Killing Hamas leader garners Israel a tactical, not a strategic success
Yahya
Sinwar’s last moments: Source: Israel Defense Forces
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For the past year, Israel depicted Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar
as a coward
hiding in Gaza’s fortified underground tunnels shielded by 22 handcuffed
Israeli hostages.
Drone footage of the Hamas leader’s last minutes released by
the Israeli military showed a different Mr. Sinwar.
Dressed in military fatigues, badly wounded, and covered in
dust in a ruined above-ground apartment after an exchange of fire with Israeli
troops, Mr. Sinwar, seemingly alone, made one last gesture
of defiance before he was killed.
More important than shining a light on apparent Israeli
dis-and misinformation, the impact of the contrast in images suggests that
Israel’s management of its information war is backfiring, much like its targeted
assassinations that have failed to spark the collapse of groups like Hamas
or Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shiite militia.
The backfiring of Israel’s failed information warfare
strategy didn’t prevent its spokespeople from regurgitating assertions of
corruption and Hamas leaders living a life of luxury while Gazans pay a
horrendous price.
In the wake of Mr. Sinwar’s death, Israel’s Arabic language
military spokesperson published a video showing the Hamas leader’s wife
entering an underground tunnel with a handbag identified by the military as a US$32,000 Birkin
product.
A second video purported to show Mr. Sinwar’s comfortable
underground hideout furnished with food stocks, including a seemingly
unopened United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) sack, weapons caches,
and stacks of US dollars and Israeli shekels.
“He lives here in a good way with his millions, while the
civilians above ground are living in poverty and are starving… We know he fled
from here and left some of his millions behind,” an unidentified Israeli
military guide says in the video.
Mr. Sinwar’s defiance and the debunking of, at least, some
Israeli assertions have garnered him in death respect among Palestinians and
Arabs, including critics who held him co-responsible for Gaza’s suffering in
the past year and/or were long opposed to Hamas despite the Israeli effort to
discredit him and stoke public anger.
“Even people who were angry about Hamas, when they
saw. . . he had been killed during clashes and not hiding in a tunnel, as
Israel was always claiming, they felt sorry and sad for him. Sinwar’s
death will raise his popularity,” said Mohammed Sobeh, speaking to the
Financial Times from Khan Younis in Gaza.
Long on Israel’s most wanted list, officials accused Mr.
Sinwar of masterminding last year’s October 7 attack on Israel that sparked the
Gaza war. Many Palestinians, including supporters of the attack, hold Mr.
Sinwar co-responsible for prolonging Gaza’s agony by allegedly having
complicated ceasefire negotiations.
On X, Ghanem Nuseibeh, the founder of a London-based
strategy and management consultancy with close ties to the United Arab Emirates
and a rare Arab campaigner
against ant-Semitism, warned that Israel’s killing of Mr. Sinwar and the
release of the footage was counterproductive.
“A very worrying trend is emerging in the Arabic cyberspace.
Unlike, for example, when (Osama) Bin Laden was killed, Sinwar is getting a lot
of positive publicity, almost a hero figure in Arabic circles… It doesn’t
matter what I or the West or moderate Muslims say about Sinwar. What matters is
the Arab street, and he has turned into a
hero. Very worrying indeed,” Mr.
Nuseibeh said.
Mr. Nusseibeh’s warning should ring alarm bells in Jerusalem
but is unlikely to do so.
Instead, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s policy bolsters
Mr. Sinwar’s post-mortem popularity, which is fuelled by a generation of Gazans
and Palestinians’ loss of hope because of Israel’s ultra-nationalism, devasting
war on Gaza and stepped-up repression on the West Bank.
Motaz Azaiza
on BBC Hardtalk
“What’s the need of rebuilding Gaza if the problem still
exists, if I’m still under occupation?... Whenever I’m under occupation, and
everything is restricted, this will never end, and no one will have
safety, and no one will have peace whenever I don’t have peace as a
Palestinian,” said photographer Motaz Azaiza.
Mr. Sinwar’s killing “only strengthens Hamas’ determination,
tenacity, and resolve,” added Walid al-Hubali, a resident of Ramallah on the
West Bank.
Harking back to Egypt’s failed
attempt in the late 1940s to destroy the Muslim Brotherhood, Middle East
analyst Steven A. Cook noted that “it is hard to kill your way out of the
problem posed by a
resistance movement. The committed do not get the message; they just redouble
their efforts… Resistance, after all, is not futile. It is a critical component
of identity.”
Mr. Cook suggested
that “as proficient in avenging blood as the Israelis have become in their
decades-long struggle with terrorism, they have never managed to bring an
appreciable end to violent resistance.”
Beyond Palestinians’ despair and lack of prospects, Mr.
Sinwar’s enhanced status in death spotlights the gap between autocratic Arab
rulers’ attitudes towards Hamas, Palestinian aspirations, and Israel’s war
conduct and public opinion in the Middle East.
Credit: Quds
News Network
“Seventy per cent of my population is younger than me. For
most of them, they never really knew much about the Palestinian issue. And so
they’re being introduced to it for the first time through this conflict. It’s a
huge problem. Do
I care personally about the Palestinian issue? I don’t, but my people
do,” Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reportedly told US Secretary of
State Antony J. Blinken, according to The Atlantic.
Saudi officials said The Atlantic had quoted the crown
prince inaccurately.
At the bottom line, Messrs. Bin Salman, Nuseibeh and Azaiza
are telling Israel that efforts to bomb Palestinians into submission are
failing, producing a generation that has nowhere to go and nothing to lose, and
dashing Israeli hopes of regional acceptance, even if Gazans’ most immediate
aspiration is to see an end to the war.
“Sinwar’s death is par for the course. Palestinians expected
it, he expected it. Sinwar and others will inspire the next generation of
resistance. It will come, but that is for later. Right now, all we want is an
end to this war,” said a Gazan, who asked not to be identified.
Rather than sparking doom and gloom in Hamas’s ranks, Mr.
Sinwar’s killing is likely to reinforce the group’s sense of success.
“Hamas
has the upper hand. It has remained steadfast” and brought the Israeli
military into “a state of attrition,” the group’s former leader, Khaled Meshal,
told The New York Times in September.
In that vein, Hamas senior official Khalil al-Hayya, confirming
Mr. Sinwar’s killing, suggested that the leader’s death would not weaken the
group’s resolve
to release Israeli hostages kidnapped a year ago only if Israel ends the
war.
Messrs. Meshal and Al-Hayya are both touted as potential
successors to Mr. Sinwar.
Senior Israeli military officials, including Rear Adm.
Daniel Hagari, the military spokesman, have conceded that Mr. Netanyahu’s goal of
destroying Hamas was unrealistic.
In August, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told a
parliamentary committee that Mr. Netanyahu’s goal of “total
victory” over Hamas was “nonsense.”
Retired Major General Gadi Shamni, a former commander of the
Israeli military’s Gaza division and military secretary to Prime Ministers Ehud
Olmert and Ariel Sharon, asserted that “Hamas
is winning this war. Our soldiers are winning every tactical encounter with
Hamas, but we’re losing the war,and in a big way.”
Mr. Shamni attributed Israel’s inability to translate
tactical successes into strategic victories to Mr. Netanyahu’s failure to plan
for a Gazan future involving Israeli withdrawals and a credible Palestinian
administration of the territory.
Credit: Al
Jazeera
The two-week-old siege
of the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza is Exhibit A of Mr. Shamni’s
assessment as are Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah’s escalating attacks on
Israel and the group’s ability to slowdown Israel’s initial ground invasion of
southern Lebanon.
The siege intends to dislodge Hamas, which, in the absence
of credible Palestinian governance. reestablishes itself in the camp every time
Israel withdraws.
The siege suggests that Mr. Netanyahu’s refusal to present a
plan for credible interim governance and longer-term accommodation of
Palestinian national aspirations is sucking Israel into a low-level guerrilla
war or war of attrition with resistance fighters who have nothing to lose, are
likely to sap Israel’s strength, and will complicate the Jewish state’s efforts
to repair the reputational damage it has inflicted on itself.
“If Israel’s plan is to annex part of Gaza and impose
military rule, how long before thousands of vengeful, angry young men who have
watched their parents and siblings die join a reconstituted Hamas or a new
movement that replaces it and takes
up arms against Israel? And what of the reconstruction of Gaza, which now
resembles a 25-mile-long Dresden? Who will reconstruct it, and who will foot
the bill? asked international affairs scholar Rajan Menon.
“Sinwar is gone, but his departure will do nothing to help
Israel overcome these challenges – which it must if the country hopes for an
end to violent resistance in Gaza and anything resembling long-term peace,” Mr.
Menon added.
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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