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56271


Date: November 07, 2024 at 04:21:35
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: With or without Sinwar, Netanyahu has no interest in ending the war

URL: https://www.972mag.com/netanyahu-sinwar-indefinite-war-gaza/


With or without Sinwar, Netanyahu has no interest in ending the war

The Hamas leader’s death could make the return of Palestinian governance in
Gaza more likely. For Israel's government, that scenario must be thwarted.

By
Meron Rapoport
October 30, 2024

"It took the Israeli army more than a year to find and kill Hamas leader Yahya
Sinwar in Gaza — and it ultimately did so by chance, only discovering his identity
after killing him. The Israeli government had repeatedly claimed Sinwar was
hiding in an underground bunker, surrounded by human shields in the form of
Israeli hostages. But rather than tracking him down there, soldiers encountered
him above ground in a building in Rafah, when he opened fire at them.

Israel’s military, politicians, and media roundly celebrated killing the man
responsible for orchestrating the October 7 massacres. Photos of Sinwar’s
mutilated and dust-covered body, lying in a pit of rubble, and videos of his last
moments inside the building where he was killed were widely circulated as a kind
of “victory image.” “The man who committed the most terrible massacre in the
history of our people since the Holocaust was eliminated today,” Netanyahu
declared, after the army confirmed that the body belonged to Sinwar. “Hamas will
no longer rule Gaza. This is the beginning of the day after Hamas.”

Policymakers and analysts around the world quickly began interpreting Sinwar’s
killing as the beginning of the end of the war. U.S. President Joe Biden, Vice
President Kamala Harris, and many other world leaders stressed that his death
opened the door to a deal to free the hostages and reach a ceasefire. Even family
members of hostages argued that there was no real excuse to continue the
hostilities. “Sinwar has been eliminated,” Einav Zangauker, the mother of a
hostage still being held in Gaza, said at a rally in Tel Aviv. “What else is there to
fight [there]?”

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But Israel is far from ending the war. Following Sinwar’s assassination, Netanyahu
clarified that “the mission before us is not yet complete.” And while signaling
toward a “day after Hamas,” it was no coincidence that he didn’t bother
elaborating on who will rule Gaza when that day comes.

Besides Hamas, there is only one body that may be willing and able to take
responsibility for governing and rebuilding Gaza after the war: the Fatah-
controlled Palestinian Authority (PA) or some derivative of it. In July, Hamas and
Fatah signed a unity agreement to ensure Palestinian control over Gaza after the
war. Meanwhile, Arab states willing to take part in the post-war effort to secure
and reconstruct the Strip say they will only enter the enclave if the PA invites
them.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken meets with Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh in
Ramallah, January 31, 2023. (State Department photo by Ron Przysucha/ Public
Domain)
U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken meets with Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah, January 31, 2023. (State Department
photo by Ron Przysucha/ Public Domain)
This is exactly the outcome Netanyahu seeks to avoid. Back in November of last
year, I argued that the prime minister was aiming to prolong the war in order to
save his life’s mission of preventing Palestinian statehood. If the PA were to take
over the governance of Gaza, uniting the occupied territories under its sole rule,
Israel would come under immense international pressure to negotiate with it to
that end.

By December, Netanyahu had effectively made averting this possibility a third,
non-official war goal, on top of destroying Hamas and bringing home the
hostages. “We will not bring into Gaza those who educate terrorism, support
terrorism, [and] finance terrorism,” he said. “Gaza will neither be ‘Hamastan’ nor
‘Fatahstan.’”

Nearly a year later, that goal hasn’t changed. In this regard, Sinwar’s assassination
actually makes things harder for Netanyahu. After all, so long as the Hamas
leader was alive, there was a consensus among the Israeli public — as well as in
the American administration — that the Israeli army should keep fighting in order
to prevent a scenario in which a Sinwar-led Hamas would continue to control
Gaza after the war.

Now that this possibility no longer exists, restoring PA rule to the Strip appears
increasingly inevitable, certainly to world leaders. And that, for Netanyahu, poses
a major problem.

Sanctifying a new status quo
Right now, Israel faces three options: agree to a ceasefire deal to end the war and
return the hostages in exchange for prisoners; continue fighting in Gaza and
Lebanon in the hope that Hamas and Hezbollah will be so severely weakened
that they will no longer pose a threat to Israel; or impose full Israeli rule over Gaza,
while cleansing it of its Palestinian population and reestablishing Jewish
settlements, as many on the right are clamoring for.

Right-wing activists at a settlement event near Gaza, October 21, 2024. (Oren
Ziv)
Right-wing activists at a settlement event near Gaza, October 21, 2024. (Oren
Ziv)
Even after Sinwar’s killing, the chances that Netanyahu will choose the first
option appear slim. There are certainly compelling reasons for him to accept a
deal: it would allow him to contest the next election as the leader who both
eliminated the two “arch-terrorists” Sinwar and Hassan Nasrallah, and returned
the hostages (at least those who are still alive). But his coalition partners —
Itamar Ben Gvir, Bezalel Smotrich, and perhaps also Gideon Sa’ar — will never
allow him to.

Besides, as mentioned, such a move risks jeopardizing his legacy by paving the
way toward a Palestinian state. And there is simply not enough pressure, either
from Washington or the Israeli public, to force his hand.

The second option, continuing the war indefinitely, seems to be the natural choice
for a man who has spent the past 15 years sanctifying the status quo. The current
situation is of course much less bearable for many Israelis than what existed here
before October 7 — with more than 60 soldiers killed since the start of the month,
thousands of people still displaced from the north and the south, communities
across the country being forced into their rocket shelters every day, and a
deteriorating economy. For Netanyahu, though, this new status quo is still
preferable to a political settlement with the Palestinians.

But there is also the third option: the full or partial expulsion of Palestinians from
Gaza and reestablishment of Jewish settlements. Netanyahu may have stated at
the UN General Assembly that Israel “does not want to settle Gaza,” and he is
well aware that such a move remains unpopular among the Israeli public, even as
it grows increasingly mainstream at the political level. Yet his total indifference to
Palestinian lives and his obsession with denying the Palestinians national self-
determination, combined with pressure from his coalition partners to “clean” the
northern Gaza Strip and rebuild Jewish settlements there, may push Netanyahu
to adopt this option. And based on what is currently happening in northern Gaza,
he might already have done so.

After Sinwar’s death, ‘there is an opportunity’
Last month, I imagined what it might look like if the Israeli army implemented the
so-called Generals’ Plan. That plan, spearheaded by Maj. Gen. (res.) Giora Eiland,
proposed giving residents of northern Gaza a week to evacuate south of the
Netzarim Corridor that bisects the Strip, before imposing a total siege on the area
to prevent any food, water, electricity, or medicine from entering.

Palestinians fleeing Beit Lahia via Salah al-Din Street to Gaza City, October 22,
2024. (Omar Elqataa)
Palestinians fleeing Beit Lahia via Salah al-Din Street to Gaza City, October 22,
2024. (Omar Elqataa)
I wondered what would happen if the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians
living in the north of the Strip would refuse to leave. Would the army forcibly expel
them, or subject them to “a process of starvation or extermination,” as one of the
plan’s proponents suggested?

This dystopian scenario is now materializing, at least in part. According to local
residents and aid agencies, since the Israeli military operation began in early
October, it has been impossible to bring food or medicine into the besieged areas
north of Gaza City. As suspected, most residents refused to leave their homes or
shelters, and so the Israeli army intensified its bombardment, killing more than
1,000 people in the north of the Strip over the past three weeks. First responders
have been forced to suspend all activity in the besieged areas due to incessant
targeting.

The army has bombed shelters, raided hospitals, and rounded up thousands of
residents — some of whom were then forcibly marched southward at gunpoint,
while others were stripped, bound, and driven away to detention camps where
torture and abuse are rife. And after emptying shelters of their displaced
occupants, soldiers set the buildings on fire to prevent residents from returning.

The IDF Spokesperson has denied that the army is implementing the Generals’
Plan, and claims that “the evacuation of the population was carried out
temporarily and subject to military necessity only.” Yet Eran Etzion, former deputy
head of Israel’s National Security Council, has alleged that Netanyahu’s
government secretly approved the General’s Plan, while Netanyahu reportedly
refused U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s request that he state publicly
that it is not being implemented. It is no wonder that Western governments are
increasingly concerned that Israel is seeking to push all Palestinians out of
northern Gaza.

The killing of Sinwar didn’t halt this operation; if anything, it accelerated it, since
the army claims that news of the Hamas leader’s death has broken residents’
willpower to remain in the besieged areas. “This is an opportunity for you, the
people of Gaza, to finally be rid of [Sinwar’s] tyranny,” Netanyahu said after the
killing.

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But for the Israeli government and its supporters, it seems Sinwar’s death is an
opportunity to be rid of the Palestinians and their presence in Gaza. As Yehuda
Yifrah, head of the right-wing Israeli paper Makor Rishon’s legal desk recently put
it: “Gaza cannot be a suitable place for Palestinians to live … The only option for a
decent life for Gazans is not inside the Gaza Strip but outside it, in the big wide
world that craves working hands.”

It is no coincidence that, as Channel 12 recently revealed, the fingerprints of pro-
settlement organizations were all over the drafting of the Generals’ Plan, seeing it
as a stepping stone toward annexation. In the meantime, the army is cooperating
with the campaign, and the Israeli public is willingly endorsing it.

A version of this article was first published in Hebrew on Local Call. Read it here. "

Benjamin Netanyahu
October 7 war
Hamas


Responses:
[56273]


56273


Date: November 07, 2024 at 08:16:45
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: With or without Sinwar, Netanyahu has no interest in ending the...




And now he doesn't have to end the war.

He's killed off not only the bombed, but the old the
sick, the disabled and is left with, once fed and
housed a whole young population of workers to clear
rubble and work in the new "Monaco" of Trump Gaza.

Win-win, right?

I hope those Muslims who voted for trump or didn't vote
for Harris enjoy the world they helped fashion.



Responses:
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