Innocent Gazans pay a heavy price for Hamas and Israel’s disregard for human life.
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Failed efforts to achieve a Gaza ceasefire on the eve of
Ramadan leave innocent Gazans in the lurch, highlight the gap between Israel
and Hamas’ demands in negotiations, and raise the stakes for the United States.
At the core of the stalled negotiations is Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu’s insistence on continuing Israel’s assault after a
ceasefire and an exchange of some Hamas-held hostages kidnapped during the
group’s October 7 attack on Israel for Palestinians held in Israeli prisons.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Credit: AP
Photo/ Maya Alleruzzo
Mr. Netanyahu hopes that if he gets his way, he will
reduce public
pressure to prioritise the release of the hostages and
the return of the bodies of captives killed in the Israeli assault, address US
concerns amid the Biden administration’s mounting pressure, and be able to
claim success in a devastating war that in its sixth month has failed to
achieve Israel’s goals and severely damaged its international standing.
In Mr. Netanyahu’s mind, securing the release of all the
hostages would deprive Hamas of its foremost trump card in negotiations over
Gaza’s post-war fate, which is why Hamas
will not agree to release all the captives without an end to the war, an
Israeli withdrawal from the Strip and its return to Palestinian control, and a
reconstruction process in the devastated territory.
Mr. Netanyahu’s problem is that getting his way may not
provide the temporary relief he seeks.
Public pressure is likely to continue until all the
hostages are released. Moreover, freeing the hostages will do little to weaken
widespread calls for Mr. Netanyahu to resign.
In addition, relations between Messrs. Biden and
Netanyahu have crossed a Rubicon, even if the US president still refuses to
pressure Israel in ways that it would feel the pain.
The United States and Mr. Biden have not done themselves
a favour by opting for a
cumbersome and slow maritime channel for humanitarian aid
instead of linking US arms supplies to Israel to an opening of border crossings
that would allow the immediate flow of massive humanitarian aid sitting on
Egypt’s border with the Strip.
US President Joe
Biden. Credit: Reuters
Finally, accepting even some of Hamas’ demands would
likely spark the
demise of Mr. Netanyahu’s government with his ultra-nationalist
and ultra-conservative partners walking away from the coalition.
The ultra-nationalists and ultra-conservatives strengthened
their stranglehold with significant gains in the first round of
last month’s municipal elections. Israelis went for a
second round in 35 cities and towns on Sunday.
All of this does not take Hamas off the hook.
Hamas does not have much to lose if it were to agree to a proposed six-week ceasefire during which it would release only 40 hostages – mostly women, children, elderly people, and those in need of immediate medical assistance.
Family and supporters of hostages held by Hamas
in Gaza complete the final leg of a five-day solidarity rally calling for their
return, from Tel Aviv to the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem. Credit: AP/Mahmoud Illean
Moreover, by agreeing to a six-week-ceasefire, Hamas
would help create the space for negotiations on a permanent silencing of the
guns and an end to the war.
Finally, even a temporary ceasefire on terms involving a
substantial flow of humanitarian aid would help avert famine and a mushrooming
public health disaster in Gaza.
The problem is that neither Israel nor Hamas cares about
the desperate plight of Gazans.
“#Hamas and #Netanyahu are haggling
over human lives as if they were on a cattle market,”
said scholar Andreas Krieg in a tweet.
At least some Hamas figures, reportedly
including Yahya Sinwar, the group’s Gaza-based leader and one
of Israel’s most wanted men, believe that Hamas’ negotiating position would be
further enhanced if the humanitarian crisis in Gaza worsens and if the onset of
Ramadan heightens tension around Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque, Islam’s third
holiest site.
Palestinians attend afternoon prayers on the
Temple Mount, which houses the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in Jerusalem's Old City, during Muslim
holy month of Ramadan. Credit: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP
Hamas and Israel compete on who issues the most
blood-curdling statements. Both display a despicable disregard for the humanity
of the other.
Cloaking itself in the mantle of legitimate resistance
and the assertion that all Israelis, including those within Israel’s pre-1967 borders,
are settlers, Hamas has no compunction about threatening
more October 7-style attacks.
Civilians accounted for most of the more than 1,100
people killed, some brutally, in the Hamas assault.
Israel digs itself deeper and deeper into a whole not
only by its conduct of the war and refusal to ensure the unfettered flow of
humanitarian aid into Gaza but also by abusive
social media postings by soldiers in Gaza and repeated problematic
statements by political and religious figures.
In the latest incident, Rabbi Eliyahu Mali, whose
religious seminary in Jaffa, aims
to dispossess Palestinians still resident in what is today a
southern suburb of Tel Aviv that once was Palestine’s most populous city,
issued what
can only be called an incitement to genocide.
Rabbi Eliyahu Mali
speaking in a conference at his Shirat Moshe yeshiva.
“The basic rule we have when fighting a holy war, in this
case, Gaza, is the doctrine of ‘not sparing a soul.’ The logic of this is very
clear. If you don’t kill them, they will try to kill you. Today’s saboteurs are
the children of the previous war whom we kept alive,” Mr. Mali said in a
conference at his Shirat Moshe yeshiva.
“It is the women who create the terrorists… It’s either
you or them… ‘Do not spare a soul’ is based on the doctrine, ‘He who comes to
kill you in the afternoon, kill him in the morning.’ The one who comes to kill
you is not (just) the 18, 16, 20, 30-year-old who points his weapon at you, but
also the next generation and those that give birth to the next generation,” Mr.
Mali said.
The rabbi asserted that “there is no such thing called an
innocent creature… An elderly man can carry a rifle and shoot.”
Asked if the same is true for children, Mr. Mali replied,
shrugging his shoulders, “It’s the same thing… When the Torah says, ‘Do not
spare a soul, you must not spare a soul. Today he is a child, today he is a
youth, tomorrow a fighter.”
Mr. Mali’s comments echoed
statements by Israeli President Isaac Herzog early in the war.
Israel's
President Isaac Herzog. Credit: Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90
“It is an entire nation out there responsible (for the
October 7 attack). It is not true this rhetoric about civilians not being
aware, not involved. It’s absolutely not true. They could have risen up. They
could have fought against that evil regime which took over Gaza in a coup d’etat,”
the president told an October 17, 2023 news conference.
When asked to clarify whether he meant to say that since
Gazans did not remove Hamas from power “that makes them, by implication,
legitimate targets,” Mr. Herzog claimed, “No, I didn’t say that.”
However, Mr. Herzog then went on to say that “When you
have a missile in your goddamn kitchen and you want to shoot it at me, am I
allowed to defend myself?”
Tellingly, neither Mr. Herzog nor Mr. Netanyahu or any
other government official has denounced Mr. Mali’s comments that echo not only
the president’s earlier remarks but also those of various Cabinet-level
officials.
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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