By Noah Rothman
Thursday,
October 17, 2024
The
Israeli
military confirmed on Thursday that Yahya Sinwar — Hamas’s longtime
strategist, the group’s leader since summer, and the foremost architect of the
October 7 massacre — has been eliminated.
Sinwar
is only the latest high-profile terrorist to meet his fate at the hands of the
IDF. His predecessor at the top of Hamas’s hierarchy, Ismail Haniyeh, was
killed in Tehran when a bomb covertly smuggled into an Iranian diplomatic
safehouse exploded in July. Mohammed Deif, the commander of Hamas’s military
wing, was neutralized in a July airstrike after seven unsuccessful IDF attempts
to deliver him to justice. Hamas deputy commander Marwan Issa met his fate in
March, two months after his deputy, Saleh al-Arouri, was cut down in the
suburbs of Beirut by an Israeli drone.
A
little over a year after the war Hamas inaugurated against Israel on 10/7 in
the deadliest one-day slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust, the terrorist
organization has been entirely decapitated. Its fighters are scattered,
disorganized, and reduced to chaotic rearguard actions against the Israeli
troops busily rolling them up. Critics of Israel’s campaign like to insist that
Hamas is an idea and therefore cannot simply be dispatched like the thousands
of its fighters the IDF has cut down. True enough, but an idea cannot shoot at
you or launch rocket attacks on your cities. That requires well-connected,
deeply embedded commanders with years of experience conducting asymmetrical
insurgent attacks on a superior force. Those commanders are all dead.
The
Israeli officials who have pursued Hamas’s barbarians until the end have done
so without much encouragement from the West. Indeed, the death of every Hamas
commander was fretted over in the West as though it created a new impediment to peace and to the negotiations over the hostages Hamas itself captured on 10/7 — 97 of whom still have not yet been located. Joe Biden’s
administration withdrew almost all rhetorical support for Israeli operations in
places like Rafah, where Sinwar himself was taken out. Benjamin Netanyahu’s
government deserves the gratitude of the civilized world for rejecting these
entreaties seeking Israel’s surrender in its righteous war.
The
Israelis did not choose the way this war began, but they will be the authors of
its conclusion. And the
end is near. The Israelis have brought the Gaza Strip closer to its day of
liberation from the tyranny of an illegitimate terrorist regime than all the
combined efforts of the peace processors in the global diplomatic corps ever
achieved. It is a shame that the American administration that stood so
stalwartly with Israel at the outset of this campaign willingly sacrificed its
ability to celebrate alongside its Israeli counterparts. This should be
America’s victory, too. But by spending months on end agonizing over how
Israel was achieving its honorable objective, the Biden White House and its
allies lost sight of our shared strategic goals.
The
glory in this moment, therefore, is owed to Israel alone. And although it has
become a thankless mission, all those who stand against barbarism and tyranny
are the beneficiaries of Israel’s actions.
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