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54902


Date: July 05, 2024 at 16:48:24
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Gaza war a recruiting boom for terrorists, US intelligence shows

URL: https://responsiblestatecraft.org/israel-hamas-war-counterterrorism/


even I could have predicted this. Oh wait a minute, I did!


Mehdi Hasan reposted
Nathan J Robinson:

wow who could have predicted this except for all the leftists who constantly
point out that this is what happens when you bomb civilian populations


Nathan J Robinson
Dec 20, 2023
bombing civilian populations creates more terrorism in response, for reasons
that should be obvious but which the US and Israel are somehow incapable
of grasping x.com/BMarchetich/st…

link:

In Gaza, the next generation of radicalization begins
Leadership in Tel Aviv claims that taking out Hamas will end its security
problems. The evidence suggests the opposite

BRANKO MARCETIC
DEC 20, 2023
“The lesson is not that you can win in urban warfare by protecting civilians.
The lesson is that you can only win in urban warfare by protecting civilians,”
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin recently made headlines by warning.

“You see, in this kind of a fight, the center of gravity is the civilian
population," he said. "And if you drive them into the arms of the enemy, you
replace a tactical victory with a strategic defeat.”

Austin’s remarks, made at the Reagan National Defense Forum in December,
should be sobering for the sizable cohort of Israeli and Western officials and
commentators who insist that a “military solution” to Hamas is the only way
for Israel to ensure its long-term security. While the horrendous civilian death
toll of Israel’s military campaign is regrettable, this line of thinking goes, the
threat from Hamas means Israel has no choice but to prosecute the war until
the group is eliminated, as long as it takes, and no matter the cost.

If it’s allowed to survive, it will simply choose another moment in the future to
attack, and Israeli citizens will never know peace.

Yet Austin is only one prominent voice in recent months that has pointed out
the faultiness of this logic, and reminded the world that when a state battling
terrorism leaves a trail of human carnage in its wake, the resulting rage,
bitterness and despair fuel the very problem it’s fighting, and many times
over.

When Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr. was
asked directly if he feared that high civilian casualty numbers would create
future Hamas members, he replied, “Yes, very much so.” “We’ll be fighting
their sons in four or five years,” former Shin Bet chief Ya'akov Peri told the
New York Times.

“Israel Is Fostering the Next Generation of Hatred Against Itself,” read the
headline of a recent column by Haaretz’s Gideon Levy, as he warned readers
to “look what hatred was sown in the hearts of almost all Israelis by one
barbaric attack,” and consider what an even worse, prolonged slaughter
might do to the Palestinian population. “These children will never forgive the
soldiers. You're raising another generation of resistance,” one Palestinian
father, his young son killed by Israeli soldiers, told Levy.

Former UK Defense Minister Ben Wallace recently warned, with reference to
the Troubles in Northern Ireland, "that radicalisation follows oppression" and
that "a disproportionate response by the state can serve as a terrorist
organisation’s best recruiting sergeant."

Security services in the United States and around the world have already
backed up these warnings. FBI Director Chris Wray cautioned last month that
U.S. support for Israel’s war had led multiple terrorist organizations to call for
attacks against Americans and the West, and had significantly “raised the
threat of an attack” inside the United States.

That’s on top of advisories and intelligence findings by various U.S.
government agencies warning of credible threats by groups like Al Qaeda
and Hezbollah over U.S. support for the war. Both the German and British spy
agencies have likewise sounded the alarm over the war potentially fueling
militant radicalization, citing specific threats being made by jihadist groups
and those sympathetic to them.

There’s good reason to believe them. Earlier this month, a 26-year-old
French man killed one man and injured two others in a knife and hammer
attack in central Paris, before telling police he was upset that “so many
Muslims are dying in Afghanistan and in Palestine” and that he thought
France was complicit in what was happening in Gaza. A day after Hezbollah
called for a “day of rage” in retaliation for the October 17 explosion in Al-Ahli
hospital, two people threw petrol bombs at a Berlin synagogue. Just last
week, German authorities arrested suspected Hamas members who had
allegedly been tasked with drawing on a secret weapons depot in Europe for
attacks on Jewish sites on the continent.

Taking Tunisia as a bellwether for the rest of the region, a series of Arab
Barometer surveys of the country found that the proportion of Tunisians
favoring armed resistance to Israeli occupation had shot up dramatically in
the three weeks after Hamas’ October 7 attack and the onset of Israel’s
military offensive. Already, U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria have been attacked a
total of 97 times since October 7, while the Houthi rebels who control most of
Yemen have launched a series of successful attacks on commercial ships in
the Red Sea, prompting possible U.S. military strikes in response.

Meanwhile, the war has been a boon for Hamas, despite — or arguably,
because of — the human devastation caused by the war provoked by the
group’s horrifying October atrocities. Polling shows that the group’s
popularity has risen in both Gaza and, especially, in the much larger West
Bank, where its standing has been bolstered by the events of the past few
months and its popular support has risen by more than 30 points. At the
same time, the position of more moderate forces has weakened, with an
overwhelming majority of Palestinians favoring the resignation of President
Mahmoud Abbas and a smaller, nearly two-thirds majority preferring the
dissolution of the Palestinian Authority he governs.

None of this should be surprising or controversial. The United States’ own,
more-than-two-decade-long attempt to bomb and shoot terrorism out of
existence has demonstrated the counter-productive nature of such a
strategy. Domestic terrorists have regularly pointed to U.S. and other
Western governments’ military operations in the Middle East over the years
to explain the motivations for their own violence. A decade or more after
assassinating Osama bin Laden, as well as killing or capturing a spate of
other 9/11 plotters and terrorist leaders while neutralizing terrorist groups like
ISIS, U.S. forces continue to engage in ground combat against terrorists in at
least nine countries, while taking part in counterterrorism training in a total of
73.

Meanwhile, terrorist attacks in Africa have exploded by 75,000 percent since
the U.S. started conducting counterterrorism operations there two decades
ago, and the number of transnational terror groups there has gone from zero
at the time of September 11 to dozens, with the Combating Terrorism Center
at West Point declaring the continent “the new global epicenter of jihadi
violence” as of summer 2021.

All of this should inspire extreme skepticism of the Israeli leadership’s claims
that taking out a few top Hamas leaders and killing the group’s fighters at the
cost of causing extreme human suffering will end its security problems.
Indeed, all evidence quite clearly suggests the opposite. And that means the
only real solution is the long-term political settlement that Israeli officials
reject and Netanyahu now boasts of having blocked for decades.

Otherwise, Israel and its U.S. supporters may only succeed in destroying an
entity called “Hamas,” and face the exact same problems from one or more
groups that have a different name, but the exact same violent designs.


Responses:
[54903]


54903


Date: July 05, 2024 at 22:58:48
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Gaza war a recruiting boom for terrorists, US intelligence shows


me too...war breeds more...


Responses:
None


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