Israel May Have Secured Temporary Quiet in Gaza. But for How Long? https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2018/07/israel-may-have-secured-temporary-quiet-in-gaza-but-for-how-long/

July 23, 2018 | Amnon Lord
About the author: Amnon Lord is an editor and columnist at the Israeli newspaper Makor Rishon and an editor at the online magazine Mida. His books (in Hebrew) include The Israeli Left: From Socialism to Nihilism (2003) and, most recently, The Lost Generation: The Story of the Yom Kippur War (2013).

On Friday, a Hamas sniper in Gaza shot and killed an Israeli soldier, prompting the IDF to respond with intensive attacks on the terrorist group’s positions. Since then, Hamas has agreed to a cease-fire that it has thus far observed. Amnon Lord comments on the situation:

Saturday has gone down in IDF records as the quietest day on Israel’s border with Gaza since the end of March, when Hamas first embarked on its border campaign. . . . It is still too early to determine whether this last round over the weekend restored the deterrence in place following 2014’s Operation Protective Edge. According to one media report, Israel has committed itself not to target children or youths sending over incendiary kites. Still, [it has made clear that] the entire range of targets [in Gaza] is open to attack, and no one in Hamas’s senior echelon has immunity.

Since the beginning of Hamas’s campaign, the IDF’s policy [regarding Gaza] was to create a “cumulative balance of losses” on the other side. The terrorists acted on three fronts: they shot rockets, attacked the border fence, and launched incendiary kites, [balloons, and the like]. The IDF considers its efforts on the border-fence front a success because the border was not breached—one of the main goals of the so-called “March of Return.” It’s not entirely clear that the enemy is of the same opinion. It has used the border disturbances to mobilize its people endlessly and give them the sense they are engaged in a war of attrition.

Furthermore, for the first time in the history of Israel’s wars against Hamas, the Israeli left, along with some American Jews and some members of the American Democratic party, are standing up in support of the terrorist organization. From Hamas’s perspective, the fact that Israeli intellectuals have come to, in some respect, identify with the Islamist terrorist organization is a remarkable achievement. . . .

The IDF’s goal is clear: to restore peace and quiet. At some point, someone [in Israel] will have to decide whether Israel can live with a terrorist entity capable of rattling the country, each time through the use of new and unexpected methods.

Read more on Israel Hayom: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/in-gaza-all-options-are-on-the-table/