"Seven months into the Gaza war, Hamas is far from defeated, stoking fears in Israel that it is walking into a forever war.
The U.S.-designated terrorist group is using its network of tunnels, small cells of fighters and broad social influence not only to survive but also to harry Israeli forces. Hamas is attacking more aggressively, firing more antitank weapons at soldiers sheltering in houses and at Israeli military vehicles daily, said an Israeli reservist from the 98th commando division fighting in Jabalia.
Hamas's resilience poses a strategic problem for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, who proclaimed again on Wednesday that the destruction of the Palestinian Islamist group has to come before any political solution to the war. Concerns have grown within Israel, including in the security establishment, that Israel has no credible plan for replacing Hamas, and whatever achievements the military has won will be diminished.
As Israel's military moved tanks and troops into Rafah, which it had billed as Hamas's last redoubt, Hamas launched a series of hit-and-run attacks on Israeli forces in northern Gaza, witnesses said. Areas that had been relatively quiet turned into battlegrounds as Israel said this week that it called in tanks for support in fights with dozens of militants and struck more than 100 targets from the air, including one it called a Hamas war room in central Gaza.
"Hamas is everywhere in Gaza," said Joost Hiltermann, the head of the Middle East and North Africa program at International Crisis Group, a conflict-resolution organization. "Hamas is far from defeated."
The corollary is that Israel appears to be far from achieving Netanyahu's aim of total victory. Whether Israel proceeds with a full-scale attack on Rafah or not, Hamas is likely to survive and persist in other areas of the strip, according to current and former Israeli military officials and U.S. intelligence estimates.
"There is no alternative to military victory," Netanyahu said in a video released by his office. "The attempt to bypass it with this or that claim is simply detached from reality."
In a sign of the continuing fighting, the Israeli military urged Palestinian civilians to leave several neighborhoods in northern Gaza on Wednesday.
Six Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza in the past week, including five on May 10, according to military data.
The Israeli prime minister's office declined to comment on Hamas's re-emergence in Gaza.
Adding to the challenges, Hamas's top leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, who ordered the Oct. 7 attacks that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, according to Israel, has weathered the Israeli offensive by hiding in the group's tunnels underneath Gaza. The tunnel network has posed a particular challenge for the Israeli army.
Reflecting the group's belief that it can survive the war over the long term, Sinwar has relayed messages to mediators in cease-fire talks that Hamas is prepared for battle in Rafah and that Netanyahu's belief that he can dismantle Hamas is naive. "He always wanted to show Hamas was still in command and that they have not abandoned the battlefield and can go on for months, if not years," said an Arab negotiator, referring to Sinwar.
Hamas has used its tunnels, its fighters and stockpiles of weapons to transition back into a guerrilla fighting force from a group that had acted as the government of the Gaza Strip since winning a parliamentary election in 2006 and launching a military takeover in 2007.
The shift reflects a return in part to Hamas's roots as a group that organized opposition to the Israeli military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza during the first Palestinian intifada, or uprising, in the 1980s. In the current war, that means using hit-and-run tactics and operating in smaller groups of fighters, security analysts and witnesses in Gaza said.
The group has shown no sign of being reluctant to fight. Israel warned during the latest round of cease-fire talks that if progress wasn't made, it would go into Rafah, where more than one million displaced Palestinians were sheltering, seeking to pressure Hamas into softening its demands. Hamas officials told negotiators that they have already shown enough flexibility to reach a cease-fire and that Netanyahu's threats about Rafah wouldn't make them blink.
"Israel has been threatening to attack Rafah and saying they should finish their operation there," senior Hamas official Moussa Abu Marzouk said in an interview with the Dubai-based channel MBC on May 6. "Who's stopping you? Go ahead, carry out your attack and finish your job."
At key moments in cease-fire negotiations, Sinwar has sometimes opted to start shooting, the Arab negotiator said. A recent round of talks faltered as Hamas attacked a crucial border crossing for humanitarian aid, killing four Israeli soldiers.
More than 35,000 people have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war, most of them civilians, Palestinian officials said. The number doesn't differentiate between Hamas fighters and civilians.
When Israel invaded northern Gaza last year in response to Hamas's Oct. 7 attacks, Israeli military officials said they were instructed to clear areas of the strip of Hamas operatives, starting in the north, without a plan for who would take control of those areas once Israeli forces withdrew. Israel pulled much of its forces from northern Gaza this year as it shifted to operations in central and southern Gaza, leaving an opening for Hamas to reassert its influence.
Some Israeli security officials and analysts have blamed Netanyahu's government for not coming up with a plan for an authority that would succeed Hamas.
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant voiced those concerns publicly in a speech on Wednesday, saying that in the absence of an Israeli plan for an alternative government in Gaza, "Only two negative options remain: Hamas' rule in Gaza, or Israeli military rule in Gaza." Gallant and Netanyahu have long disagreed about key decisions in the war, including about a plan for how to replace Hamas.
Others have questioned whether it would have been possible to impose an alternative Palestinian government in the midst of the war when Hamas has threatened to attack anyone collaborating with the Israeli military.
"There is no vacuum. Every place that is evacuated by the IDF, Hamas fills it," said Michael Milshtein, a former head of Palestinian affairs for Israeli military intelligence. "Right now there is no alternative, other than Hamas."
Jabalia was one of the areas where Israel sent forces in recent days to again clear it of Hamas fighters. The Israeli military previously said it had broken the group's command structures throughout northern Gaza.
U.S. officials said they were concerned about the Israeli military's need to return north, noting that the Biden administration has long sought a postwar governance plan. The renewed fighting shows the military didn't do enough for Palestinians living there, giving space for Hamas and other militants to return, a U.S. defense official said.
Netanyahu has rejected working with the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority in Gaza, accusing it of supporting Palestinian militant groups.
Hamas hasn't given up its role as a de facto ruling authority in parts of Gaza, sending its operatives in without uniforms. Israeli officials view Hamas as reasserting its influence through police and civil defense bodies that are under the control of the Hamas-led interior ministry. The group also persists as a social movement.
"Even if you erode the terror activity, still you have the societal structures, the sense of Islamic brotherhood, the ideological and religious elements," said Maj. Gen. Tamir Hayman, a former head of Israeli military intelligence. "That's not something that can be rooted out."" [1]
The problem is that Palestinian Arab refugees from Israel consider the takeover of their property in Israel by the Israeli military illegal.They will not stop until the property will be returned to them [2]. Their solution is for Israeli colonists to go back to Poland. Thanks to the internet many in the world started fighting for this goal. Israelis are in a hot seat now. Military victories had already been many, but they did not make Jewish colonists safer in the Arab world. Thanks to the same internet, the Jews already know that too.
1. Hamas's Tactical Shift Fans Fears of Long War --- Militant group uses guerrilla strategy to show it can fight 'for months, if not years'. Malsin, Jared; Said, Summer. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 16 May 2024: A.1.
2. "From the beginning, Gaza’s chief economic and social problem was the presence of large numbers of Palestinian Arab refugees from Israel living in extreme poverty in squalid camps. The Egyptian government did not consider the area part of Egypt and did not allow the refugees to become Egyptian citizens or to migrate to Egypt or to other Arab countries where they might be integrated into the population. Israel did not allow them to return to their former homes or to receive compensation for their loss of property. The refugees were maintained largely through the aid of the UNRWA."
https://www.britannica.com/place/Gaza-Strip
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