By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
If devastation is the
goal, Israel’s military campaign in the Gaza Strip has been a resounding
success. More than two months after Hamas killed over 1,100 people on October
7, Israeli air and ground operations have killed some 20,000 Palestinians, many
of them children, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry. Much of Gaza
lies in ruins, with the United Nations estimating that almost 20 percent of the
territory’s prewar structures have been destroyed. More than half of Gazans are
experiencing severe hunger, unemployment has risen to 85 percent, and disease
is spreading.
Israel’s war in Gaza
differs from many other conflicts in that there is not a single finite
objective. There is no invading force to be expelled, no territory to be
conquered, and no dictator to be toppled. Nonetheless, two months on, a more or
less clear list of goals is emerging. Israel seeks to destroy Hamas, capturing
or killing its leaders, shattering its military capacity, and ending its power
in Gaza. It seeks the release of the hostages who were kidnapped on October 7
and remain alive, as well as the bodies of those who have been killed. It wants
to prevent another attack, particularly by Hezbollah, Iran’s proxy in Lebanon.
It wants to maintain international support, especially from the United States,
and safeguard the diplomatic gains it has made with Arab countries in recent
years. And it seeks to rebuild the trust in security institutions that the
public lost after the attacks.
Israel’s response can
seem confusing to outsiders, but it makes more sense when these competing goals
are considered. Each has its metrics and complications, and some are in
direct conflict with one another. So far, the results of Israel’s campaign have
been mixed: Israel has hit Hamas hard, but it is falling short in many areas,
inflicting a devastating toll on civilians in Gaza and paying a heavy price in
terms of international support. Israel’s leaders are often trying to have it
all. Instead, they need to make hard choices about which goals to prioritize
and which to downplay.
Because maintaining
U.S. support is vital, Israel should focus on targeting Hamas’s leaders more
than destroying the group’s broader military forces and infrastructure. It
should make more of an effort to reduce civilian casualties. It should seek to
deter, rather than destroy, Hezbollah, maintaining larger numbers of forces
near Gaza and Lebanon even after active hostilities end to reassure the Israeli
people. And it should focus more on who will replace Hamas in Gaza, which
requires bolstering the Palestinian Authority and Palestinian technocrats. If
Israel instead tries to have it all, it risks having nothing.
Appetite For Destruction
No visitor to Israel
can miss the sense of pain, fury, and mistrust that pervades every
conversation. The term “earthquake” came up again and again when I asked about
October 7. One Israeli security official declared that “something fundamental
broke” in the country that day. (To encourage candor, we agreed to not to
identify our interview subjects.) Israelis believe that they cannot go back to
a pre–October 7 world, with a hostile and intact Hamas across the border in
Gaza. In their eyes, the brutality of the attacks showed Hamas to be beyond
redemption, unable to be deterred or contained.
The problem goes
beyond Gaza, however. With justification, many Israelis blame Iran for Hamas’s
impressive arsenal and the innovative methods of its fighters. They fear that
Iran’s proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah, will also attack Israel, using its
exponentially larger rocket arsenal and far more skilled fighters to launch a
much more devastating attack on Israel’s north. Since October 7, over 200,000
Israelis have fled areas near Gaza and Lebanon.
At the same time,
Israelis no longer trust their security institutions. As one Israeli security
official explained, “Before October 7, intelligence told the country, ‘We know
Hamas,’ while the military said, ‘We can handle Hamas.’” Both, he added, were wrong.
It is now hard for Israeli leaders to reassure the public that next time, the
military and intelligence services will keep them safe.
To rebuild public
confidence, Israeli leaders have vowed to utterly destroy Hamas. Days after the
attack, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant issued one such pledge.
“We will wipe this thing called Hamas, ISIS-Gaza, off the face of the earth,” he
said. “It will cease to exist.” But destroying Hamas can mean many different
things in practice.
The focus of Israel’s
current military campaign is to destroy Hamas’s military wing, which boasted
around 25,000 to 30,000 members before October 7. At the time of my interviews,
most Israeli officials estimated that 7,000 of those fighters had been killed
in the war. That figure is hard to verify, however, and it may include
Palestinians who fought back against invading forces yet were not formally part
of Hamas’s military wing. The number of fighters appears to be dwindling
further: some Israeli officials told me that more and more are fleeing or
surrendering.
Although the Israel
Defense Forces are inflicting a steep toll on Hamas, the group’s large numbers
and ability to blend in with the population make it difficult to eradicate,
especially without killing a huge number of Palestinian civilians. Urban warfare
is a nightmare for even the best militaries, and the IDF has already lost more
than 100 soldiers in its current campaign. Adding to the difficulty, Hamas has located many of its military assets near or in
civilian facilities such as mosques and schools. In addition, Gaza has a
vast tunnel network, more extensive than Israeli intelligence had originally
thought, where fighters can move undetected and leaders can hide. Hamas also has deep roots in Gaza, with
decades-old ties to mosques, hospitals, schools, and charities, and since 2007,
it has been the government there. The group permeates everyday life in Gaza:
the doctor, the police officer, the garbage collector, and the teacher may all
have links to Hamas, making it difficult to eradicate the group beyond its
military wing.
Israel, of course,
will not be able to kill every single Hamas fighter. But it may be able to kill
enough members, especially leaders and veteran forces, to shatter the group’s
military capacity. In this vision of victory, Hamas’s units would no longer be
able to fight effectively and launch operations against Israel. If there were a
new government in Gaza, the remnants of Hamas would be more easily suppressed
because that administration’s security forces would have a decent chance of
finding and suppressing isolated cells of fighters.
Smoke rises over Khan Yunis in southern Gaza during an
Israeli bombardment on Dec. 20.
Hamas also has a vast
military infrastructure. This includes not only its tunnel network but also its
rockets, missiles, launch pads, and ammunition depots. The assets are
everywhere: Hamas has been preparing for an Israeli invasion for more than a
decade. Part of the purpose of Israel’s invasion is to destroy this
infrastructure, which in turn requires bombing or occupying much of Gaza. There
isn’t much publicly available data for quantifying this progress, but it can be
measured by the frequency and size of Hamas’s rocket and missile attacks, the
quantity of ammunition Hamas fighters have, and the territory that Hamas
controls—all of which, according to the officials I interviewed, are steadily
shrinking. Some of these observations are visible to outsiders, whereas others
require detailed intelligence to judge.
Hide And Seek
Another metric of
success is whether Hamas’s leadership has been destroyed. Israel has a long
history of killing terrorist leaders, and Israeli officials have announced
plans to assassinate Hamas’s leaders after the war ends. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has called Hamas’s top official, Yahya Sinwar, a
“dead man walking,” and even before October 7, Israeli forces had repeatedly
tried to kill Hamas’s military leader, Mohammed Deif, as well as his
second-in-command, Marwan Issa. The Israeli government reports that it
has already killed many Hamas leaders in the current military
campaign, with Netanyahu claiming that half of Hamas’s battalion commanders are
now dead.
Yet like destroying
Hamas’s military infrastructure, eliminating its leadership is difficult. Deif,
Issa, and Sinwar are believed to be hiding underground. More junior leaders are
being killed, but at least some of them will be replaced by other competent
leaders. Because of the difficulty of destroying infrastructure and killing
Hamas members and leaders, most of the Israeli security officials I spoke to
estimated that another six to nine months of high-intensity military operations
are necessary.
Even if the current
cohort of leaders is killed, however, Hamas has a deep bench of replacements.
Ever since Hamas’s founding in 1987, Israel has routinely killed or jailed its
high-level leaders, yet the organization has endured. It has ample lower-level
leaders and large support networks to draw on. That said, killing Sinwar and
Deif, in particular, would have political value for Israel, even if Hamas
replaced them with equally competent and hostile leaders. Both have become
symbols of October 7, and an Israeli government could more credibly claim
victory if they were killed, even if many of their fellow leaders survived.
Beyond any individual
leader, Hamas embodies an ideology that will be even harder to eliminate. The
idea behind muqawama, or resistance, is that the way to defeat Israel
(and, for that matter, the United States) is through persistent military force,
a credo also embraced by Hezbollah and Iran. Should Israel devastate Hamas but
a strong new organization with the same mindset take its place, Israel will
only have replaced one foe with another. In the past, Israel has nearly
eliminated individual Palestinian terrorist groups, such as Al Saiqa, a
once-strong Baathist group backed by Syria in the 1960s and 1970s whose leader,
Zuheir Mohsen, was gunned down by Israeli agents in 1979. Israel has greatly
diminished others, such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a
leftist group famed for its airplane hijackings in the 1960s and 1970s and a
hang-glider attack on Israel in 1987. But would-be terrorists simply joined
other groups, including Hamas.
Smoke rising in Gaza, December 2023
The ideology of
resistance is popular among Palestinians, and October 7 has made it even more
so. Hamas deeply hurt Israel, which many Palestinians, humiliated by decades of
occupation, regard with glee. Israel’s destructive military campaign, with its
large civilian death toll, has further angered Palestinians, and Hamas’s
seizure of hostages has forced Israel to release some detained Palestinians, a
goal that past negotiations by moderate Palestinians were unable to
achieve. A poll conducted in late November and early December by
the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey
Research found that 82 percent of
Palestinians in the West Bank support the attack. Eventually, Palestinians may
look at the destruction in Gaza and conclude that violent resistance makes
their lives worse, and polls show that there is less support for October 7 in
Gaza, which is paying the price of Hamas’s brutality. But so far, support for
Hamas has grown.
A very different
aspect of destroying Hamas involves its long-term replacement as the government
of Gaza. Someone must govern the strip and prevent Hamas from returning to
power, and Israel has no interest in being a long-term occupier. On this
question, however, there is little progress, and if anything, the situation for
Israel is worse than on October 7. No outside power wants to act as Israel’s
police force in Gaza.
U.S. President Joe
Biden has called for a “revitalized Palestinian Authority” to govern Gaza. The
PA now controls the West Bank and works closely with Israel there on security,
but its leadership is incompetent and unpopular. Israel’s harsh policies and expansion
of settlements in the West Bank steadily undermined the PA there, and its
invasion of Gaza has worsened the organization’s legitimacy problem, as
Palestinians admire Hamas’s defiance and see the PA as complicit in Israel’s
occupation. “There is no Palestinian leadership,” one interviewee noted acidly,
even as he added, “Palestinians must control Gaza.” If the PA were put in
charge of Gaza, Palestinians would see it as a handmaid of the brutal Israeli
occupiers. Without significant support from Israel, the PA’s forces would be
overwhelmed even by a remnant of Hamas.
Held Hostage
The faces of hostages
stared out from posters. Their treatment in Gaza and the need for their release
came up constantly in my conversations. Hamas took roughly 240 hostages on
October 7, and a little under half have been freed. The remainder, estimated at
129 today, are still in Gaza, and it is unclear how many of them survive.
(Israel believes at least 20 of them have died.) At a psychological level, the
presence of over 100 hostages is an open wound for Israel. At a tactical level,
it complicates the IDF’s operations.
To comprehend the
scale of the trauma for Israelis, consider how Israel has handled hostage
situations in the past. In 2011, it traded more than 1,000 Palestinian
prisoners for a single Israeli soldier whom Hamas had captured, Gilad Shalit.
Since October 7, it has already freed around 240 prisoners in exchange for
Hamas’s liberating more than 100 of those captured on October 7, including
23 citizens of Thailand and one from the Philippines, as well as many dual
nationals. Many of the remaining hostages are young Israeli men of
fighting age, and Hamas has vowed to extract a high price for their
release—part of the reason that talks collapsed after the initial releases. The
remaining hostages also include women whom Israelis believe were raped or
otherwise brutalized, and Hamas is reluctant to release them lest they
publicize their abuse. Further complicating the hostage problem, perhaps around
30 of the remaining hostages are under the control of Palestinian Islamic
Jihad, another terrorist group, or other factions in Gaza.
Conducting
high-intensity military operations while trying to free prisoners is
exceptionally difficult. Just as Hamas places its forces among civilians, it
uses hostages as shields. Friendly fire by the IDF has killed some Israeli
prisoners, and IDF bombing has undoubtedly killed more. If military operations
continue, Israel will likely be able to liberate some of those kidnapped, but
it will also lose many in the fighting.
The Northern Front
Israel has long
relied on deterrence to counter its enemies, trying to convince them that any
attack would leave them worse off. Measuring deterrence is difficult. Most
Israelis would have said before October 7 that Hamas was successfully deterred,
but Hamas nonetheless attacked, and its success may inspire other enemies to do
so as well. In general, it is hard to understand the risk-reward calculus of a
foe, especially a highly ideological one.
Even as Israel fights
on in Gaza, it has engaged in a back-and-forth with Hezbollah on its northern
border, with Hezbollah firing rockets and attacking Israeli border posts and
the IDF bombing Hezbollah positions. Israeli leaders hope to demonstrate resolve
by making Hezbollah pay a price for its aggression, but they also wish to avoid
a larger war while their forces are occupied with fighting Hamas. For now,
Hezbollah also seems to want to avoid full conflict, launching limited attacks
to show solidarity with Hamas but avoiding a more intense campaign. The
devastation of Gaza has probably reinforced deterrence: Hezbollah may not want
to risk its strongholds in Beirut looking like the moonscape that is much of
Gaza today.
Eventually, however,
Israel may want to wage a larger war against Hezbollah in the belief that
unless it does so, deterrence will not hold and Israel might be surprised
again. As one Israeli security official put it to me, “Deterrence is something
that lasts until the other side is ready for war.” Hezbollah keeps elite
commando units—its Radwan forces—on the Lebanese border with Israel. It also
has a substantial rocket arsenal that can reach targets throughout Israel and
is big enough to overwhelm the country’s missile defense system.
Israel may be able to
continue deterring Hezbollah from launching a war, but the threat of rockets
and commando attacks—a repeat of October 7, but in the north and from a far
more capable foe—keeps Israeli military planners up at night. In early December,
Gallant, the defense minister, threatened to open up a second front
against Hezbollah if the group didn’t remove its Radwan units from the
border.
Foreign Friends
Israel is a small
country, and despite its military prowess, it cannot operate alone
indefinitely. It also sees itself as a Western democracy and is sensitive to
criticism from other members of that club. So Israeli leaders have looked on
with worry as Western support appears to slip. Anti-Israeli protests have
broken out across Europe, and 17 of 27 EU members supported a UN
General Assembly resolution calling
for a cease-fire.
Arab leaders,
including ones who have recently signed peace treaties with Israel, are very
critical of Israel publicly—even if they strongly oppose Hamas and its brand of
political Islam privately—because Arab publics are outraged by the Palestinian
death toll. Yet the new peace deals with Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, and the United Arab Emirates have been held, and there is little sign that
they are in jeopardy, even as their leaders’ rhetoric grows more heated.
Israel can live with
fraying European ties and growing criticism from Arab states, but losing
American support would be an altogether different matter. The Israelis I spoke
to were uniformly glowing about Biden—a “mensch,” in one interviewee’s words,
and, in another’s, “the biggest friend of Israel since Harry Truman,” who was
the first world leader to officially recognize Israel. On top of the more than
$3 billion Israel receives from the United States in military aid every year,
Congress and the White House are now considering a package that would provide a
$14 billion supplement. Israel also depends on the United States for munitions,
which it needs in Gaza and would need far more of in a war in Lebanon. The
United States also regularly provides cover for Israel at the United
Nations—for instance, vetoing a recent Security Council resolution calling for
a cease-fire in Gaza.
But many Israeli
leaders worry that American support may not last forever, and those who don’t
harbor that fear should. Biden’s party is increasingly split over Israel’s
conduct in the war, the president himself has now criticized “indiscriminate
bombing” in Gaza, and officials in his administration are pressing for an end
to major military operations. The Biden administration has also strongly
discouraged a preventive war in the north against Hezbollah, with senior U.S.
officials, including Biden, telling their Israeli counterparts not to expand
the war. The United States deployed two aircraft carriers to the eastern
Mediterranean Sea with the explicit purpose of deterring Iran and Hezbollah and
the implicit goal of reassuring Israel that the United States has its back—a
marked change from before October 7, when many in the Middle East believed the
United States was turning its back on the region to focus on China.
To maintain strong
U.S. support and avoid putting Arab leaders into a box from which they cannot
escape, Israel will need to tone down its military operations in Gaza. But a
less aggressive and less destructive campaign will make it harder to kill
Hamas’s fighters and demolish its infrastructure. In the north, Israel is also
constrained. Barring a serious act of provocation by Hezbollah, Israel cannot
launch a war in Lebanon and maintain U.S. support.
Keeping The Faith
Israel was a divided
country before October 7, with Netanyahu’s extreme right-wing government
pushing to weaken the judiciary, expand settlements in the West Bank, and
protect the prime minister from allegations of corruption. Now, Israelis are
united behind the goal of destroying Hamas, but many hold Netanyahu responsible
for failing to prevent the attack and want to see him resign.
Israelis’ loss of
faith in their leaders might simply seem like normal politics, not anything to
do with counterterrorism, but in fact, such an outcome represents a major goal
of terrorists. Hamas was probably seeking to destroy Israelis’ confidence
in their government institutions, and even if that wasn’t a goal, this
consequence has surely been a welcome bonus for the group. Absent such
confidence, displaced Israelis will not return to their homes near Gaza or
Lebanon. And skeptics of the Israeli government will see some of its continued
anti-Hamas operations as a way for Netanyahu to keep himself in power, not as a
genuine necessity in the fight against terrorism.
When it comes to
restoring faith in government, Israel has a long way to go. Although Netanyahu
has brought some opposition figures into a war cabinet, his support has
plummeted, with a November poll finding that just four percent of Israeli Jews considered
him a trustworthy source of information on the war. As operations in Gaza ebb,
commissions will investigate the military and intelligence failure on October
7, and the revelations will in the short term no doubt cause Israelis to lose
even more confidence in their security institutions. Some confidence will be
restored as the IDF and Israeli intelligence services demonstrate their combat
proficiency in Gaza, as most Israelis agree they have already by hitting Hamas
hard and limiting Israeli casualties. And as a new generation of military and
intelligence leaders replaces those who have taken responsibility for the
October 7 debacle and promised to resign, some trust should be rebuilt. But in
the end, it will probably take years of relative calm for Israelis to regain
their faith.
No Way Out
All of Israel’s goals
are difficult to achieve, and some are at cross purposes. A continued military campaign,
which would be necessary to severely degrade Hamas and to help rebuild public
confidence in the military, will take months to succeed—and even then, it will
be unlikely to kill every last Hamas leader and destroy every last tunnel.
Releasing hostages and maintaining U.S. support, however, will be difficult to
achieve without reducing military operations. And an intense campaign will not
help find a solution to the long-term problem of who will govern Gaza: when the
dust has settled, Israel will need a Palestinian partner to run the strip, and
destructive military operations diminish its credibility among the population
there.
Because its goals are
difficult to achieve separately and even harder to achieve together, Israel is
likely to fall short. Whatever happens, more of Hamas’s leaders and fighters
will probably survive than Israel would prefer, and Hezbollah will probably continue
its rocket attacks as the war rages in Gaza. Yet a lack of complete success
does not mean failure. Hezbollah, like Israel, does not appear to want an
all-out war. The October 7 attack has brought Israel and the U.S. government
closer and diminished concerns that Washington will abandon the Middle East.
Israel’s current
approach to Gaza appears too ambitious, and the time has come to correct
course. In the coming months, Israel should move away from high-intensity
operations while continuing to eliminate Hamas’s top leaders through drone
strikes, raids by special operations forces, and other means, doing so even if
some of Hamas’s military infrastructure and regular forces remain. Israel needs
U.S. backing, and that requires limiting civilian casualties in Gaza, greatly
expanding humanitarian efforts in the strip, and avoiding an unprovoked war
with Hezbollah. To reassure the Israeli population without fully destroying
Hamas and Hezbollah, Israel should station more military forces near Lebanon
and Gaza. Perhaps most importantly, Israel and the international community
should begin the long process of bolstering the PA and other alternatives to
Hamas to govern Gaza.
Israel must also
accept the reality that in many ways, it is damned if it does, damned if it
doesn’t. Its leaders must make hard choices about which goals to prioritize and
which to set aside. One Israeli security official put it to me best: “The only
resource in the Middle East more plentiful than oil is bad options.”
Senior Israeli
officials meeting recently with CIA Director William Burns and Qatari mediators
in Warsaw suggested that Israel would consider a weeklong truce if
Hamas released 40 hostages. Around 160 Israelis remain in captivity after more
than 100 others were freed in late November during a weeklong cease-fire.
However, Basem Naim,
a senior Hamas official, said both sides must agree to a complete cessation of
hostilities before any more hostages are freed. Hamas also insists that Israel
release a large number of Palestinian prisoners, including high-level militants—demands
that Israel continues to reject. During the last prisoner
swap, Israel freed around
240 Palestinians, mostly women and children.
At the time of
writing Israeli forces signaled they were widening their ground offensive
with a new push into central Gaza on Friday, as the UN Security Council was
expected to vote on a resolution to increase humanitarian aid to stave off the
threat of famine.
As hopes faded for an
imminent breakthrough in talks this week in Egypt aimed at getting warring
Israel and Hamas to agree on a new truce, air strikes, artillery bombardments,
and fighting were reported across the Palestinian territory.
Israel’s military on
Friday ordered residents of Al-Bureij, in central
Gaza, to move south immediately, indicating a new focus of the ground assault
that has already devastated the north of the Strip and made a series of
incursions in the south, Reuters reported.
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