Forget The Hostage Talks — Win The War

Peloni:  It is so refreshing to read something so resoundingly rational and intelligent.  End the hostage talks so that the hostages might finally be brought home, not thru capitulation which will save a bare fraction of them, but thru decisive victory.

Shoshana Bryen | Daily Caller | August 25, 2024

Screen Capture/PBS NewsHour

Not the hostages! Forget the so-called “hostage talks,” which are simply a mechanism for stretching out the war and increasing pressure on Israel. They are a sign of American desperation for a political victory. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, according to Egyptian sources, aims to “persuade both Hamas and Israel to embrace the American proposal without adding complications.”

Aside from the repugnant equation of “both” Hamas and Israel, “complications” are what are known as “war goals.” Israel had three at the outset: to secure the borders and the people of Israel; to uproot the Hamas military and governing capability in Gaza; and to get the hostages back. (RELATED: Israel Recovers Bodies Of Six Hostages From Gaza)

How is Israel doing?

If you want a political opinion about Israel’s war, ask a pol. If you want a military opinion, ask a military officer.

John Spencer, Chair of Urban Warfare Studies at the Modern War Institute at West Point, gives us a starting place. Writing in Foreign Affairs, he says: “War is the pursuit of political objectives … (and) has a start and a finish, so its progress can be assessed based on how close each side has come to meeting its political objectives. By this measure, it is Israel, not Hamas, that now holds the advantage.”

Political objectives? The United States told Israel it could not achieve political objectives through warfare. Spencer disagrees. “Brute force is what gives Hamas the ability to rule over the population of Gaza. If it succeeds (in eliminating Hamas’s military capabilities), Israel can prevent Hamas from reclaiming its pre–October 7 position.”

Andrew Fox, a former British paratrooper and Sandhurst senior lecturer, who is cognizant of strong U.S. opposition to Israel entering Rafah in southern Gaza, asks in The Spectator: “Why go into Rafah at all? Simply because the aim is to destroy Hamas. That involves finding and degrading their capability, and that capability hinges on the supply tunnels from Rafah into Egypt, some of which run 2 km beyond the Egyptian border … The alternative is to face inestimable casualties.”

(Digression: Now you know why the Egyptian “mediators” are opposed to Israel controlling the southern side of the Rafah crossing. It would: 1. expose the depth of Cairo’s partnership with Hamas, which is allied with Iran, and 2. prevent the restoration of that financially lucrative partnership later.)

Fox made a relevant side point: Nearly 3,000 Israeli military vehicles “have needed some level of repair due to enemy damage” – but “Hamas has only succeeded in destroying four armored vehicles in nine months (two main battle tanks and two armored personnel carriers). Objectively, this is pitiful by Hamas. They are taking an astonishingly one-sided battering.”

Spencer agrees. Speaking of southern Israel, he notes: “The imminent danger of rocket attacks has dropped significantly in these areas. There were more than 6,000 alerts about incoming rockets from Gaza the week of October 7, but now most weeks the number of alerts is in the single digits, low double digits, or even zero. Israel is even adding an extra layer of defense to its border with Gaza. In the past, Israel relied on just a wall at the border for protection. Now Israeli forces are creating a security zone of around half a mile from the wall.”

Israeli analyst Saul Sadka wrote that Israel is presently taking control of the port of Khan Yunis, along with widening the Rafah corridor, and the 6 km-wide Netzarim corridor that separates Gaza City from the rest of the Strip, “Gaza is now cut into three. The humanitarian zone is now also cut in two by the new corridor. Expect this new corridor to be fortified … to separate Beit Hanoun from Gaza City and to separate Rafah from Khan Younis.”

This is making military resupply almost impossible, while allowing for civilian traffic.

He notes: “The only urban areas that the [Israeli Defense Forces] have yet to enter in force (though they are already starting) are the towns in the central portion, Deir al Balah and Nuseirat. Only there can the Hamas infrastructure still be anything like its pre-war level.”

That is where he – and others – presume Yahya Sinwar is cowering, begging for a deal that will allow him to escape unharmed and remain alive. What happened to the glory of martyrdom for Palestine? A lot of Palestinian parents who lost their children to this disgusting fraud should be ready for revolution against Sinwar and his remaining minions.

Spencer explains: “Hamas’s authority in Gaza is much shakier today than it was on October 7. Although Hamas remains the main political power, it must now use heinous force in order to govern. Hamas militants kill civilians in Gaza, including clan or tribal leaders, who challenge the group’s brutal rule.” (RELATED: ‘Hamas’s Mouthpiece’: Israel Raids, Shuts Down Al Jazeera In The Country)

This is, in fact, how military success begins to translate into political success, where the military defeats a vicious dictatorship – as in Nazi Germany or Imperial Japan.

Take away the weapons. Take away control of territory. Take away control of the population. Military defeat of Hamas can become liberation for the Palestinian people and security for the people of Israel.

Shoshana Bryen is Senior Director of the Jewish Policy Center and Editor of inFocus Quarterly magazine.

August 26, 2024 | 6 Comments »

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6 Comments / 6 Comments

  1. BRAVO! The only way to vanquish an enemy who is ideologically, culturally, educationally, psychologically, and religiously committed to your annihilation, is through total and complete military victory. There is no cease-fire, land-for-peace, two-state solution, or any other political “deal” to be made. All have been tried and all have been abject failures. These political deals have only given the sworn enemies of Israel the time, space, and funding to regroup and attack Israel again and again and again. In other words, these political deals allow Israel’s enemies to RESUPPLY and RECONSTITUTE. Netanyahu must complete Israel’s mission to end Iran’s savage reign of terror against Israeli citizens waged by Iran, its proxies Hamas and Hezbollah, and their accomplices. Netanyahu cannot stop until total victory is achieved. And the best way to win a military war is to end the enemy’s supply lines. The time for political deals is AFTER complete military victory is secured!

  2. Shoshanna is 100% right about this. The very idea of negotiating with a terrorist organization for any reason at all is obscene. But negotiating with them to exchage terrorists for innocent hostages kidnapped by the terrorist organization is beyond obcsene.

  3. “Military defeat of Hamas can become liberation for the Palestinian people ”

    The problem with that logic is it assume there is an underlying human goodness in the average Palestinian.

    Not the case, these are vermin arab hillbillys. They can never be fixed, as they have a cult based world view.

    Perhaps the most humane way to deal with them is containment til their population implodes.

    Damn the ICC and the wailing of others about unfair. Let other arab countries take them in.

  4. dreuveni:
    Do you remember the the US slogan (it was about drugs) “Just Say No!”?

    That’s something that Israel should simply keep on doing. How much of a barrel could they be using against Israel? I believe the Israeli military knows exactly what to do. In this case the IDF has really no choice…

  5. Do we have to follow the advice from Washington or do they have us so much over the barrel that we have no choice?

  6. No deals with Islamic Jihad. Destroy the enemy..
    No compromises. HOSTAGES. we know that 35 more are dead. 65 unlikely surviving. Those must be retaken by extreme force
    No deals or Shalitazos.