Let’s be clear about why Israel signed onto this ceasefire. There are three reasons:
1. Joe Biden has been slow-walking aid to
Israel. That slow-walking has gotten Israeli troops killed. The
ceasefire is designed to allow Biden to leave and Israel to be re-armed
by the incoming Trump administration.
2. Joe Biden has been threatening Israel
with U.N. abstentions on his way out the door if Israel does not end
action in Lebanon; furthermore, Israel is attempting to broker a deal
with France to end France’s support for the antisemitic International
Criminal Court targeting of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and former defense minister Yoav Gallant.
3. Even under these conditions, Israel has
an interest in taking Hezbollah off the board as a chess piece with
regard to Hamas. Hamas has attempted throughout the Oct. 7 war to rope
in other powers to save it. Hezbollah openly pledged that it would not
stop its war until Hamas was preserved. Hezbollah failed. Its leadership
is dead, its weapons caches largely destroyed, all at an insanely low
military cost to Israel. Now Hezbollah is no longer there to split
Israel’s attention and prolong Hamas’s resistance. What does this mean?
It means that Israel sees this ceasefire as just that: a ceasefire until
Joe Biden is gone. It is a 60 day ceasefire. Joe Biden leaves office in
54 days. That is not a coincidence.
Biden, pictured holding the anti-Israel book "The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine", threatened Israel with U.N. abstentions on his way out the door if Israel does not end action in Lebanon
If Hezbollah abides by the terms, so much
the better: Israelis go home and live in security in the north. But
Israel is working under the likely correct assumption that Hezbollah
will not abide by the terms, and that the agreement as interpreted by
the Trump administration will actually allow Israel freedom of action (a
freedom of action denied by Biden under his spurious and ugly
interpretation of the same agreement).
How can you tell all this is true?
Netanyahu in his statement openly said that if the agreement is
violated, they will go back in, and that the goal in the north is the
return of the residents—and he hasn’t called for them to go home yet.
The durability of the ceasefire is completely dependent on Hezbollah and
Lebanon abiding by it. If they don’t, and Jan. 20 comes, Israel will do
what it must.
How about Gaza? Israel will renew its
efforts in Gaza to free the hostages. They hope that Hezbollah’s absence
from the war will create new leverage against Hamas. Perhaps that’s
true. But presumably, the Biden administration will now attempt to
leverage Israel into some sort of premature and unhealthy agreement in
Gaza that leaves Hamas in power, akin to Lebanon. Israel simply will not
and cannot do that. Instead, Israel will stick by its goals in Gaza and
will consolidate and refresh its forces in anticipation of the next
round of fighting, when there is a president who isn’t a pathetic coward
in relation to Iran and its proxies.
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