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Hamas attack shows why Israel cannot keep security a second priority
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  • Hamas attack shows why Israel cannot keep security a second priority

Hamas attack shows why Israel cannot keep security a second priority

Maj Gen Jagatbir Singh • October 13, 2023, 09:21:01 IST
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The Arab world was coming to terms with Israel, the US was also pressing Israel to make concessions to the Palestinian Authority, Hamas’s enemy. So this was an opportunity for Hamas to disrupt the whole process

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Hamas attack shows why Israel cannot keep security a second priority

A week is not supposed to be a long time in international relations. At the end of September, the US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan had listed out an inventory of positive developments in West Asia and said, “The Middle East region is quieter today than it has been in two decades.” On 07 October, a shocking multi-dimensional attack in south Israel by Hamas, who are reportedly funded by Iran, has churned the region once again, shattering the fragile peace that existed by launching Operation Al-Aqsa Flood. Though war has been a perpetual concern in Israel, but it has been decades since Israelis have had to wonder whether this would be the day that their borders would be overrun and their enemies would roam the streets with slaughter as their aim. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned his citizens that “they are at war”; civil reservists have been called up, and videos are showing hand battles on the streets. The country is in lockdown, with the potential for future strikes in the south by Hamas and new ones by Hezbollah in the north. The country has been torn apart by domestic divisions. No doubt further death and destruction will follow. Current conflict We can take a stand on the conflict from two sides: one is based on the current episode, and the other is based on a continuum of events that took place nearly 75 years ago and the events that have followed with alarming regularity. While bids have been made for peaceful resolutions, unfortunately, as the ground beneath the feet is not firm, these have only led to an uneasy silence and not to an enduring and lasting peace. While both sides have resorted to force and violence over the decades as a means to settle the issue of a Palestinian homeland within or without the state of modern-day Israel, what also stands out is the psyche of both their populations in conditioning themselves to live within this overhang and be ready to resort to brutal means in their bids to attack each other. The reasons for Palestinian anger and Israeli aggression can be debated endlessly, with both sides having strong arguments to support their cause and case. Can one draw parallels with the drawn-out conflict in Ukraine? The issue depends on the extent of Hamas’ arsenal in terms of rockets and the ability to replenish them. Firing four thousand rockets in a matter of hours will be difficult to sustain in the long run, and building up a coalition of open support as is being done by NATO is not feasible or likely in the current geo-political context. Need to focus on localising the conflict The earlier wars were fought in a larger context described as Arab-Israeli Wars with conventional forces dominating. The ‘Intifada’ saw the Israeli troops in Lebanon though they finally had to withdraw but Lebanon continues to remain at the precipice bitterly divided with its economy in dire straits. Will Hezbollah now risk retribution by directly supporting Hamas? The main issue of concern is being able to localise the conflict in the Gaza Strip. The principal challenge for President Abbas of the Palestinian-led authority is how to insulate the West Bank from this bloody onslaught by the jihadis. Sucking the West Bank into the conflict will lead to more ordinary people suffering from the untold consequences of conflict. Not just an intelligence failure Intelligence failure on the part of the Israeli state and the famed Mossad is being attributed as one of the main reasons for Hamas to have been able to unleash themselves fifty years after Israel was caught by surprise during the Yom Kippur War, when on 06 October 1973 a joint Arab Coalition launched the attack on them. How Hamas was able to get the weapons, train, prepare, organise themselves, and moreover carry out this attack, which is being live streamed with gruesome images all over the world, speaks of intent. Capability, the ability to use that capability, and the will and resolve to execute this attack would not have been developed overnight, and being able to discern the intent is what intelligence is all about. Eliminating the threat from the base from where it originates comes next. It cannot just be seen as an intelligence failure but is a monumental failure of a system. How were Hamas able to accumulate and fire five thousand rockets in less than an hour without triggering alarms? The Gaza border reportedly has sensors, cameras and thermal imaging to detect movement and is patrolled regularly and this is backed by quick reaction teams who can then arrive at the point within minutes. Was there some sort of cyber-attack that preceded the attack resulting in immobilising these assets and rendering the surveillance grid virtually ineffective? What about space-based surveillance systems? There is always redundancy built in as far as these networked systems and other monitoring mechanisms are concerned. Images show tank crews being pulled out of cupolas, women being trampled upon and innocent civilians being shot in their cars. The path the returning pickup trucks could have been tracked and targeted to prevent hostages being taken. The murderous spree continued for over four hours and military garrisons were overrun but there seemed to be no response. Thousands of rockets, which must have been obtained and hidden, were launched by Hamas. Hamas used drones to strike at Israeli targets. It sent its fighters on foot, by boat, and by air on motorised paragliders on the streets of Israeli towns unleashing barbaric acts against innocent citizens. As much a physical attack as a performative one delivering a sinister message. Though images may suggest a spontaneous action on the part of Hamas it was without doubt a pre-planned and well-coordinated and executed operation. The Israelis were confident they knew exactly what the Palestinians were doing by their sophisticated means of spying. They built a wall between Gaza and the communities on the Israeli side of the border. They felt that Hamas wouldn’t dare launch an attack because they would get crushed, and that the Palestinians would turn against Hamas for causing another war. They believed that Hamas was focused on a long-term cease-fire in which each side benefited from a live-and-let-live arrangement with nearly 20,000 Palestinian workers going into Israel every day from Gaza, that was benefiting the economy and was generating tax revenues. But it turns out that this was a lull before the storm. As per the Atlantic, commentators are already describing this as Israel’s 9/11, but that comparison is a crutch—9/11 was about, in the words of the commission that reviewed it, a “failure of imagination” to understand what could happen in America, a nation that had not encountered foreign terror threats of any significant magnitude. Israel has existed, still exists, with that very imaginable prospect as part of its national being. Disturbing images Hamas fighters targeted the main settlements and communities close to the Gaza Strip border with the aim of holding them hostage for releasing Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and to use as human shields to prevent a retaliation. There are images showing old women at a bus stop, their possessions still next to them, and their blood leaking from their corpses. Others—are even worse, gunmen going from -to-door killing indiscriminately while residents are huddled in fear. More and more videos are emerging of civilians beaten and sometimes soaked in blood, either their own or others’. They appear to have been transported to Gaza as hostages. The dead are not spared this fate. Two videos also suggest that Hamas took corpses of Israeli soldiers to Gaza and encouraged crowds to desecrate them. A woman’s body is stripped partly naked and spat upon. The tactics of taking and parading hostages, the spectrum of which extends from the Chief of Israel’s ‘Depth Strike Force’ Major General Nimrod Eloni to women who have been stripped, has no doubt enraged millions around the world. Reasons that led to the counter terrorism failure What is more important is the reasons that have led to this counter terrorism failure. Internal bitterness, political instability and acrimony within Israel. In July this year serious cracks were visible in the IDF. The IDF comprises mainly reservists. Military service is compulsory for all Jewish males and females of certain ethnicities for up to three years after which they are absorbed as reservists. They form a critical pool of manpower and report every year for training in order to maintain the operational readiness of the IDF. However, a large number of them refused to serve or be mobilised in wake of the nation-wide protests against the judicial reforms initiated by Prime Minister Netanyahu. Some of them even participated in street demonstrations. Israel’s counterterrorism efforts are extensive, they infiltrate terrorist groups and pay off members for intelligence. They destroy infrastructure as a deterrence. Israel has long utilised assassination against its enemies in Iran and elsewhere. Their signal intelligence and technology in gathering information is renowned. Bombing raids and military excursions against Hamas are part of Israel’s counterterrorism mission. However, there is no doubt that the tools at their disposal failed them. Israel regularly tests its response and evacuation systems. It recently built an extensive technology wall—including radar, cameras, and sensors—on 65 kilometres of the Gaza barrier. Its emergency-management capabilities are mature. Still, Hamas was able to storm Israel. Hamas’s drones seem to have penetrated parts of Israel without reports of counter-drone efforts. Iron Dome, Israel’s famous counter-weapons system, seems to have been no match for this multifaceted attack. There is no doubt that the current political gridlock has resulted in damaging Israel’s security. It has to introspect and place national security above its internal political bickering. There are many analysts who are saying that one of the reasons for Hamas to carry out this attack was the Abrahms Accord. They felt abandoned by the fact that Saudi Arabia and Israel were improving ties and thereby abandoning their cause, while a rapprochement between Iran and Saudi Arabia would have led to stability in West Asia, leading to a greater irrelevance of the Palestinian cause. The Arab world was coming to terms with Israel, the US was also pressing Israel to make concessions to the Palestinian Authority, Hamas’s enemy. So this was an opportunity for Hamas to disrupt the whole process. Hamas also has its backers, Iran and Syria being foremost among them and they would have had plenty of time to think through how the war will unfold. It’s unlikely that Hamas would have jeopardised its sponsorship by launching the attack without consultation. Conclusion Israel’s response may be disproportionate in a bid to divert attention away from their failure to gauge such an attack. But an uncalibrated retaliation also has its pitfalls. While they do hold the moral high ground this time given the brutality of attacks on innocents. Resolving a centuries old issue is challenging but this escalation in violence will have far reaching regional and global implications. Israel will have to answer its citizens as to how, in the modern era, it has suffered a massive security failure. Finding the answer is essential to its future security. The parties led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have long argued that they were responsible for the relative peace that has prevailed for the past decade or so. That peace now seems to be over. They thought the problem was under control. But now all their assumptions have been cast aside, and they are going to have to come to terms with that. While one of the lessons that emerged from the Ukrainian War is the need to build deterrence in the form of hard power and that violence still remains the currency for settling disputes, the current conflict in Israel not only reinforces that but also shows the impact on a country where its internal issues have consumed its people and polity, resulting in them taking their eyeballs off as far as external threats are concerned. The author is a retired Major General of the Indian Army. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely that of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost_’s views._ Read all the  Latest News,  Trending News,  Cricket News,  Bollywood News, India News and  Entertainment News here. Follow us on  Facebook,  Twitter and  Instagram.

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Hamas Israel Gaza Strip Israel Palestine conflict Prime minister benjamin netanyahu Israel Palestine tensions hamas attack on israel
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