I
sometimes wonder just what pundits are thinking. Israel has just
used Gaza as a shooting gallery without seriously risking life and
limb and sharply reducing the actual missile threat posed by Hamas.
Even better they were able to battle test the Iron Dome against a
missile suite that obviously is not even capable of hitting a
target.
In
the Aftermath, Hamas will loudly declare a victory and perhaps sober
up. They got zero support from Egypt or anyone else for that matter.
Egypt is now morally in a position to supervise their stepchild and
will since no conceivable Egyptian interest is served by having a
state of war in the Sinai.
Recall
Hezbollah went through the same process of asserting their
credentials in southern Lebanon and then announced victory when it
was nothing of the sort. What they asserted was that they could
engage in a bloodbath on their own home ground while absorbing 100%
of the collateral damage and even paying for it. This is a complete
repeat with the only difference been that their missile threat is
even less of a threat with the Iron Dome in place.
Egypt
is now in position to negotiate a settlement with Gaza that has been
needed since 1948 and ultimately quell their border. With the
political credentials of the Muslim Brotherhood, it is even possible
to normalize trade with Israel. Both are now desirable outcomes for
Egypt while Gaza was lost its legitimacy as a military threat to
anyone.
In
fact as Egyptian power waxes it will find itself in real conflict
with the averred goals of Hamas. Dealing with it now has become
desirable. Can you imagine massive Israeli investment in Egypt?
In
short, Egypt and Morsi are the winners of this conflict, while Gaza
has been reduced to impotence. Israel won in 1967 and the rest of it
has been assisting the Arabs in accepting that. The last holdouts of
Syria and Gaza have fallen on their swords during the past year
leaving a completely isolated Iran who can only talk the talk today.
In
the meantime, the Palestinian people are hopelessly isolated into
pockets and are now coming to grips with making the best
accommodation possible in a piecemeal fashion. Their best possible
deal today would be outright absorption of the West Bank with a
generational process of reeducation and acceptance of Israeli
citizenship. There is enough on the table for Israel to come to
grips with establishing a social and economic dispensation that is
fair and equitable. It may never be possible but we need to see it
done somewhere and sometime and there is no better case.
After Israel-Gaza: Who won, who
lost?
By Peter Wilkinson, CNN
updated 12:09 PM EST, Thu November 22,
2012
(CNN) -- As the
dust settled over Gaza and Israel on Thursday amid relative calm,
analysts were weighing who were the winners and losers from the
conflict. How do the main players in the region now stack up?
Israel: The
conflict represents a qualified victory for the country and
its Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to CNN's Paula
Newton. "Just months before an election, Netanyahu's government
targeted and killed Hamas' military leader, Ahmed al-Jaabari.
Hundreds of airstrikes on Gaza followed, but, the real victory was
possibly the combat debut of Iron Dome, the U.S.-funded defense
shield that kept dozens of Hamas rockets from hitting Israeli
civilians."
The Israeli
military itself said the intensity of its airstrikes on Gaza
meant it made a significant dent in Hamas' offensive capability. Over
the eight-day conflict, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) looked to
deplete some of the estimated 12,000 rockets it says Hamas has in its
arsenal and destroy tunnels that are said to be used to smuggle
weapons.
But some analysts
questioned whether the death of al-Jaabari really would benefit
Israel. Elizabeth O'Bagy, from the Washington-based Institute for the
Study of War, told CNN she believed it was in fact a mistake. "It
will lead to the proliferation of extremist groups (in Gaza), less
control over rocket attacks and an increase in violence against
Israel."
Al-Jaabari controlled
the militias with an iron grip, as Jon Alterman, for the
Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies,
pointed out. "There were people in Hamas jails for firing
rockets at the wrong time and al-Jaabari was one of the guys who put
them in jail. Now when someone decides to take a pot-shot, they can
take a pot-shot."
The background of the
conflict took place in a region greatly changed since the last
significant violence of 2008-09. In the UK's Daily Telegraph,
Richard Spencer wrote that the Arab Spring had changed the situation
significantly for Israel: "Once it could afford to retreat into
a default position of using overwhelming force in its own defence.
After all, the Arab dictators it faced were equally unflinching -- in
their rhetoric, at least, even if their actions often failed to
match.
"Now Israel has a
political base that is more divided and broad-ranging than ever
before, and allies that are profoundly uneasy about its policies. And
suddenly its neighbours are more pluralist. Hamas has new democratic
allies abroad, in many cases allied to the U.S. -- Egypt, Turkey and
Qatar prominent among them."
Even before the
cease-fire was brokered, CNN's Nic Robertson observed: "Where
does this leave Israel? Simply put, while Israel is stronger
militarily, it is in a weaker political position than it was in 2009.
"The long
universal of the Arab world is a dislike of the Israeli state's
treatment of Palestinians. In the past most Arab leaders were
dictators, able to take a path far different from the views of the
Arab street. Not any more. The region's new post-Arab Spring
democratically-elected leaders are only too aware of the radical
hardliners waiting for an opportunity."
Hamas: Despite
the deaths and destruction in Gaza, the Islamist political movement
that rules the territory has emerged emboldened from this conflict
and its truce, according to some observers.
"Hamas has
emerged stronger, it has consolidated its control over Gaza and it
has gained now more legitimacy," said Aaron David Miller, a
Middle East scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center, told CNN.
In the eyes of many
Palestinian people, the militant leaders of Gaza took on Israel more
boldly than ever before, firing rockets farther than ever before. And
they may yet manage to get an easing of the Gaza economic blockade if
a more comprehensive deal can be reached.
"Look what they
accomplished; they, rather than (President Mahmoud) Abbas, has put
the Palestinian issue back on the international stage," says
Miller.
But with Al-Jaabari
once a key figure in uniting rag-tag Hamas militias into organized
brigades, counter-intuitively his death could mean more unrest ahead.
"He was an enforcer of peace as well as war," said
Alterman, adding that his death may "make it not only harder to
reach a peace agreement, but it can make it harder to avoid war."
Fatah: Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah faction that governs
the West Bank have lost much in this conflict, commented CNN's
Newton. "He was supposed to be the moderate peace broker who
could finally forge a new deal with Israel. Now he cannot even claim
to speak for all Palestinians and has shown that he has no leverage
with Hamas, his archrival."
In an op-ed for
CNN, Danielle Pletka, vice president for foreign and defense policy
studies at the American Enterprise Institute, said Hamas was not
trying to destroy the state of Israel. "Rather, it was to gain
the upper hand in its endless and fruitless battle against Fatah for
the Palestinian political mantle, ideally with the wind of the Arab
world's Islamist revolutions at its back. That won't happen either.
"Egypt's Mohamed
Morsy and Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan are willing to lend
rhetorical support and a few visits to Gaza, but they're never going
to do anything substantial for Palestinians because they neither care
enough about actual Palestinian people nor wish to queer their pitch
with Europe and the United States."
Egypt: President
Mohamed Morsy, clearly underestimated, deftly navigated what is a
minefield of competing interests, including those of his own country.
"For a civilian
president in Egypt perceived as a weak leader, he has, much to
everyone's surprise, delivered," said Miller.
Morsy proved he had
the leverage necessary to bring Hamas to the table and get its
leadership to agree to a cease-fire. Brokering that deal has given
him much needed political capital in both the Arab world and the
United States.
Under former President
Hosni Mubarak, the country's security forces had suppressed its own
Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood, even jailing Morsy at one point.
That gave Morsy and his government influence with Hamas that Mubarak,
a product of Egypt's military establishment, never had, said
Fawaz Gerges, a professor of international relations and Middle East
analyst at the London School of Economics.
"Hamas listens to
Mohamed Morsy," Gerges told CNN as the talks were still going
on. "Hamas looks up to Egypt now, at this particular stage, and
that is why Egypt has emerged as the most important state vis-a-vis
Hamas and Gaza." Egypt's role in the talks was "pivotal,"
he said.
Iran: The
Islamic republic's nuclear program was one of the unspoken aspects to
the conflict, according to world affairs columnist Frida Ghitis.
"Iran and its nuclear program also play a powerful psychological
role, as observers and participants ponder the parallels between the
latest Israel-Hamas conflict and a possible war in which Iran would
stand against the U.S. or Israel, and perhaps other NATO allies.
"Little wonder
then that Israel has received strong support from U.S. President
Barack Obama -- who has repeatedly stated, "We are fully
supportive of Israel's right to defend itself from missiles raining
on people's homes" -- as well as from nations including the UK,
Germany, Canada, Australia, the Netherlands and others.
"When Israelis
see a rocket launched from Gaza, the thought that one day that rocket
could carry nuclear materials burns hot in their mind."
But Iran's hand was
arguably weakened after this episode as Israel's Iron Dome shot
hundreds of its missiles out the sky, CNN's Newton said.
While Israel has
always accused Iran of smuggling weapons to Hamas through the
Egyptian border, Iran today implicitly confirmed it.
"Gaza is under
siege, so we cannot help them. The Fajr-5 missiles have not been
shipped from Iran. Its technology has been transferred (there) and
are being produced quickly," Mohamed Ali Jafari, the head of
Iran's Revolutionary Guard, is quoted as saying by the Iranian news
agency ISNA.
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