By Seth Mandel
Friday, May 17, 2024
Ever since October 7, we’ve gotten a steady stream of
reminders of just how different life in Israel can be from the rest of the
West. No matter how European the architecture or how Americanized its politics
have become, Israel’s experience has always been different from that of its
allies in crucial ways.
For example, the renewed fighting in Gaza’s north is the
subject of this lead from the Wall
Street Journal: “Seven months into the war, Hamas is far from
defeated, stoking fears in Israel that it is walking into a forever war.”
This is a very Western, and indeed American, way of
looking at it. Because when you live far from the war zone, as in the case of
the U.S. invasion of Iraq, you always fear walking into a trap. But Israel
isn’t walking into anything—in fact, Israel tried walking away from
Gaza. Not just in its 2005 disengagement, although that move did end once and
for all any notion of an Israeli “occupation” in Gaza. Israel, in fact, tried
walking away in 1967—that is, immediately upon taking and holding the territory
in a defensive war. The Arab states Israel had defeated met in Khartoum and
released a famous resolution declaring the “three noes”: No peace with Israel,
no recognition of Israel, no negotiation with Israel.
Thus, instead of immediately negotiating back the
territory it won, Israel was forced into a simmering state of war that turned
into a full-blown war of annihilation against the Jewish state once again in
1973. In the aftermath of that war, the Arab states, which had instigated each
war against Israel, began to accept the fact that they weren’t going to
vanquish the Jews after all. Israel returned the entire Sinai Peninsula to
Egypt, including oil fields that could supply Israel with about a fifth of its
energy needs at the time. The deal ensured there’d be no traditional shared
border between the two countries by demilitarizing areas around the border.
In 2000, Ehud Barak offered to Yasser Arafat a
Palestinian state that included the Gaza Strip. Arafat turned down the offer of
statehood. Five years after that, Israel left Gaza unilaterally, after decades
of trying to walk away from the Strip. Hamas’s takeover of the Strip soon
followed, and it was turned into a large military installation the entire of
point of which was to keep Israel from walking away completely.
Attacks from Gaza did not begin in 1967, just as they did
not stop after Israel’s disengagement in 2005. Hamas’s attacks have nothing to
do with a supposed occupation. Whether or not there are Israeli boots on the
ground in the Gaza Strip, there has been and will be war.
Which brings us to the second point: This is
already a forever war. And that forever war was declared by Israel’s
enemies and is re-declared each time Israel offers to end it. Hamas’s raison
d’etre, in fact, is forever war. You can find this out by doing such things as:
asking them; reading their statements; reading their essential documents;
watching their interviews; opening your eyes; etc.
Hamas does not deny this. Since October 7, Hamas
officials have been saying this with even more regularity than they did before.
Just one example of about a million: “Hamas’s goal is not to run Gaza and to
bring it water and electricity and such,” Khalil al-Hayya, one of Hamas’s top
leaders, said in
November. “Hamas, the Qassam [brigades] and the resistance woke the world up
from its deep sleep and showed that this issue must remain on the table. This
battle was not because we wanted fuel or laborers. It did not seek to improve
the situation in Gaza. This battle is to completely overthrow the situation.”
Israel is not “walking into a forever war.” It has spent
its 76 years as a state trying to get out of a forever war imposed on it by the
enemies of its existence, some of whom, such as the Hamas leaders and soldiers
involved in the October 7 attacks, are barbarian war zombies who have no other
setting.
If you want to end the forever war against Hamas, you
must destroy Hamas. President Biden’s opposition to that is, in essence,
opposition to ending the forever war launched against Israel the day of its
rebirth as a state. There isn’t another option. The twist here is that Israel
is the only actor involved in this drama that wants to end the forever war. No
one else seems to be in much of a rush.
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