Добавить новость
ru24.net
WND
Январь
2025
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31

Trump calls Gaza ceasefire ‘epic’ – but it’s not

0
WND 

Only hours after a possible ceasefire deal was announced between Israel and Hamas, Khalil al Hayya, chairman of the terrorist organization, declared victory, contending that the mass murder of Israeli civilians on Oct. 7, 2023, would “forever be a source of pride for our people.”

Speaking from the safety of Qatar, Hayya didn’t express a hint of regret for the deadly tragedy he helped bring down on his own people, promising that the next Oct. 7 would finally “expel the occupation from our lands and from Jerusalem in the earliest time possible.”

We’ll see about that, I guess.

President-elect Donald Trump said the ceasefire deal is “epic.” It isn’t. At best, it’s a painful, and hopefully fleeting, surrender to theocrats that will save the lives of some hostages.

If the deal is finalized, it will reportedly entail a six-week ceasefire that would see a gradual withdrawal of the Israel Defense Forces from the Gaza Strip, though not the Philadelphi Corridor, the sieve that separates Gaza from Egypt and Iranian armaments. In turn, the terrorist group promises to release 33 hostages on “humanitarian” grounds, which is to say perhaps they will be alive, though there are no guarantees. Israel will hand over 30 terrorists for each of the kidnapped civilians.

Hamas will still be holding 65 hostages, American citizens among them. Many, if not most, are likely dead.

The ceasefire itself means little in the long run. It’s not as if Hamas is concerned about civilian casualties in Gaza. Indeed, it welcomes them. Why else would it embed munitions and operational centers under hospitals and schools? Former Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar is on record telling his underlings that churning out thousands of martyrs is the best way to manipulate the credulous Western establishment.

Palestinians do not view the cessation of fighting as a time to forge lasting settlements, peace or security but rather as a time for retrenchment. After all, there was a ceasefire in place on Oct. 6, 2023.

So, why now? It’s almost surely the case that the incoming Trump administration frightened Hamas. Not long ago, the future and past president promised there would be “hell to pay” if the hostages weren’t returned by his inauguration, which is early next week. The remnants of Hamas believed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was about to be unleashed.

Other reports claim that Trump also pressured Netanyahu to take the deal. (As of this writing, Israel hasn’t voted on the proposal.) Perhaps. Though, to be fair, Israel has traded terrorists for Israeli hostages, alive or dead, for decades. It’s easy to say, “Never negotiate with terrorists.” In real time, the moral calculations are complicated.

President Joe Biden, who often delayed Israel’s efforts to decimate Hamas and Hezbollah, said the new deal would bring a “permanent end of the war.” Well, al Hayya disagrees. History disagrees. And the Israeli electorate, which no longer seems keen on living with Iranian-proxy terrorist states on its borders, also tends to disagree.

One hopes that after hostages are brought to safety, the IDF re-invades after six weeks and decimates the remnants of Hamas – or the Islamic Jihad or Jihadis of Gaza, or whatever the next iteration of the terrorist group is called – and keeps doing so until the Palestinians in Gaza finally embrace reality. There is no other choice.

Many Israelis and supporters of the Jewish state are angry about the deal. They argue not only that these types of arrangements incentivize more hostage-taking, which is true, but they claim handing back Gaza means the loss of life was for nothing.

It shouldn’t be forgotten that Netanyahu accomplished much after the massive security lapse of Oct. 7.

Israel largely decimated Hamas, eliminating thousands of its militia and decapitating its leadership, killing, among others, Sinwar. Hezbollah, the theocratic militia that has kept Lebanon in a state of turmoil for decades, is also in disarray. Operation Grim Beeper greatly mitigated collateral damage and left thousands of Hezbollah militants dead or injured. The success of the Northern Front helped topple the genocidal Iranian stooge Bashar Assad, who is now in Russian exile. Iran itself, which spent so much treasure erecting proxies throughout the Middle East, is as impotent as it has been in a long time.

It’s understandable, surely, why Israel would approve such a deal. Think back, if you can, to the trauma of 9/11 in the United States. The national pain, and the plight of the families, created immense political pressure to bring home the innocent.

Trump, a great ally of Israel in his first term, has a political victory before he’s even sworn in. But there are costs and risks attached to allowing Hamas possibly to retrench. The question is, does the deal risk putting more lives in danger in the long run? Not if Israel does the right thing and finishes the job.




Moscow.media
Частные объявления сегодня





Rss.plus




Спорт в России и мире

Новости спорта


Новости тенниса
Елена Рыбакина

Елена Рыбакина сделала заявление после выхода в третий круг Australian Open-2025






Февраль будет удивительным: синоптики поделились новым прогнозом на конец зимы

Жители Саратова попросили спасти застрявшую на льду Волги собаку

Ефимов: в Москве в 2024 году внесено более 1,3 тысячи изменений в ПЗЗ

Деньги закопали в лесу: как из сочинского депозитария украли более 160 миллионов