What's the true target in Gaza invasion?

Sunday, 04 January 2009 20:53


IHT
http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/01/04/mideast/assess.php


By Ethan Bronner

EREZ CROSSING, on the Israel-Gaza border: As Israeli tanks and troops poured 
into Gaza, the next phase in its fierce attempt to end rocket attacks, a 
question hung over the operation: Can the rockets really be stopped for any 
length of time while Hamas remains in power in Gaza?

And if the answer is determined to be no, then is the real aim of the operation 
to remove Hamas entirely, no matter the cost?

After her visit to Paris on Thursday to explain to the French authorities why 
she thought this was not the time for a quick cease-fire, Foreign Minister 
Tzipi Livni of Israel said, "There is no doubt that as long as Hamas controls 
Gaza, it is a problem for Israel, a problem for the Palestinians and a problem 
for the entire region."

Vice Premier Haim Ramon went even further Friday night in an interview on 
Israeli television, saying Israel must not end this operation with Hamas in 
charge of Gaza.

"What I think we need to do is to reach a situation in which we do not allow 
Hamas to govern," Ramon said on Channel One. "That is the most important thing."

Neither Prime Minister Ehud Olmert nor Defense Minister Ehud Barak has made 
such a statement. Still, there is a growing and shared concern among Israeli 
leaders that any letup against Hamas would be problematic for Israel's broad 
goals in the long term because it could bolster and validate the group, which 
says Israel should be destroyed.

"If the war ends in a draw, as expected, and Israel refrains from re-occupying 
Gaza, Hamas will gain diplomatic recognition," Aluf Benn, a political analyst, 
wrote in the newspaper Haaretz on Friday. "No matter what you call it," he 
added, "Hamas will obtain legitimacy."

In addition, any potential truce deal would probably include an increase in 
commercial traffic from Israel and Egypt into Gaza, which is Hamas's central 
demand: to end the economic boycott and border closing it has been facing. To 
build up the Gaza economy under Hamas, Israeli leaders say, would be to build 
up Hamas. Yet withholding the commerce would continue to leave 1.5 million 
Gazans living in despair.

Implicit in Benn's argument, however, is that the only way to stop Hamas from 
gaining legitimacy is for Israel to fully occupy Gaza again, more than three 
years after removing its soldiers and settlers. That is a prospect practically 
no one in Israel or abroad is advocating.

Moreover, while it may sound decisive to speak of taking Hamas out of power, 
almost no one familiar with Gaza and Palestinian politics considers it 
realistic. Hamas legislators won a democratic majority in elections four years 
ago, and the group has 15,000 to 20,000 men under arms. It has consolidated its 
rule in the past 18 months since pushing out its rivals loyal to the more 
Western-oriented and moderate Fatah party of President Mahmoud Abbas, who sits 
in Ramallah in the West Bank.

And while there are plenty of Gazans who would prefer Fatah, they seem hardly 
organized or strong enough to become the new rulers, even with the help of 
former colleagues in exile in Ramallah who say, anyway, that they would never 
be willing to ride into Gaza on the back of an Israeli tank. In fact, the 
longer Israel pounds Gaza, the weaker Fatah is likely to become because it will 
be seen as collaborating.

The likelier result of a destruction of the Hamas infrastructure, then, would 
be chaos, anathema not only to the people of Gaza but also to those hoping for 
peace in southern Israel.

Yet in its campaign so far, which has killed scores of bystanders, including 
children, Israel has not spared the trappings of Hamas sovereignty or limited 
itself to military targets. It says that the mosques it has destroyed were 
weapons storehouses and that the Islamic University, which it has hit 
repeatedly, housed explosives factories. But it has also reduced many 
government buildings to rubble without any claim that they were military in 
nature.

"The government buildings are a place where financial, logistical and human 
resources serve to support terror," said Captain Benjamin Rutland, a spokesman 
for the Israeli military. "Much of the government is involved in the active 
support and planning of terror."

Taken together, it suggests that even if Israel intends to hold back from 
completely overthrowing Hamas, its choice of assault tactics could head that 
way anyway. And the Israelis may already be facing a kind of mission creep: 
After all, if enough of Hamas's infrastructure is destroyed, the prospect of 
governing Gaza, a densely populated, refugee-filled area whose weak economy has 
been devastated by the Israeli-led boycott, would be exceedingly difficult.

In the background, too, is broad international criticism of this war on Gaza, 
not only because of the unspeakable suffering seen on television screens but 
also because of a feeling that Israel has tried such tactics in the past and 
never succeeded.

In particular, many point to the 2006 war against Hezbollah in Lebanon, where 
Israel also tried to destroy rocket launchers and a hostile organization's 
infrastructure, only to end up killing many civilians and leaving Hezbollah 
more popular and perhaps ultimately stronger than before the war.

But military planners here say that the parallel is inexact and that they, too, 
have learned a lesson. Gaza is smaller and flatter than southern Lebanon and, 
most important, does not have a sieve-like border with a country like Syria 
where arms can be constantly resupplied. Destroying the smuggler tunnels from 
the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula into Gaza and systematically eliminating weapons 
depots and launcher sites, along with their supporting infrastructures, will 
ultimately succeed, they contend.

It may take weeks or months, they assert, but it can work. If true, questions 
still remain: At what human cost? And who will be in charge when it is all over?


      

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