National Review Online
Monday, October 13, 2025
Barbarism didn’t win.
For more than two years, Hamas clung to the people it had
taken hostage and brutalized as leverage over Israel in the war that the terror
group initiated on October 7, 2023 — men, women, and children, Israelis and
foreign nationals, Jews and non-Jews alike.
Through ephemeral deals and in daring raids, some were
liberated. Too many, though, were killed or languished in Gaza’s dungeons
during the war that followed. Throughout the conflict, the Israeli government
maintained that the war would end when the hostages were released. Today, the hostages who were not murdered in
Hamas’s captivity are home, and the war for their freedom is over.
Those in the West who raged at the sight of posters
featuring the captives’ faces didn’t want to believe it. They told themselves
that Israel invited the atrocities to which its civilians were subjected and
that its government sought to engineer a genocide of the Palestinian people.
They tore up and defaced the images that confronted them with the gravity of
their moral inversion. Their credulity and cowardice stand in stark relief
against the moral clarity that undergirded today’s triumph.
Israeli military and intelligence services displayed incredible
acumen throughout the war against the terrorist groups that surround Israel and
the rogue states that sponsor them. And President Trump and his deputies
contributed mightily to this civilizational achievement. Their
clear-sightedness and diplomatic creativity delivered a result that means Trump
certainly deserves the Nobel Peace Prize, whether he ever gets it or not.
Their elementary theory of the case — defeat Israel’s
enemies first and make peace with them second — eluded far too many over the
course of the war that Hamas started on 10/7. But it did not elude the
president. “When others were weak, you were strong,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Trump in a
historic and raucous speech before the Israeli Knesset. “When others were
fearful, you were bold. When others abandoned us, you stood by our side.”
Far too many can count themselves among the fearful,
weak, and vacillating. Governments in London, Paris, Madrid, Ottawa, Canberra,
and elsewhere lent credence to the lies promulgated by Israel’s pathological
opponents. They convinced themselves they could supplicate their way to a
resolution of the ancient enmities that sparked this conflict. As they applaud
a victory to which they did not contribute, perhaps they might feel a fleeting
sense of shame for their conduct? If the past is any guide, they will persist
in their errors beginning tomorrow.
It would be foolish to presume that Israel’s troubles are
behind it. Fanatics in the region and in the West will never accept the Jewish
state’s existence. And Israel fell short of some of its war aims. Hamas, while
defeated, was not destroyed. Phase 2 of the Gaza deal will, of course, be much
harder to implement. The terror group will presumably rebrand as it attempts to
rearm and mete out terrible violence against the Gazan people in the effort to
cling to power. Already, dozens are reported dead amid clashes between Hamas
and its rivals in Gaza City.
It and its terrorist allies in the region could one day
again threaten the Israeli people. The Islamic Republic of Iran, too, is
battered and bruised, but it persists. Tehran is ideologically wedded to its
existential war with Zionism. There will not be peace in the region until that
commitment and the regime dedicated to it are gone.
But there are vistas of hope, too. The process of
diplomatic normalization between Israel and its Muslim neighbors that Hamas
hoped to end is set to continue. Indeed, we now know that Israel’s Arab
counterparts deepened their security cooperation with Jerusalem even as
they criticized its defensive war. As Israel emerges from the longest war in
its history as the dominant military and intelligence power in the region, it’s
possible for that covert coordination to become overt, for military relations
to become commercial ties, and for, one hopes, a prosperous covenant to emerge.
None of that would be possible in the absence of Israel’s
military victory. The force that it brought to bear in this conflict — and
Trump’s strike on Iran — changed the facts on the ground in ways that
rudderless diplomatic processes never could. There is hope today for a brighter
future in the Middle East as a direct result of Jerusalem’s refusal to accept
the logic of terrorism and hostage-taking and Donald Trump’s unwavering support
for that endeavor. The civilized world owes them both a profound debt.
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