By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Fading Chances Of Getting The
Hostages Back
It’s tempting to
believe that the latest escalation in the Middle East, which threatens once
again to engulf the entire region in war, killed the prospects of a long-term
cease-fire in Gaza and the return of Israeli hostages held there—some 115,
according to the official count.
But the painful truth
is that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been sabotaging efforts
at a deal for months, spurning advice from his generals, and conditioning the
Israeli public to accept the idea that the hostages should not be prioritized.
Families and
supporters of Israeli hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7,
2023, protest at Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv on July 21
He has done all that
by stoking divisions in Israeli society—including within the group that
represents families of the Israeli hostages—and rejecting any terms for a
cease-fire, including those put forward by the United States, Israel’s
staunchest ally. As a result, it could be months or even years before the
remaining hostages return to their families. Some might never come home.
For close watchers of
this country, the fact that Israelis have come to accept this reality is
nothing short of shocking. For almost as long as the country has existed, the
social contract has included a commitment to retrieving hostages or prisoners
from enemy hands by almost any means necessary. Usually, that has meant
rescuing them or agreeing to lopsided prisoner swaps.
But Netanyahu, in his
fight for political survival after the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023, has shown
a willingness to sacrifice even the country’s core principles—and its most
vulnerable citizens.
“Every time the deal
is near, he adds new preconditions that torpedo the deal,” a former top
official for Mossad, Israel’s national intelligence agency, told us recently,
referring to Netanyahu.
Hamas and other
gunmen from Gaza killed more than 1,200 people during their surprise incursion
into southern Israel on Oct. 7. They also dragged away 251 hostages and several
corpses—hoping to exchange them for Palestinians held in Israeli prisons.
The hostage crisis
loomed large in the first weeks of the war, and negotiations got underway
quickly, mediated by Qatar, Egypt, and the United States. In a temporary truce
deal reached in November and supported by most Israelis, Hamas freed more than
100 women and children in exchange for the release of hundreds of
Palestinian women and minors imprisoned by Israel. Since then, Israel has
managed to rescue a handful of additional hostages.
Israeli officials
estimate that only about half of the remaining 115 hostages have survived the
fighting in Gaza so far. Negotiations for their release have been intermittent,
with both Israel and Hamas putting up obstacles.
However analysts
believe something has changed in Netanyahu’s approach to the hostage issue
since that first deal in November. Instead of prioritizing their release, he
has come to view a long-term cease-fire with Hamas—and an accompanying hostage
deal—as politically risky. In recent months, he has downplayed the hostage
issue and dwelled instead on the need for Israel to achieve a “total victory”
over Hamas—even as military officials and analysts say the goal is out of
reach.
“For [Netanyahu], the
end of the war or a long-term cease-fire would be a political death
certificate. His messianic partners will leave the government, and he will be
forced out the door,” the retired Mossad official said. Netanyahu’s coalition
includes far-right religious parties that oppose cease-fire efforts and hold
the key to his parliamentary majority.
For families of the
hostages, watching Netanyahu put the issue on the back burner has been
excruciating. Many of them take part in weekly protests around the country,
urging the Israeli leader to accept a cease-fire deal that would bring the
hostages home.
“Everyone knows that
you [Netanyahu] decided to sacrifice the hostages on the altar of your
political survival. You prefer to drag Israel toward an escalation [of war]
instead of signing a deal which will prevent it,” said Einav Zangauker, the mother of one of the hostages, speaking at a
recent rally in Tel Aviv. “Because of you, the hostages are subjected to
torture or worse and will die in captivity.” Zangauker,
whose 24-year-old son, Matan, is still being held in Gaza, told us that she
considered Netanyahu “the most cruel prime minister” in Israel’s 76-year
history.
One of the hostages that was freed:
Most of Israel’s
current and former security chiefs say privately that Netanyahu is driven by
his quest to remain in power and not by the best interests of the hostages or
the country.
The serving heads of
Israel’s security agencies have repeatedly told Netanyahu that gaining the
release of hostages is not only a moral obligation but a decision that would
improve Israel’s strategic posture at home and abroad, according to Israeli
media and our sources. Netanyahu has rejected their recommendations and
described his critics as “weak.”
Several of the
security chiefs have considered taking responsibility for the failures of Oct.
7 and stepping down, according to their public comments. But they must surely
worry that Netanyahu would replace them with cronies, making the chances of a
hostage agreement even slimmer.
In the meantime, the
public campaign for a hostage deal has diminished. Families keep protesting,
joined by anti-Netanyahu demonstrators who demand early elections, but much of
the wider public appears to have given up hope.
Within Netanyahu’s
government, a few far-right politicians are increasingly viewing the war as an
opportunity to finally annex the West Bank and perhaps the Gaza Strip as well.
Netanyahu has said Israel would not rule Gaza in the long term, but he needs the
support of the far-right factions to continue governing. Netanyahu faces
criminal charges of fraud and bribery, in a slow-moving trial that began four
years ago. Losing his hold on power would potentially make it harder for him to
fight the criminal charges.
Netanyahu has ruled
the country, in total, for more than 16 years. He claims that he is uniquely
qualified to address Israel’s problems, including a war on multiple
fronts—Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Iran, and the West Bank. But the
internal divisions he has stoked are taking a toll on the country. While the
Oct. 7 attack appeared to unite Israelis, the ongoing war, the agonizing over
the hostage ordeal, and frustrations with the government have created a
domestic crisis that might be deeper than any Israel has experienced since its
founding. It’s not unusual to hear Israelis talk about examples in Jewish
history when internal divisions led to national tragedies—including the Roman
destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 C.E. and the subsequent banishment
of Jews from their homeland.
Netanyahu invokes
this history in his speeches, but it rings hollow to many Israelis. “He is a
real threat to the very existence of Israel,” said Yair Golan, a retired
general who now leads the left-center Democrats.
“As far as he is
concerned, the future of Israel is only secondary to his fate. … Like many
leaders throughout history who stay too long in power, he is living in his
bubble and became detached from reality.”
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