National Review Online
Thursday, August 01, 2024
Ismail Haniyeh, who was the political leader of Hamas,
was eliminated in Tehran on a visit to attend the inauguration of new Iranian
president Masoud Pezeshkian. Good riddance.
Haniyeh joined the terrorist group when it was founded in
1987 and rose up the ranks over the decades. When Hamas took over Gaza in 2006,
he became prime minister, and in 2017, he became head of the group’s political
bureau. Two years later, he left Gaza for Qatar, which has hosted him since.
While branded as a “moderate” by the media, that was a relative term, as he
still was committed to Hamas’s goal of destroying Israel, supported their
terrorist attacks, and helped raise money from Iran to further their objective.
He condemned the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden and was seen
on video celebrating the October 7 attacks as they were unfolding.
In a speech in January, he said, “We should hold on to the victory that took place on
October 7 and build upon it.”
Though the Israelis did not claim credit for the attack,
it is widely believed that they were the ones who pulled it off. Assuming this
is true, it is humiliating for the Iranian regime, as it means they allowed a
leader of one of their proxy groups to be killed right under their noses when
he was supposed to be under their protection.
Haniyeh’s death came within 24 hours of the elimination
of top Hezbollah military commander Fuad Shukr, the mastermind behind
Hezbollah’s rocket campaign against northern Israel that resulted in the
massacre of twelve children playing soccer in the Israeli Druze community
Majdal Shams. Shukr was also believed to have played a key role in the 1983
Marine barracks bombing that killed 241 U.S. service members. These two
killings come within weeks of a strike in Gaza that is believed to have killed
Mohammed Deif, the terrorist group’s military commander.
Taken together, Israel is sending a powerful message that
it has intel on the location of the leaders of Iran’s terrorist proxies and can
strike them.
It is unclear what impact these developments will have on
Israel’s ongoing war against Hamas. Haniyeh, according to news reports, was
seen as more willing to cut a cease-fire deal than Yahya Sinwar, who remains
the leader of Hamas in Gaza. Were Israel to eliminate Sinwar, coupled with the
killings of Haniyeh and Deif, it would be easier for Israeli prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to claim that Israel has effectively decapitated Hamas,
making it more plausible to declare victory and exit Gaza to focus on the
threat from Hezbollah and Iran itself.
For now, however, let’s take a break to celebrate the
death of another terrorist.
No comments:
Post a Comment