Israel Has No Choice but to Fight
On
March 12, 2024
Opinion Columnist
On
Saturday, President Biden warned that Benjamin Netanyahu’s approach to the war
in Gaza was “hurting
Israel more than helping Israel.” The
Israeli prime minister replied the next day that Biden was “wrong.” The rift between the two leaders means that Israel risks losing its
most important pillar of military and diplomatic support.
I’ve
argued that Israel has no choice but to destroy Hamas as an effective fighting
force. Here I imagine a conversation with an intelligent critic of that view.
Thousands
of Gazan civilians, many of them children, have now been killed, bombed in
their homes or out of them. Now they face a humanitarian catastrophe in the
form of medicine and food shortages, even starvation.
How
can you possibly justify it?
Like all wars, this one is horrible and heartbreaking. But
I blame Hamas, not Israel, for the devastation.
Look,
Hamas is a terrorist group whose leaders should face justice for the massacres
of Oct. 7. But it isn’t Hamas’s bombs, missiles or artillery that have leveled
Gaza. It’s Israel’s.
Right.
And Hamas, which started the war, could put a halt to that rain of fire
tomorrow. It rejected a six-week cease-fire that would have
paused the fighting and allowed much more aid in exchange for the release of
roughly 40 of the remaining 100 Israeli hostages. It could stop the fighting
for good by simply surrendering.
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Hamas
may not want to stop the fighting, but there’s little we can do about that.
Israel can stop its assault, and thus spare Palestinian lives. And because
Biden has leverage on Israel, he should use it.
The
best way to get Hamas to stop fighting is to beat it. If Israel were to end the
war now, with several Hamas battalions intact, at least four things would
happen.
First, it would be impossible to set up a political
authority in Gaza that isn’t Hamas: If the Palestinian Authority or local
Gazans tried to do so, they wouldn’t live for long. Second, Hamas would
reconstitute its military force as Hezbollah did in Lebanon after the 2006 war
with Israel — and Hamas has promised to repeat the attacks of Oct. 7 “a second, a third, a fourth” time.
Third, the Israeli hostages would be stuck in their awful captivity
indefinitely.
Fourth,
there would never be a Palestinian state. No Israeli government is going to
agree to a Palestinian state in the West Bank if it risks resembling Gaza.
All
that is speculative. The reality is that children are hungry, the sick aren’t
getting medicine, innocent Palestinians are being killed, now. It’s wrong to
avert theoretical harms by causing actual ones.
It
might be more speculative if this weren’t the fifth major war that Hamas has
provoked since it seized power in Gaza in 2007. After each war, Hamas’s
capabilities have grown stronger and its ambitions bolder. At some point this
had to end; for Israelis, Oct. 7 was that point.
Maybe,
but why can’t Israel be much more judicious in its use of force?
Do
you have any specific suggestions for how Israel can defeat Hamas while being
more sparing of civilians?
I’m
not a military expert.
I’ve noticed that whenever Israel’s critics lecture the
country on better calibrating its use of force, they don’t have any concrete
suggestions. Are Israelis smart enough to fight better, but too stupid to
appreciate the diplomatic consequences of not doing so?
Maybe
they’re thirsty for vengeance.
The
reality of urban warfare is that it’s exceptionally costly and difficult. The
United States under Barack Obama and Donald Trump spent nine months helping
Iraqi forces flatten the city of Mosul to defeat ISIS, with results that
looked even worse than Gaza does today. I don’t remember calls for “Cease-Fire
Now” then. Hamas has made it even more difficult for Israel because, instead of
sheltering civilians in its immense network of tunnels, it shelters itself.
Even
so, that doesn’t relieve Israel of the obligation to prevent a humanitarian
catastrophe.
It’s
not as if Israel is not lifting a finger. On Sunday alone, 225 truckloads of aid entered Gaza through Israel, according
to the Israeli military. But you seem to think that the government of Israel’s
primary responsibility is to the welfare of the people of Gaza. It isn’t. As
with any government, its obligations are to its own people.
Israelis
are mostly doing fine now. It’s Palestinians who are dying.
Israel
has spent the last five months degrading Hamas’s military capabilities to the
point that it seems to have run out of rockets to fire at Israel. And around
200,000 Israelis are living as refugees inside
their own country because its borders aren’t secure. No country can tolerate
that. Israel didn’t come into existence to showcase the victimization of Jews.
It came into existence to end their victimization.
Well,
since you’re alluding to the Holocaust, it surely can’t be in Israel’s
interests to be seen perpetrating a version of it in Gaza. Just look at the
worldwide explosion of antisemitism since Oct. 7.
That analogy is false and offensive on many levels. Israel
is fighting a war it didn’t seek, against an enemy sworn to its destruction and
holding scores of its citizens hostage. If Israel had wanted to wipe out Gazans
as Germans sought to wipe out Jews, it could have done so on the first day of
the war. Israel is fighting a tough war against an evil enemy that puts its own
civilians in harm’s way. Maybe there should be more public pressure on Hamas to
surrender than on Israel to save Hamas from the consequences of its actions.
As
for antisemitism, the war hasn’t generated a torrent of antisemitism so much as
it has exposed it.
Probably
a mix of the two. Still, you make the mistake of imagining that Hamas can be
defeated. You can’t kill an idea, particularly by generating the terrible
resentments that are surely brewing in Gaza and throughout the Arab world.
By
that logic, the Allies should have spared Germany because National Socialism
was also an idea. You may not be able to kill an idea but you can defang it,
just as you can persuade future generations that some ideas have terrible
consequences for those who espouse them.
So
what do you suggest the Biden administration do?
Help Israel win the war decisively so that Israelis and
Palestinians can someday win the peace.