The Gaza war is set to spill onto the streets of Western cities.
By James M. Dorsey
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The question is not if but when
Gaza-related violence will spill onto the streets of European and American
cities.
This week’s killing in Beirut of
Hamas executive Saleh al-Arouri significantly enhanced the threat posed by
Hamas, Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah, and jihadists.
Hamas
deputy political chief Saleh al-Arouri, after signing a reconciliation deal
with senior Fatah official Azzam al-Ahmad, during a short ceremony at the
Egyptian intelligence complex in Cairo, Egypt. Photo: AP/Nariman El-Mofty
Adding to the increased threat of
Gaza-related violence spilling into other parts of or beyond the Middle East,
Hezbollah leader Hasan Nasrallah, warned for the second time in a week that
Hezbollah would retaliate.
“We’ll choose the right place and the
right time, but the field will respond,” Mr. Nasrallah said in his second
response to the Al-Arouri killing in Hezbollah’s stronghold in southern Beirut
in as many days.
Hezbollah has vowed to retaliate for
the killing in Lebanon of any representative of the Iranian-backed Axis of
Resistance that includes Hamas, the Yemeni Houthis, and Iraqi militias
alongside the Lebanese Shiite militia and the Islamic Republic.
Restrained by not wanting to drag
bankrupt Lebanon into a full-fledged war, Hezbollah could opt for a retaliation
far from the Israeli-Lebanese border.
That response was not precluded by the firing on Saturday of 62
rockets at an Israeli observation post in what Hezbollah called a “preliminary response” to the
Al-Arouri killing. The attack appeared calibrated to keep hostilities with
Israelis contained.
This photograph taken on January 5, 2024 from the southern
Lebanese village of Dhayra along the Israeli border, shows buildings in the
Lebanese town of Tair Harfa as smoke billows over northern Israel. Photo: AFP
However, in a possible indication of
further things to come, Mr. Nasrallah’s representative to Iraq, Mohammad
Hussein Al-Kawtharani, returned to Baghdad reportedly to coordinate attacks on
US targets in Iraq with Iranian-backed Iraqi militias.
A US Treasury-designated global
terrorist, Mr. Al-Kawtharani has a US$10 million bounty on his head.
Mr. Al-Kawtharani’s return coincided
with the US killing of an Iranian-backed
Iraqi militia leader
in retaliation for recent attacks on American personnel and Iraqi steps to remove the U.S.-led international
military coalition
against the Islamic State from the country.
Sheikh Mohammad al-Kawtharani, a senior military commander of
the Hezbollah in Iraq group. Photo: File Photo
Widely viewed as a hardliner within
Hamas, Mr. Al-Arouri grew close to Mr. Nasrallah after the Hamas official
arrived in Lebanon at a time when the group’s relations with Hezbollah were strained because of Lebanese
Shiite support for President Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian civil war.
Mr. Nasrallah “turned (Mr. Al-Arouri)
into a power card within Hamas but in Nasrallah's hand... Some even say that
Arouri was a Hezbollah hawk within Hamas,” said a source close to Hezbollah.
Addressing Israelis directly in a
speech earlier this week, Mr. Nasrallah, was unequivocal in his call for
replacing Israel with a Palestinian state rather than an independent
Palestinian state alongside Israel.
“Here you (Israelis) don’t have a
future. The land of
Palestine is for the Palestinians,” Mr. Nasrallah said.
From Hamas’ perspective, responding
to Mr. Al-Arouri’s killing by striking abroad at Israeli embassies, diplomatic
facilities and representatives is its best option. Hamas is unlikely to see a
rocket barrage fired from Gaza toward Israeli towns and cities, most of which
are intercepted by Israeli air defense, as a sufficient response.
Similarly, Hamas, three months into
the war, is not well positioned to successfully target Israeli government
offices and officials in Israel.
Raising the stakes, the Islamic State
this week called for lone wolf attacks on civilian argets in Europe and the
United States, including churches and synagogues.
Islamic State militants parade. Photo:
Yaser Al-Khodor/Reuters
Referring to past Islamic State
operations and lone wolf attacks in multiple European cities, the group’s
spokesman, Abu Ḥudhayfah Al-Ansari, called on Muslims in the West in a
67-minute audio message “to renew your activity and revive your blessed
operations in the heart of the homes of Jews and Christians…. Chase your prey from Jews, Christians, and
their allies, in the streets and the roads of America, Europe, and the world.
Raid their homes, kill them, and torture them by every means you can.”
“Blow them up with explosives, burn
them with incendiary bombs, shoot them with bullets, slaughter their necks with
knives, and run them over with buses… Do not differentiate between an infidel
civilian or military, as they are all infidels, and they should be judged the
same way… Aim for an easy target before the difficult ones, and for civilian
targets before military ones, and religious sites such as synagogues and
churches, before anything else,” Mr. Al-Ansari said.
Mr. Al-Ansari issued the call a day
after the group claimed responsibility for two explosions in the Iranian city of
Kerman that killed
at least 89 people.
Mr. Al-Ansari appeared to justify the
bombings by denouncing Hamas’ alliance with Iran as a “sin” and denouncing the
1979 Iranian revolution as an “apostate revolution.”
The Sunni Muslim Islamic State has
made attacks on Shiites, who it views as polytheists, one of its hallmarks. In
addition, the group is angered by Iranian suggestions that the Islamic Republic
will accept a two-state resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
if that was the Palestinians’ choice.
Mr. Al-Ansari accused Hamas and its
archrival, President Mahmoud Abba’s Palestine Authority and Al Fatah movement,
as well as a United Arab Emirates-backed former Gaza security chief, Mohammed
Dahlan, of being US and/or Iranian proxies.
The spokesman insisted that “the
battle with the Jews is not a religious patriotic or nationalistic battle. It
is a battle not because of the land, soil, or borders. Rather, it is a battle
that derives its legitimacy from the Quran and Sunnah,” Prophet Mohammed’s
deeds and sayings, Mr. Al-Ansari said.
An expanded spree of tit-for-tat
Israeli Palestinian targeted killings in third countries is likely to resemble a
similar spree in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, with one caveat.
Palestine Liberation Organisation
(PLO) representatives targeted by Israel and hardline Palestinians, like Abu
Nidal, a renegade PLO official, were proponents of compromise with Israel.
Sabri Khalil al-Banna, known as Abu Nidal, whose terrorist
group was said to be behind an attack on Paris’s Jewish quarter in 1982. Photo:
AP
However, this time round, Israel is
likely to go for Hamas officials irrespective of where they stand within Hamas’
political spectrum.
In a potential tit-for-tat, Israel could
prioritise Hamas representatives in countries like Turkey, home among others to the group’s
‘chief financial officer,’ Lebanon which hosts other senior Hamas officials beyond Mr. Al-Arouri,
and Malaysia which allows Hamas to operate in the country and raise funds, even
though it recently cracked down on one of Hamas’s local
funding channels.
By the same token, Israel will likely
refrain from striking in Qatar at senior officials like Ismail Haniyeh and
Khaled Mishal, who are resident in Doha, as long as Hamas holds hostages in
Gaza kidnapped during the group’s October 7 attack on Israel.
Qatar is the main mediator,
attempting to negotiate further prisoner exchanges between Israel and Hamas.
In November, Qatar facilitated a
one-week truce in Gaza during which Hamas released more than 100 hostages in
exchange for 240 Palestinians incarcerated in Israeli prisons. Hamas still
holds 129 hostages, including bodies of captives killed in the hostilities in
Gaza.
A tit-for-tat assassination spree
could play into the hands of Hamas, a movement proven capable of surviving the
killing by Israel of its successive leaders over the past two decades.
It could also serve Hamas’ strategy
articulated in 2007 by Mr. Al-Arouri in an interview with Middle East scholar
Bronwen Maddox.
“Our job is to keep the Palestinians
radicalized. Most of
them would settle in a moment for peace, some deal that will let them get on
with their lives. We need to keep them angry,” Mr. Al-Arouri said.
The jury is out on whether Hamas
overshot its goal by provoking the devastation and carnage rained on Gaza by
Israel’s sledgehammer response to the October 7 attack.
Irrespective of what Gazan attitudes
towards Hamas will be once the guns fall silent, Mr. Al-Arouri put his finger
on what remains the group’s Achilles Heel.
Rather than exploiting it, Israel has
focused on security and humiliating control and subjugation of Palestinians in its
zeal to thwart the establishment of an independent Palestinian state alongside
Israel at the expense of socio-economic development.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant’s
recent proposal for post-war governance of
Gaza suggests that
Israel will continue to refrain from playing what could be its trump card.
Reconstruction and development of
Gaza, managed by a compliant Palestinian authority that would lack credibility,
is in Mr. Gallant’s mind an afterthought that is the international community
rather than Israel’s responsibility.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is 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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