A Hamas Official Explains How His Organization Duped Israel into Thinking It Was Interested in Palestinians’ Wellbeing

As Hamas’s founding charter makes explicit, and Evelyn Gordon underscores in her Mosaic article today, the organization’s goal is not statehood but Israel’s destruction. If this isn’t clear enough from the terrorist group’s actions, it was stated frankly by Ali Baraka, a senior Hamas official, in an interview on Russia Today’s Arabic-language television channel. Baraka explains how Hamas sought to lull Israel into a sense of security by acting as if it “it wanted to focus on the 2.5 million Palestinians” under its rule and had “abandoned the resistance altogether.” He goes on to express his gratitude for the backing of Iran and Russia, and ends with the now-familiar claim that Israelis love life, while Palestinians love death. Thanks to the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), the 4-minute video is available with English captions here, along with an abbreviated transcript.

Read more at MEMRI

More about: Gaza War 2023, Hamas, Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

 

When It Comes to Iran, Israel Risks Repeating the Mistakes of 1973 and 2023

If Iran succeeds in obtaining nuclear weapons, the war in Gaza, let alone the protests on college campuses, will seem like a minor complication. Jonathan Schachter fears that this danger could be much more imminent than decisionmakers in Jerusalem and Washington believe. In his view, Israel seems to be repeating the mistake that allowed it to be taken by surprise on Simchat Torah of 2023 and Yom Kippur of 1973: putting too much faith in an intelligence concept that could be wrong.

Israel and the United States apparently believe that despite Iran’s well-documented progress in developing capabilities necessary for producing and delivering nuclear weapons, as well as its extensive and ongoing record of violating its international nuclear obligations, there is no acute crisis because building a bomb would take time, would be observable, and could be stopped by force. Taken together, these assumptions and their moderating impact on Israeli and American policy form a new Iran concept reminiscent of its 1973 namesake and of the systemic failures that preceded the October 7 massacre.

Meanwhile, most of the restrictions put in place by the 2015 nuclear deal will expire by the end of next year, rendering the question of Iran’s adherence moot. And the forces that could be taking action aren’t:

The European Union regularly issues boilerplate press releases asserting its members’ “grave concern.” American decisionmakers and spokespeople have created the unmistakable impression that their reservations about the use of force are stronger than their commitment to use force to prevent an Iranian atomic bomb. At the same time, the U.S. refuses to enforce its own sanctions comprehensively: Iranian oil exports (especially to China) and foreign-currency reserves have ballooned since January 2021, when the Biden administration took office.

Israel’s response has also been sluggish and ambiguous. Despite its oft-stated policy of never allowing a nuclear Iran, Israel’s words and deeds have sent mixed messages to allies and adversaries—perhaps inadvertently reinforcing the prevailing sense in Washington and elsewhere that Iran’s nuclear efforts do not present an exigent crisis.

Read more at Hudson Institute

More about: Gaza War 2023, Iran nuclear program, Israeli Security, Yom Kippur War