Israel may win its battle against Hamas but has already lost the war.
By James M.
Dorsey
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It no longer really matters who
attacked Gaza’s Al Ahli Arab Hospital in which
hundreds of innocent civilians were killed or the Greek Orthodox Saint Porphyrius Church in the Strip.
Public opinion has issued its verdict
on the streets of cities across the Middle East and beyond.
It took the attack on the hospital, which
Israel asserts involved a misfired Palestinian rocket launch, not Israeli warplanes, some 10 days into the Israeli assault on Gaza to
bring protesters to the streets.
The time lag is telling and hints at
the ultimate political fallout of a war that plays to the deepest fears and
traumas of both Israelis and Palestinians as well as Arab autocrats’ security
concerns.
Even if anti-Israeli sentiment runs
deep in the Middle East because of its 56-year-long occupation of the West
Bank, 17-year-long blockade of Gaza in cooperation with Egypt, and refusal to sincerely
negotiate the creation of an independent Palestinian state, aided by the
incompetence of the Palestine Authority, many were ambivalent about Hamas’
brutal October 7 attack on Israel.
No doubt, Palestinians and Arabs took
pride in a Palestinian militia successfully attacking Israel and breaching its
image of military and intelligence superiority and invincibility.
But at the same time, many in the
Middle East were troubled by Hamas’ indiscriminate slaughter of innocent men,
women, and children and kidnapping of some 200 people, mostly civilians.
Breaking taboos, Arab voices on
social media took Hamas before the hospital attack to task for its unwarranted
brutality, sparking a rare discussion in the
Arab world.
The indiscriminate Israeli bombing,
the stream of heart-wrenching images emerging from Gaza, and the genocidal language employed by Israeli leaders silenced those voices.
To be sure, Hamas’ language is no less genocidal as is its charter.
In some Arab quarters, distance to
Hamas was driven by perceptions of its alleged affiliation with the Muslim
Brotherhood, a polarizing group that like Palestine evokes deep-seated
passions.
The Israeli assault on Gaza has put
that on the backburner.
Worse from the perspective of Israel
and Saudi Arabia, the Hamas success raises the spectre of other groups aligned
with Iran, like Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militia, and Houthi rebels in
Yemen, emulating the Hamas model.
Hezbollah and the Houthis are far
more battle-hardened and better equipped than Hamas.
Israel’s ferocious response to Hamas’
attack may prove less of a deterrent than many think.
Israel’s decades of wielding a
sledgehammer and continued collective punishment has failed to quell
Palestinian aspirations or stop Palestinians from resisting Israel.
As a result, Arab states, whether
formally or informally engaged with Israel, are in a bind. They may want to see
Hamas defeated on the battlefield, if not destroyed, but are restricted by
pro-Palestinian public opinion.
Moreover, Hamas’ ability to breach
Israeli security and trap Israel in the words of Middle East scholar and commentator Hussein Ibish, if it moves ahead with a ground offensive in Gaza, bolsters Iran as a
significant security threat in the eyes of Gulf states.
The threat is compounded by the fact
that comparisons between the 1973 Middle East war and the Gaza war hink.
To be sure, Egypt and Syria restored
their pride in 1973 by, like Hamas, taking Israel by surprise and achieving
initial battlefield successes.
Like Hamas, Egypt and Syria lost on
the battlefield but won the war politically. Ultimately, the war led to
President Anwar Sadat’s unprecedented 1977 visit to Jerusalem and the 1979
Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty.
But, unlike the Hamas attack and
Israel’s response, the 1973 war, fought along conventional military lines, did
not evoke the Israeli trauma of the Holocaust or the Palestinian ordeal of the
1948 and 1967 expulsions and displacements.
As a result, the Gaza war is likely
to harden sentiments on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide in ways
that the 1973 war did not, making an equitable resolution of the conflict any
time soon highly unlikely.
Some analysts have suggested that Mr.
Ibish’s trap with Israel seemingly lacking an exit strategy and potentially
being sucked into a long-term occupation of Gaza that would provoke criticism
from its closest allies, including the United States, may open the possibility
of the Strip being temporarily administered by the United Nations and/or a coalition of Arab
states.
That may prove easier said than done.
Condominiums tend to have a life of their own and involve the kind of
commitment and involvement Arab states may not want to shoulder.
For starters, Israel, deeply
suspicious of the United Nations, is likely to reject the idea.
Similarly, Israel, particularly given
Arab public opinion, is unlikely to want to surrender or limit its notion of
Gaza security with the involvement of Arab states.
By the same token, Arab states may be
tempted by the return of Arab land to Arab control but will fear being sucked
into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in ways they have avoided for the past 75
years since Israel was established, except for during the Jordanian and
Lebanese civil wars.
At the bottom line, Hamas’s brutal
attack and Israel’s ferocious response, true to a paradigm of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, have strengthened hardliners on both sides of the
divide, even if neither Hamas nor Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu
survive the war.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary Fellow at
Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and
the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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