes as it sought to delay every Israeli effort
at finishing off the terrorists.
Administration officials were soon
parroting the defeatist line about Hamas being an “idea” that could not
be defeated, rather than a terrorist force that could be eliminated.
Plenty of “ideas” have been militarily defeated, such as Nazism, which
didn’t survive the defeat of Adolf Hitler’s genocidal regime. But to
Americans and Israeli liberals, Hamas is regarded as an eternal force.
By adopting this position, the opportunity to convince Palestinians to
give up their fantasies about Israel’s elimination was thrown away and
their century-long war on Zionism prolonged.
Combined with the post-Oct. 7 surge in
antisemitism made obvious by the pro-Hamas encampments at elite
universities, it gave Hamas every reason not to negotiate seriously for a
hostage release deal. As Mashaal told the Times, Hamas viewed
all of this as encouragement for its plan to simply hunker down in its
remaining tunnel strongholds, and hold out until U.S. and international
pressure—heightened by the anti-Israel bias of the mainstream
media—forced Israel to stand down and allow the Islamists to emerge as
the victor in the war.
Demoralizing the Israelis
It must be recognized that a key element in the Biden administration’s efforts was the fact that, as the Times
story also noted, many in the leadership of the IDF and Israeli
security establishment had adopted similarly defeatist stands about
dealing with Hamas.
The conduct of the military
leadership—both before and after Oct. 7—will be a subject for formal
investigations and then historical inquiry for many decades. Suffice it
to say that this attitude about Hamas seems very much a product of the
same thinking that left the country unprepared for the attacks that
Shabbat morning and then needing weeks before it could initiate an
attack on the perpetrators.
It should be noted that Netanyahu bears
responsibility for these failures as the head of the government. But the
military leadership should not be shielded from the same opprobrium
because of the respect their uniforms and records inspire. As I’ve heard
from so many Israelis in the last year, if the war has not always gone
as well as it should have, it was always the fault of the generals, not
the rank-and-file soldiers and lower-level officers who have fought
bravely and often sacrificed their lives in order to limit Palestinian
casualties.
While Israelis have every right to protest
against their government even in wartime, Hamas also views the unrest
inside the Jewish state as an asset. The families of the remaining
hostages and Netanyahu’s political opposition now seek to pressure him
to give up the war and sign a ceasefire agreement, even if it means
essentially handing Gaza back to Hamas and ensuring a repeat of the
horrors of Oct. 7. I understand why some feel that way for a number of
different reasons, but the fact remains that Hamas is counting on that
sentiment.
Claiming U.S. ‘recognition’
But above all, Hamas views American
pressure on Israel as its ace in the hole. As Mashaal pointed out, the
way that the hostage negotiations have been handled by Washington has
amounted to American “recognition” of Hamas as a diplomatic partner as
opposed to a despised and outlawed terrorist organization. He’s right
about that.
While it’s not clear just how closely they
are observing the presidential election or counting on one outcome over
another, they obviously prefer Harris’s stand in favor of an “immediate
ceasefire” to former President Donald Trump’s comments, which amount to
a green light to Israel to “finish the job” of eliminating the
terrorists.
Hamas’s military position inside Gaza is
not completely eliminated, but it is a shadow of its pre-October self.
And there are even reports now starting to circulate about Gazans
drawing some obvious conclusions about the high cost of letting Hamas
lead them into disaster after disaster. Even as Israel’s focus is
increasingly turning towards its northern border and the imperative to
stop the Hezbollah fire that has depopulated a large area in the direct
line of terrorist fire, the need to continue the work of demolishing
tunnels and rooting out remaining Hamas elements is not over. It may
take years—something that discourages Israelis, and that infuriates
Biden and Harris. But the notion that there is any realistic alternative
to continue fighting that would ensure Israeli security—whether in the
form of a ceasefire/surrender or bringing international forces into Gaza
to stop Hamas—is a pipe dream.
The reality of Palestinian politics
As the Times article makes clear,
Hamas will never budge from its demands that Israel hand back Gaza to
them. And as long as they are useful to their cause, they will hold onto
many of the hostages, despite the belief among some Israelis that it is
Netanyahu’s stubbornness or political ambition that is the obstacle to
their freedom. Moreover, Hamas leaders are right to believe, despite the
understandable anger in Gaza, that the basic equation of Palestinian
politics remains unchanged. Over the last century, Palestinian groups
and leaders have always gained credibility primarily by shedding Jewish
blood. Hamas thinks that it will eventually reap a great benefit from
the atrocities of Oct. 7 in the form of broad support that will enable
it to topple and replace Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas’s
Fatah Party in Judea and Samaria as well as Gaza. All they have to do to
cash in on that is to survive the war, and they think they’ve found the
formula to enable them to do just that.
If left to carry out its tasks without
foreign interference, the IDF will eventually eliminate Hamas, though
that task will not be accomplished easily or quickly. It can certainly
prevent it from returning to power in Gaza, thus ensuring that its reign
of terror over Israel as well as Palestinians is over. Still, Mashaal
and the rest of the terrorist group are counting on feckless American
politicians, ideologically motivated leftist demonstrators and political
activists, a media that is always prepared to demonize Israeli efforts
at self-defense, as well as war-weariness and anguish about the hostages
inside Israel to guarantee their survival. We may hope that they are
wrong about that, but it’s easy to understand why the terrorist leader
is confident that he can outlast the Israelis … with American help.
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