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The war is far from over, but Hamas’s southern stronghold of Khan Younis is falling. Civilians have streamed out and Hamas’s remaining forces in the city’s west are encircled. They face an Israeli advance on all sides, and Israel is now fighting above and below ground in force.
Consider
that the 2016-17 battle of Mosul against ISIS took nine months. “Mosul,”
writes John Spencer, chief of urban warfare studies at West Point’s Modern
War Institute, “was one battle, in one city against 3 to 5k militants with
limited defenses. Israel is fighting multiple battles in 7 cities against 30k
militants with military grade underground cities built under civilian areas.”
Israel
needs time to achieve victory, and Hamas is counting on Western powers to deny
it that time. The “CNN strategy” of using human shields to gain media sympathy
has worked every time so far for Hamas.
Israel believes
it has killed, incapacitated or arrested some 20,000 of Hamas’s 30,000 men and
dismantled 18 of Hamas’s 24 Gaza combat battalions. The losses have prevented
Hamas from mounting military maneuvers and quieted its rocket fire, down more
than 95% from the war’s early days.
The
Biden Administration is using that domestic pressure as diplomatic leverage to
promote a hostage deal and long pause in the war that it hopes will become a
cease-fire. Never mind that leaving Hamas in control of territory is the
definition of Israeli defeat. No matter the length of the pause, Israel would
likely have to resume fighting afterward.
That
may be why Hamas has resisted the U.S. pause and hostage-deal proposal and
instead demands a cease-fire guarantee that Israel can’t give. Recall that
Hamas consented to the first hostage deal after Israel took Gaza City faster
than anticipated. An Israeli advance now could push the terrorists to Rafah,
Hamas’s last major refuge, at the edge of Gaza.
Once
Hamas’s last brigades are defeated, it will take time to sweep Gaza for
terrorist cells and infrastructure. Israel is clearing urban terrain and
tunnels at a “historic pace,” Mr. Spencer writes, but the tunnels are vast and
soldiers are finding munitions in home after home.
Israel’s
task for 2024 is to finish the job, but will U.S. political support hold? The
Biden Administration, despite its second-guessing, continues to provide
munitions and diplomatic cover that it would have a hard time withdrawing. The
latest Harvard CAPS-Harris poll finds that large majorities of Americans
support Israel and its war aims.
Europe’s
elected leaders are also holding the line, and no Arab state has quit the
Abraham Accords. Only Iran, which has escalated its regional war against the
U.S., applies pressure. Even the United Nations International Court of Justice
balked at ordering a cease-fire.
Winning
the war doesn’t guarantee winning the peace afterward, but it is essential for
a secure Israel and a chance for Palestinians to have a normal life in Gaza.
1 comment:
An "enclosed Gaza" is detrimental to everyone, the Gazans and Israel.
Those who want to leave Gaza should be able to do so. Neighboring Arab countries may accept to take a few families. It is not good politics for them to be in an "open prison". The world does not know that Gaza is enclosed with check-points for exit because they go to Israel to destroy, steal and murder: it is for Israel's security. Will Israel be able turn them good and honest citizens when the war is over? That will be a big challenge.
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