Gideon Levy had a fascinating article in Haaretz yesterday, reporting this:
- The group of reservist paratroopers returned all astir: Hamas fought like an army. The comrades of Sergeant-Major (Res.) Ehud Efrati, who fell in a battle in Gaza about two weeks ago, told Amos Harel that “in all parameters, we are facing an army, not gangs.” The soldiers of the Israel Defense Forces were impressed by their enemy’s night vision equipment, the tactical space they kept between one another – and their pants even had elastic bands to make them fit snugly around their boots.
Levy’s very sensible reaction to this is unequivocally that this is good news for Israelis:
- the news the soldiers brought is … encouraging on several other levels. According to their descriptions, a Palestinian Defense Force has emerged. Instead of a rabble of armed gangs, an orderly army is coalescing that is prepared to defend its land. If it makes do with a defensive deployment against Israeli incursions, we will again have no moral claim against them: Hamas is entitled to defend Gaza, just as the IDF is entitled to defend Israel.
The coalescence of an army also ensures that if Israel tries to reach an accord with the Hamas government – the one and only way to stop the firing of Qassams – there will be someone in Gaza to prevent the firing. An armed and organized address in the chaos of Gaza also means good news for Israel. But the respect the reservists felt for the way Hamas fought is liable to trickle down deeper. “The Palestinians never looked like this,” the surprised soldiers told Haaretz. Perhaps we will finally stop calling them “terrorists” and refer to them as “fighters.” A bit of respect for the Palestinians and, in particular, an end to our dehumanization of them is liable to mark the beginning of a new chapter.
Well, I certainly hope he’s right that an increased “respect” for the Palestinian Hamas forces will trickle through to larger number of Israelis (though I would not as yet bet my farm on it.)
I do recall that back in 1982, an earlier generation of IDF reservists also discovered a “new” level of respect for the Palestinians fighters who were dug in around Beirut, during the punishing siege the IDF maintained around that city for ten long weeks. (Q.v., the Schiff and Yaari book, “Israel’s Lebanon War”, or any number of other contemporary sources.)
And then, during the first intifada, many Israelis expressed some grudging respect for the Palestinians who maintained a largely nonviolent, mass civilian uprising against the occupation for many years, despite Rabin’s “Iron Fist” and other brutal punishments.
Recently, however, it has been mainly the forces of Hizbullah who’ve won some “respect” from the Israelis, not particularly any Palestinians.
Levy makes an excellent point, though, about the need for a coherent force to be able to maintain order in Gaza– especially under today’s extremely stressed (and distressed) circumstances there.
I suspect, though, that very few of Levy’s countrymen will immediately agree with him that “Hamas is entitled to defend Gaza, just as the IDF is entitled to defend Israel,” though that is certainly a courageous, fairminded, and generally admirable sentiment. (Of course, “defending” both territories through nonviolent means on both sides of the line would be highly preferable to having them both use of military force.)
Levy writes:
- Perhaps the reservists’ reports will dissuade the defense minister from carrying out his plan to conquer Gaza and will motivate Israel to try, for the first time, a different approach with Hamas – negotiations. [One would certainly hope so, though I am less hopeful of this than Levy seems to be. ~HC] Only the recognition of Hamas’ strength is liable to persuade Israel to be cautious about another operation, and only its military buildup will make us understand the full stupidity of the boycott policy that was designed to weaken Hamas…
In his ending, he eerily echoes some of the arguments I made in this recent JWN post, about the problematic absence of any “mutually hurting stalemate” between the Israelis and Palestinians at the present time. He writes:
- Ours is a country that has been ready to make concessions only after blood is spilled. Since the interim accords following the Yom Kippur War and through the withdrawal from Lebanon and the disengagement, Israel has needed a relatively strong enemy to get its act together. If not for Hezbollah, we would still be in Lebanon; if not for Hamas, we would still be in Gaza.
Now the time has come for the next chapter: Did we think leaving Gaza and imprisoning it was enough for life in Israel to be hunky-dory? Hamas comes along and reminds us that this does not suffice. The West Bank is quiet in the meantime? Until an organized and strong resistance movement is revived there, we will not consider evacuating even one little outpost. We will conduct talks every two weeks with Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas, we will go to Annapolis, but we will not discuss, heaven forbid, the “core” issues there. And our terrific lives will continue, while in the West Bank the masses will crowd together at the checkpoints for hours, be subject to humiliation and risk their lives every time they go outside.
These words are not meant to encourage another wave of Palestinian terror. They are intended to try to motivate us, for the first time, to move beyond our usual habits and reach the conclusion – this time without bloodshed – that the occupation cannot continue forever. Perhaps the news about the elastic bands on the Hamas men’s pants will do it for us, and the next cycle of violence will be averted.
Anyway, regardless of Levy’s possibly over-optimistic prognosticating, I think many of the analytical points he makes in the piece are valid… And the facts he reports– about the impressions those seasoned IDF soldiers had of Hamas’s upgraded organizational capabilities– are extremely important.
One depressing prospect is, of course, that instead of reacting to these reports the way Levy clearly hopes, the Israeli political leadership will react in exactly the opposite way: that, egged on by Elliott Abrams and the rest of the Bushites, they will argue instead that Hamas is engaged in a “dangerous, Iranian-backed military buildup in the heart of Gaza that needs to be snuffed out immediately.”
(In March 2006, when I talked with the hawkish Israeli figure Dore Gold in Jeruslaem, that was almost exactly the tenor of the argument he made to me about Hamas’s then-recent victory in the parliamentary elections… Except that in his extremely fevered and fearmongering version of the matter, the Hamas people– along with their alleged Iranian “backers– were also on the verge of acquiring nuclear weapons… Are we scared enough yet?)