For Hamas, the kidnapping of the three Jewish
teens was a massive failure -- no Palestinian prisoners were freed,
Israel devastated Hamas' infrastructure in the West Bank, and it put the
unity government in jeopardy and deepened Hamas' isolation.
An Israeli Air Force strike
in Gaza this week
|
Photo credit: AFP |
This week, Israel was on the verge of
exploding: In Gaza, there were growing indications of escalation; in
Judea and Samaria, tensions became increasingly more palpable; in east
Jerusalem riots raged after the murder of a boy from Shuafat; inside
Israel, rage abounded when the bodies of the three kidnapped teens were
discovered, to the point of potential vigilante justice by groups and
individuals.
Amid this chaos, the Diplomatic-Security
Cabinet tried to reach conclusions, convening three emergency meetings
between Monday and Wednesday, in efforts to arrive at the appropriate,
proportional response. There was no contingency plan ready to be
executed. Now, after two and a half weeks of pounding the Hamas
infrastructure in the West Bank, the Israel Defense Forces are running
out of targets, and certainly the kind that can be presented to the
Israeli public as a triumph.
The Diplomatic-Security Cabinet has made
decisions, but they are the kind of decisions that require time and
persistence: continuing arrests; confiscating funds; shutting down
welfare organizations ("dawah") that spread Hamas' teachings.
The demand for wider-scale offensives, like
the calls to "erase Hamas from Hebron," are nothing but empty words: Of
the 170,000 residents in Hebron, 25,000 are declared Hamas supporters
who voted Hamas in the elections, but are not involved in terror. There
is no legal justification to arrest them or deport them, and certainly
no way to remove Hamas from their hearts.
However, Israel does have several viable
options at its disposal, and it is these options that have split the
cabinet over the last week. Economy and Trade Minister Naftali Bennett
and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, as one would expect, were in
favor of launching a wider offensive that would include Gaza. Justice
Minister Tzipi Livni and Finance Minister Yair Lapid wanted to focus on
the West Bank and avoid escalation in the south. Livni and Lapid were
(surprisingly) joined by Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch.
Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
ultimately made the deciding call, joining the Livni-Lapid-Aharonovitch
camp.
Midweek, however, the balance shifted as
rockets fired from Gaza began raining down on the south. Officially,
Hamas continued to insist that it was adhering to the cease-fire struck
after the 2012 Operation Pillar of Defense. They even communicated clear
messages to Israel (via Egyptian mediation) indicating that they were
not interested in any escalation. But the facts on the ground, and the
information pouring in from other sources, indicated otherwise. In one
instance, on Tuesday morning, Hamas was directly responsible for rocket
fire into Israel, apparently in response to the assassination of one of
its men in a prior Israeli airstrike. Since then, Hamas has
demonstratively refrained from preventing other terror organization from
firing projectiles into Israel.
Reconciliation and rockets
Several Israeli experts believe that an
escalation in Gaza would actually benefit Hamas, which is currently at
an all-time low. By Hamas standards, the kidnapping of three Israeli
teens was a tactical failure -- the bodies of the boys were found, and
their abduction failed to advance the release of Palestinian prisoners.
The only thing it did was decimate Hamas infrastructure in the West Bank
and jeopardize Hamas strategy. The Palestinian unity government is
shaky and the global isolation of Hamas, which was supposed to ease up
thanks to the pact with Fatah, only deepened.
Hamas' reality in Gaza is also grim: The
much-anticipated reconciliation with Iran has not materialized yet, the
Rafah border crossing into Egypt has not been opened, the salaries of
47,000 public servants have not been paid. People who visited the Gaza
Strip this week have said that they had never before seen such a gloomy
Ramadan there.
Ostensibly, Hamas' despair is Israel's
opportunity to strike at the organization. Some even believe that
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah party are
encouraging such a development, in efforts to weaken their
enemy-partner.
There are plenty of viable targets in Gaza,
ranging from leaders and commanders (the highest ranking officials have
gone underground, ever since the discovery of the three bodies on
Monday) to military targets, namely the rocket firing mechanism.
However, the Israeli defense establishment has warned that the
escalation could come at a dangerous price: Beyond the direct results of
combat -- casualties and loss on both sides and a possible widening of
the rocket range to include Tel Aviv and possibly even further north --
Israel could draw the ire of the global community, whose attention is
currently focused on Iraq, and risk another uprising in the West Bank.
The ministers opposed to launching an
offensive, led by Ya'alon, wondered how effective it could be when, in
the absence of any Israeli desire to re-conquer the strip, the only
possible outcome could be a cease-fire agreement, or, in other words,
back to where we are now.
It appears that ultimately it was Hamas that
decided Israel's dilemma (or intensified the dilemma, depending on how
you look at it). On the one hand, Hamas sent out conciliatory messages,
but on the other hand, the rockets and mortars were constantly fired.
The retaliatory Israeli Air Force strikes on dozens of Gaza targets did
achieve some operative objectives -- they somewhat reduced the
manufacturing and launching capability of the rocket squads -- but they
failed to achieve the key objective, which is deterrence.
Ever since Operation Pillar of Defense, Israel
has made sure to respond to every rocket launch, attacking the
sovereign group, Hamas. After all, it is Hamas that is responsible to
impose its will even on the smaller insurgent groups. In most instances
it was enough, but this past week, it had the opposite effect: The
strikes only exacerbated the rocket attacks.
Hamas has refrained from expanding the range
of its rockets, true, and in a substantial number of instances rockets
were intentionally aimed into open spaces rather than populated areas,
but the rocket fire continues, and with steady force. It seems that
these days, under the current circumstances, the question in Israel is
no longer whether to attack Gaza but to what extent. Especially in
efforts to prevent an unwanted deterioration.
The options on the table
Sliding into a Gaza offensive would be
possible, among other reasons, due to the lack of targets in the West
Bank. The kidnappers who killed the three Israeli boys are still at
large, and when they are apprehended, they probably will not go down
without a fight. Other options have hit various walls: Terrorists'
houses will be demolished, eventually, but only after the High Court
finishes debating the appeals; deporting Hamas officials to Gaza -- an
option that enjoyed a lot of support -- has been bogged down by the
legal advisers who claim that it would violate international law;
speeding up construction, which has already been approved (including a
new neighborhood slated to be built on state lands in the Hebron hills,
close to where the three boys were kidnapped), takes planning and time.
Fear of a triple front
As things stand now, considering the public's
frustration with the tragic (yet predictable) end of the abduction
ordeal, Israel is headed toward dangerous territory. It does not take
more than a cursory glance at the country's social networks to see the
radicalization, including the explicit use of words like "revenge" and
"murder."
For the Shin Bet security agency it was enough
to prompt them to tighten surveillance of the usual suspects, the
extreme rightists. But that is not enough. The fact that thousands of
soldiers rushed to join the revenge bandwagon indicates that, at its
moderate end, the soldiers' state of mind is showing signs of anarchy,
and at its extreme end, the rage could potentially be translated into
action during a military operation.
The IDF Spokesperson's Unit promptly condemned this
behavior and warned that any soldier caught inciting would be severely
punished, but this likely will not help. It takes wider action, mainly
political, with the help of religious and spiritual figures who hold
sway, to stop the current, which could end up with incidents like the
murder of the Arab teenager in east Jerusalem. As of Thursday, the
motive behind that murder was not yet clear, but the potential damage it
could cause is clear: riots staged by Jerusalem's Arab population, and
possibly in the West Bank as well, which could escalate during Friday
prayers, and acts of revenge that could speed up the deterioration we
have seen over the last three weeks. From there, Israel would be
fighting on three fronts -- the West Bank, Gaza and at home.
No comments:
Post a Comment