bitterlemons-international.org
Middle East Roundtable /
Edition 46-2008
An Israeli View (I):
Limited strategic objectives
by Yossi Alpher
Israel has opted to launch a major attack on Hamas in
Gaza. The idea appears to be to use heavy military force, primarily from the
air, but with a limited objective: to weaken Hamas to a point where it
returns to a ceasefire on conditions congenial to Israel.
The opening conditions are favorable from Israel's standpoint: it achieved
tactical surprise in launching a Sabbath attack while much of the world is
busy with Christmas and New Year celebrations. The United States is
supportive and is in any case between administrations; PM Ehud Olmert's
recent visit to Turkey gave Syria an incentive not to meddle; Egypt shares
Israel's frustration with Hamas and seemingly--through the vehicle of FM
Tzipi Livni's meeting with President Hosni Mubarak on the eve of the
attack--gave its blessing. The Israeli political scene, both (Zionist) left
and right, is supportive, to the extent of setting aside the current
election campaign.
Militarily, Israel ended up with little alternative but to respond to Hamas
rocket attacks. Even the Egyptian mediators between Israel and Hamas agreed
that the latter had unilaterally broken a ceasefire. Hamas seemed to believe
it could fire rockets at Israeli civilians with impunity, while arming and
fortifying Gaza and flouting Egypt's invitation to negotiate a unity
government with the West Bank-based PLO.
Yet the difficult part for Israel is to attack, achieve something, then get
out. Minister of Defense Ehud Barak and IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi
are clearly not anxious to get drawn into ambiguous ground warfare that
could multiply Israeli losses and lead to reoccupation of Gazan territory.
Nor is the Israeli public or body politic interested in renewed, open-ended
occupation of 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza or even a portion thereof. On
the other hand, the ghost of Israel's failed war against Hizballah in 2006
hovers over this operation: it must end by strengthening Israel's deterrent
profile against the militant Islamists.
At the end of the day, however, the operation confirms the contention I have
voiced in these virtual pages repeatedly over recent weeks and months:
neither Israel nor anyone else has a long-term workable strategy for dealing
with Hamas in Gaza. This is a militant terrorist organization that has taken
over a piece of Palestinian territory but refuses to behave like a sovereign
power and, ultimately, glories in the victimhood or martyrdom of its people.
Terms like victory, defeat and peace negotiations are irrelevant here. At
its best, operation "Cast Lead" (the Hebrew term relates to the current
Hanukah holiday, besides sounding appropriate in military terms) will
deliver a few more months of ceasefire and tenuous coexistence between
Islamist Gaza and its surroundings. Indeed, the operation apparently doesn't
aspire to achieve more than that.
And at its worst? The attack on Gaza could, particularly if prolonged over
weeks as Minister of Defense Barak threatens, inflame anti-Israeli and
anti-western sentiments throughout the Arab and Muslim worlds. Rioting could
spread across the West Bank and among Palestinian citizens of Israel.
Hizballah could open a second front in the north, and terrorists could
attack anywhere. Hamas rockets will almost certainly continue to rain down
in an expanding circle around Gaza (Israeli military planners, learning from
the Second Lebanon War, have been careful to caution that this operation
cannot stamp out the rocket fire militarily). Finally, Hamas could refuse to
renew the ceasefire, despite its losses. The war in Gaza could become a
major election issue in Israel. And it could end up as Barack Obama's first
presidential crisis.
In the fog of war, alternative strategies look more distant than ever. Yet
they are worth recalling.
One is to open up the Gaza passages and cease inflicting ineffective
collective punishment on 1.5 million Gazans, making clear that Israel's
quarrel is only with the Hamas military and political leadership in Gaza and
beyond. Once this operation is over, and assuming Israel emerges from it in
a position of strength, that would be the time to take this step.
Another is to seek direct talks with Hamas, on the assumption that the
movement is here to stay and cannot be ignored forever. This is not simple:
most (but not all) Hamas leaders don't want to talk to us; those who do have
a limited and problematic agenda that does not include recognition of Israel
or peace. Then too, we have to be careful not to undercut the leadership of
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who does recognize Israel and does
wants peace. Still, this option must find a place on our strategic agenda,
if only in the form of informal, unofficial contacts.
Finally, if nothing else works and Israeli vulnerability to Hamas rockets
expands in an increasingly broad radius around the Strip, we may indeed end
up with the option we fear the most: reoccupying all or part of the Strip
with the goal of militarily eliminating Hamas. The price would be heavy
losses on both sides and an open-ended occupation without an exit strategy.
Everyone would condemn us; nobody would volunteer to take Gaza off our
hands. Hamas, for its part, is counting on our reticence to invoke this
option, which would set us and the Middle East back by 40 years.
I wish this operation quick success with minimal civilian losses all round.
If Hamas does not show concern for Gazans and ask for a renewed ceasefire,
Israel should try ceasing all operations for a day as a gesture to allow
Hamas to end the conflict with a measure of dignity, through Egyptian or
Qatari mediation. Yet under the best of circumstances, none of this will
really solve our Hamas problem.- Published 29/12/2008 © bitterlemons.org
Yossi Alpher is coeditor of the bitterlemons.org family of internet
publications. He is former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies at Tel Aviv University.
Bitterlemons-international.org is
an internet forum for an array of world perspectives on the Middle East and
its specific concerns. It aspires to engender greater understanding about
the Middle East region and open a new common space for world thinkers and
political leaders to present their viewpoints and initiatives on the region.
Editors Ghassan Khatib and Yossi Alpher can be reached at
ghassan@bitterlemons-international.org and
yossi@bitterlemons-international.org, respectively.
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