Caspit:
Apparently,
there is no way to avoid the creation of a commission of inquiry once Operation
Protective Edge is over. The commission will have to discuss what Israeli
cabinet ministers are describing as a “resounding security failure.” Why didn’t
Israel mark the threat posed by the Hamas tunnels as a strategic threat, as is
now so obvious? Why didn’t it devote thought, effort, budgets and attention to
this threat, just as it did to the rocket threat, which received an appropriate
response in the form of the Iron Dome air-defense system?
The
commission of inquiry will have to investigate three distinct tiers of
questioning: Did the security forces have intelligence about the tunnels? If
so, was it relayed to the political leadership? And if it was relayed, why
didn’t the political leadership act accordingly? It should be remembered that
had Hamas not rejected the Egyptian cease-fire initiative, Israel would not
have discovered the scope of this threat, and Hamas would have continued
digging and expanding its tunnel network, right until the moment it was
deployed.
One
senior Cabinet member I spoke with this week described that possibility to me:
“Imagine," he said, “that we are in the middle of a conflict with
Hezbollah up north. Our top-notch infantry brigades are up there, in the north,
when suddenly Hamas deploys its network of dozens of tunnels all at once. Some
2,000 Hamas commandos suddenly burst out of them and embark on a killing spree,
slaughtering thousands of people in the cities and towns across Israel’s south,
from Sderot through Ashkelon, Netivot and Ofakim, maybe even all the way to
Beersheba. Who would stop them? The police? The air force? It would take weeks
to clean up the mess, and at the end of the entire process, we would find death
and destruction across southern Israel. I know,” the minister continued, “that
it sounds like a figment of the imagination, but based on what we are
discovering these days, the scenario is far more realistic than it is
imaginary. In this region, the reality easily exceeds anything we can imagine.”
What
originally led to Israel’s ground assault in Gaza was the tunnel near Kibbutz Sufa from which 13 Hamas commandos emerged. They were seen coming out of the
tunnel by scouts in an Israel Defense Forces observation post. Video of the ensuing battle, which took place that same morning, aired on all of Israel’s TV
networks. The commandos can be seen coming out of the tunnel dressed in IDF
uniforms, with all of the standard equipment, with body armor, camouflaged
helmets and toques (knit caps) and an enormous amount of weapons. They crawled
across the ground together, performing together rolls and rescue maneuvers,
until, apparently, they suddenly heard the motor of one of the IDF’s unmanned
aircraft or the ignition of a tank that was turned on in the sector by
accident, and they raced and pushed themselves back into the tunnel. An IDF
aircraft fired a few rockets, but not all of the commandos were hit.
The
film footage shocked Israel. Suddenly, everybody realized how permeable
Israel’s border wall along the Gaza Strip really is, how much we had been
living for the past few years beside a barrel of gunpowder on the edge of a
volcano. Even ministers Yair Lapid and Tzipi Livni, who did not support a
ground incursion until that morning, withdrew their opposition, clearing the
way for the operation to begin. At first, it was said that it would take three
days to clean out the tunnels and destroy them. Now they are already talking
about three weeks. This is not some effort to win time. It is an effort to win
lives. Israel believed before that Hamas had three strategic tunnels. The
current estimate is that there are 30, and perhaps a lot more.
As this
piece is being written, an end to the ground operation in Gaza seems to lie far
in the future. Efforts by US Secretary of State John Kerry to bring about an
end to the fighting are not bearing any results. Hamas is not interested in a
cease-fire. It is interested in prolonging the fighting, which is costing
hundreds of residents of the Gaza Strip their lives, because the organization
is well aware that this is the only way to break through the international
blockade. It is the only way for Hamas to get past the dead end that it has
reached as a result of its behavior over the past few years.
So they
continue to fight. What helps them along is the realization that Israel will
restrain itself and not dare “go all the way.” Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu may be a big talker, but he is somewhat less of a doer. He will not
have the courage to sacrifice the necessary lives (about 200 soldiers according
to one estimate) to conquer Gaza. He is worried about complications, he recoils
from international pressure and he has difficulty making decisions. That is why
what we have now is a paradoxical situation verging on the absurd: Israel is
desperate for a cease-fire, and Hamas is thumbing its nose at it. The entire
international community (except for Egypt) is desperate for a cease-fire, and
Hamas is thumbing its nose up at it. The strongest, best equipped and most
powerful army in the Middle East is completely submerged in Gaza, fighting a
hopeless war against a guerilla army that is carefully concealed and
camouflaged, well-trained and unwavering. But the outcome remains unresolved
because Israel’s political leadership is afraid of any complications, afraid of
casualties and afraid of international public opinion.
I write
this as a journalist who is identified more with the Israeli left. Throughout
my journalistic career, I supported, and continue to support, all of the peace
plans, from Oslo to the Geneva agreement. In order to resolve this conflict, I
am prepared to give up the occupied territories (with territorial swaps), East
Jerusalem (although, like all Israelis, regardless of who they are, I will not
agree to the return of the refugees to Israel), everything. I would do all that
on the condition that there is someone with whom that peace agreement could be
signed.
It
seems to me that we are at the stage that the world is wising up to Hamas.
Given the international community’s support for Israel, which was not taken for
granted, it seems to me that the world has already internalized that this was a
war between good and evil, between a culture of life and a cult of death. Hamas
is the Islamic State, IS. Hamas is Jabhat al-Nusra. Hamas is Ansar Beit al-Maqdis. They are all products of the same school: the oppression of women,
the expulsion of Christians, a war of annihilation against the Jews. Some of
the aforementioned groups even slaughter Shiite Muslims, solely because they
are not Sunnis. This is not some figment of the imagination. It is not a
delusion. These are firm facts that any child can find on YouTube.
The
facts are that even after the current conflict began, Israel agreed to a
cease-fire and Hamas refused. It is piling up the people of Gaza as a defensive
shield for the means of destruction that it is acquiring wholesale — and then
complaining that Israel is killing civilians. On Wednesday, July 23, three young Israeli paratroopers were killed when they entered a booby-trapped house
in Beit Hanoun in the Gaza Strip. The US Army would have flattened the house
from the air. The Russian army would have flattened the entire town from the
air. Let’s not even talk about what the Syrian army would have done, because
that’s something of a sensitive issue these days. In contrast, the IDF informs
civilians that it is coming by way of text messages and phone calls and even by
firing warning shots. Hamas responds by firing rockets at a field hospital that
Israel set up in Gaza, where Palestinian civilians were being treated.
No, I
am not saying that Israel made no mistakes or that it has been free of errors.
Not everybody in Israel wants peace. The behavior of Netanyahu, particularly in his dealings with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a moderate, has been
strongly criticized here by me and in many other places, too. He has been
criticized severely, and he will continue to be criticized. But in this war we
must not get confused. This is a war between the Sons of Light and the Sons of Darkness.