HomeNewsOpinionHamas must be punished, but the Palestine question demands answers

Hamas must be punished, but the Palestine question demands answers

Israel can’t be secure unless it first crushes Hamas and then creates a clear path toward a political settlement. How it handles Gaza’s civilians in the coming days and weeks — and ensures they have food, water and medical care needed to survive — will play a big role in deciding whether that messy, less violent future is possible

October 12, 2023 / 10:36 IST
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An emergency worker carries an injured child to hospital following Israeli airstrikes in the Rimal district west of Gaza City, Gaza. (Source: Bloomberg)

A bunch of Harvard student groups issue a statement putting the blame for Saturday’s wanton massacre of civilians by Hamas “entirely” on Israel. Russia’s President Vladimir Putin blames the US, while Republican presidential hopefuls are accusing Iran. Meanwhile, Israel’s defense minister says it’s all about the “human animals” in Gaza; Hamas, the group of animals in question, blames the existence of Israel.

When it comes to the deliberate slaughter of civilians, those who pull the trigger are always responsible. Yet collectively, these attempts to assign blame for Saturday’s orgy of violence go to the heart of the problem facing Israel’s new “war management cabinet,” formed on Wednesday with Benny Gantz, an opposition leader and retired generalWhat comes after crushing Hamas? That’s best addressed before the Israeli Defense Forces send tanks among 2 million Palestinians in Gaza.

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What the Hamas attack proves is that the emerging new Middle East everyone was so excited about just a week ago — the one in which Israel trades and invests with its Arab neighbors — can’t happen without some kind of settlement for the Palestinians, says John Jenkins, a former UK ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Syria, Libya and Myanmar, who also served as a diplomat in Israel. “After this is all done, how do you reinvent a new politics of settlement?” he asked at a London panel on events in Israel held by Chatham House on Wednesday. “I don’t know what the answer is, I just know there will have to be an answer.”

There are two paths that attempt to solve complex territorial problems such as the Israel-Palestine question typically take. One, the route of absolutes, leads inexorably toward greater violence. The other, involving compromise and self sacrifice, is messy, politically dangerous to those who execute it and hard to achieve. (The attempt cost former Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin his life).  Israel, tragically, has been on the bloodier track for at least 15 years, and the blame for how that happened is spread widely.