Destroy the terrorists and their rockets in Gaza

I agree with everything these authors have written with one exception. They assume the IDF will withdraw when the goal is achieved and that the weapons build up will start again. I suggest that the IDF must retain control of the Philidelphi Corridor indefinitely to stop smuggling. Ted Belman

Prof. Efraim Inbar and Dr. Max Singer..
BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 167..

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Israel has to respond to the attacks from Gaza with a large-scale military operation. If no such action is taken, the attacks against Israel will surely increase. Gaza is small enough so that Israel can destroy most of the terrorist infrastructure and the leadership of Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other organizations. The goal would be to restore deterrence and to signal Israeli determination to battle the rising Islamist forces in the region. By acting now in Gaza, Israel will also greatly reduce the missile retaliation it would face if and when it strikes Iran’s nuclear facilities. Political conditions seem appropriate as Hamas is divided, most of the Arab world is busy with pressing domestic issues, and the US is in the middle of an election campaign.

Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz stated several times that a large-scale operation in Gaza is inevitable. If he is right, this is the time. Postponing the inevitable is likely to increase its cost.

The obvious reason for silencing the forces that have been attacking Israel from Gaza is that no nation should tolerate massive military attacks against its civilians by a neighbor. We cannot allow the forces in Gaza to fire hundreds of missiles against Israeli cities as they have in recent days. If no action is taken, the attacks against us will surely increase. Moreover, their ability to strike at strategic installations such as ports, power stations, airbases, and even Dimona must be eliminated.

The thing that most terrorist organizations fear the most is that their organization – especially its leadership – will be destroyed. Gaza is small enough so that Israel can find and destroy most of the Hamas military leadership and the leadership of Islamic Jihad and other groups that have been firing missiles at Israel. It is likely that doing so would reduce the amount of missile fire on Israel from Gaza for much longer than Operation Cast Lead did. The goal of Cast Lead was to deter missile fire by giving a blow to Hamas. It provided relief for more than a year. The goal this time should be to destroy the Hamas military organization and the forces that have been firing at Israel. This stronger action will provide more relief at almost the same diplomatic and political cost. Clearly the deterrence created by Cast Lead, which was effective for a while, is wearing thin. Recent attacks from Gaza show that Cast Lead, only three years ago, was too limited an action rather than an excessive one. Military action now could restore deterrence.

In addition, a serious blow to Hamas and other Islamist organizations in Gaza is a signal of Israeli determination to battle the rising Islamist forces in the region, which will buttress Israel’s standing among those powers in the region – as well as elsewhere – that fear the Islamist wave.

Another important reason for acting in Gaza now is that Israel is presumably considering an attack on the nuclear sites of Iran’s revolutionary government. By taking the current opportunity to act in Gaza, Israel will greatly reduce the missile retaliation it would face if it attacks Iran’s nuclear facilities. Not only would most or all of the Gaza missiles and the organizations preparing to use them be destroyed, but deterrence against missiles from Lebanon and elsewhere would increase. Such an action in Gaza would also bolster credibility in the international community that Israel really might attack Iran’s nuclear sites.

Nowadays, political conditions seem appropriate for Israeli action. The Israeli government is stable and would draw large popular support for putting an end, even for a while, to the terror against its citizens. In contrast, Hamas is currently weak and divided, as its political leadership had to leave Syria and there are tensions with Iran.

Furthermore, one of the effects of the fluidity and uncertainty in at least Egypt and Syria is that neither country can focus on dealing with Israel now. They are too busy contesting for internal power. It would also be better for Israel if whoever ends up in control of those countries has a fresh reminder of Israel’s power and readiness to protect itself by acting against those who attack it.

Finally, because of the election campaign in the US, it will likely be safer for Israel to act against missile attacks from Gaza now rather than eight months from now. Until November, the US is likely to restrain rather than promote international action against Israel in response to an action in Gaza. These political circumstances indicate that the diplomatic costs in the international arena might be minimized, although it is not impossible that a Gaza operation could instigate an unexpectedly harmful train of political or diplomatic consequences.

If the IDF capitalizes on this opportunity, the operation must end with unequivocal victory. This time, the Philadelphi Corridor (at the Egyptian border) must be taken in order to encircle Gaza. The Gaza Strip is small enough that Israel can prevent most Hamas forces and leadership from running away. If, this time, Israel completes the job by pursuing and destroying the Hamas military and its leadership, it will be more effective than Cast Lead. This will also make it clear that Israel’s objective is not civilian destruction but the defeat of the forces that have been attacking and threatening its citizens. The IDF should be able to capture or kill the majority of the leadership and “officer corps” of Hamas and the other fighting forces in Gaza as well as destroy their existing stockpiles of missiles and advanced weapons, plus many of their files and computers – every physical component of the organizations that have been attacking Israel. This would be the kind of unequivocal victory Israel needs – although it cannot be a final victory.

Although an Israeli action in Gaza can achieve a significant increase in the protection of Israel from enemy fire for some time, and other security advantages, Israel cannot attain an everlasting victory. There is a good chance that Hamas would be able to restore itself in a year or so. In any event, Gazans and their outside supporters will create new organizations to fight Israel. Even though Israel can destroy a large share of the military equipment that has been smuggled into Gaza in the last several years – which will be an important benefit for the next year or two – we must assume that sooner or later other weapons will be smuggled in to replace those captured and destroyed by Israel. Israel will probably have to “mow the grass” again.

Israel can never win a war in the way it can lose a war. That is, the State of Israel could be destroyed, but the Palestinians and the Arab states cannot be. To protect itself from the Arab determination to eliminate Israel, Israel has to define specific victories that provide large improvements in its security – military and diplomatic – and the IDF must do what it takes, including suffering necessary casualties, to make sure that it achieves those victories. In international relations, despite fine words, weakness provokes criticism and contempt, while strength and success – even limited success – create respect and sometimes support.

Link: http://www.biu.ac.il/SOC/besa/docs/perspectives167.pdf

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Efraim Inbar is Professor of Political Studies at Bar-Ilan University and director of the Begin-Sadat (BESA) Center for Strategic Studies. Max Singer is a Hudson Institute founder and Senior Researcher at BESA. This article is a revised version of an op-ed published in the Jerusalem Post on March 14, 2012.

March 16, 2012 | 12 Comments »

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12 Comments / 12 Comments

  1. I agree with Norman and Yamit, but I would like to make a suggestion to Israel, forget what the US government and the un and other governments say, Israel destroy your enemies leave none standing, and do as the US Marines say kill them all and let God sort them out.

  2. Ted I cannot tell a lie, I want to report the moderator you hired was asleep on his or her watch last night.

    I tried but was unable to awaken him or her.

    By the way how in the world can anyone sleep in peace while those rockets being fired by Hamas from Gaza are sprinkling Israel.

  3. Yidvocate has expressed the exact point that I have made for years and for no good reason Israeli leadership has ignored the obvious.
    Hamas and the other idiot groups will not let up on Israel so long as Israel has a tit for tat mentality. A few dead Arabs mean nothing to them since they worship death. Only when their women and children are affected will they pay attention which is the reason Arabs in Gaza need to be removed to Sinai and Arabs in Judea and Samaria to Jordan.

  4. Yes, this should be done and soon and also, quickly – don’t drag this out for weeks – do it in about 72 hours and be done with it – completely.

  5. Norman,

    Just how, exactly, do you think Israel should drive the Gazzis into Egypt, and in so doing avoid “a future war” with the Egyptians? Israel needs to attack Gaza on two sides, north and east, starting with Gaza City, with an extremely “low tech” war against the terrorists. I am talking about a good old Stalingrad-style tank bombardment, complete with a total blackout of communications in or out of the place (Yes, that means posting a token presense to the south as well, as gatekeepers to direct traffic one way — OUT.)

    When Israel’s ready to do that, and its leaders get balls as big as Bashir Assad’s so they can carry it through, then what you are saying will make sense. At present, though, the Israelis are W I M P S; and I don’t expect anything sensible from them.

  6. Yamit (Uncle) time for Israel to retake Gaza. Should never have left it to the renegades. Trashy people have taken over and it has become a haven for the terrorist and a launching site for their rockets.

    Drive Hamas into the sea. Oh your right Israel will be criticized but lets face it in the last 10 days over 200 rockets were fired in to Israel and the world is silent. However, when the ADF strikes takes out these Hamas sites they and the world cry foul.

    Israel needs to put a licking on them, one that will put fear in their hearts and minds and screw world opinion.

    While Israel is at it tell the Muslim Brotherhood who controls Egypt they are on the wanted list.

  7. Yes the world will condemn us as they always do no matter what we do. So lets do what needs to be done.

    DURING THE 2008 US presidential campaign, Barack Obama visited Sderot, saying, “If missiles were falling where my two daughters sleep, I would do everything in order to stop that.”

    “There is a futility that takes place on the Earth — there are righteous ones who are treated as [if they had performed] the actions of the evil ones; and there are evil ones who are treated as [if they had performed] the actions of the righteous ones — I declared that, also, this is a futility.” (Ecclesiastes 8:14)

    The Arabs are, part and parcel of a long chain of national thieves who have, over the past several millennia, invaded, conquered and plundered our Land. Reclaiming our Land from them is not Theft — it is prophetic, historical, moral and legal Justice.

    THE ONLY VIABLE SOLUTION

    “HaShem spoke to Moses in the plains of Moab, by the Jordan [River], at Jericho, saying, ‘Speak to the Children of Israel and say to them, “When you cross the Jordan [River] to the land of Canaan, you shall drive out all the inhabitants of the Land from before you; and you shall destroy all their prostration stones; all their molten images shall you destroy; and all their high places shall you demolish. You shall possess the Land, and you shall settle in it; for, to you have I given the Land to possess it. … But if you do not drive out the inhabitants of the Land from before you, those of them whom you leave shall be pins in your eyes and thorns in your sides, and they will harass you upon the Land in which you dwell. And it shall be that what I had meant to do to them, I shall do to you.”’” (Numbers 33:50-56)

  8. Well NormanF, your last name sure isn’t Finkelstein – that’s for sure. You have it right on. I would only add that the same measures need to be taken in Judea and Samaria. Yes the world will condemn us as they always do no matter what we do. So lets do what needs to be done.

  9. The Gaza problem could be solved by driving the Arabs out of Gaza into Sinai, making them Egypt’s problem to house, feed and take care of. And it would eliminate Israel’s cities being under the constant threat of terrorist bombardment. Since Egypt will soon be ruled by a radical anti-Israel regime, Israel no longer has to worry about how “population transfer” would affect regime stability in Cairo. It is in Israel’s long term interests to uproot a danger close to its population centers and to make it hard for terrorists to drag Israel into a future war with Egypt. The only problem with the approach is Israel would be condemned by the world for through ethnic cleansing. Having seen though what the world will tolerate in Syria – an Arab-free Gaza is the most humane and practical path Israel can adopt to ensure there is long term quiet in the south of Israel. For the cost of UN condemnations, Israel can eliminate the Hamas power base next door and also advance Jewish settlement in Gaza to secure it forever as a part of Israel. The disastrous mistakes of the Disengagement can be reversed and the Arabs can be sent the message that by attacking Israel, they will be longer have a territorial base from which to attack the Jewish State.