Remember Rafah? For months, the Biden Administration bitterly opposed an Israeli invasion of Hamas’s last stronghold in Gaza.
The mantra was that Israel had “no credible plan” to evacuate the city’s 1.3 million civilians. Yet the Israelis went ahead anyway, and two weeks later they have safely evacuated an estimated 950,000 people.
This was supposed to be impossible. Rafah became a red line for Mr. Biden on the logic that there was no way to conduct a major operation with all those civilians present. That was the justification for the President’s arms embargo. “We’re walking away from Israel’s ability to wage war in those areas,” he said.
Even as the evacuation got under way, Secretary of State Antony Blinken repeated that Israel had “no credible plan.” National security adviser Jake Sullivan added, “We still believe it would be a mistake to launch a major military operation into the heart of Rafah.” When the evacuation began to work, the Biden team moved on to criticizing Israeli readiness for the “day after” the main fighting, as if success in Rafah were a foregone conclusion.
Rafah remains critical to any day-after plan, since nothing can work if Hamas governs territory with military battalions and controls the Egyptian border. Israel has already discovered 50 tunnels crossing from Rafah into Egypt for smuggling. Once troops finish clearing a buffer zone along the border, Israel can cut off Hamas from Egypt, a key to strangling whatever insurgency may follow.
Though Israeli liberals won’t like to hear it, Israel probably will need to fill the vacuum in Gaza for a time. Though Israeli right-wingers won’t like to hear it, the purpose would be to make way for local governance.
The politics, there and here, explain why it has been easier to pretend there’s no plan at all.
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Instead of pressuring Israel to accept a two-state solution, why doesn't the Biden Administration and European countries pressure Hamas to free the hostages as a pre-condition
@TrustingD3mocratGreen2yrs2Y
"Gadi Eisenkot, a former chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces and a member of the current Israeli war cabinet, also warned earlier this year that talk of the “absolute defeat” of Hamas is a “tall tale.”
Proving Biden and his apparatchiks wrong is not the challenge - - the real challenge is remediating the damage done by an almost 4 year reign of failures - both large and larger. These guys have got to go - not matter what.
@EuphoricFoxNo Labels2yrs2Y
This would have been real news if Biden had been proven right. Instead, it's just another day... Biden (and Obama's) "red lines" mean nothing.
@WeaverChuckRepublican2yrs2Y
No one wants the Palestinians and that’s the little secret no one wants to discuss. If the regional nations cared one hoot about them, they would gladly take them in as brothers and sisters. That the Israeli’s are the ONLY ones doing the decent thing for them will never be acknowledged by the cowardly US Administration whose gifts to Iran have funded the whole charade. Shame on Biden and his crowd of incompetents
Just admit it: Israel does not have a plan to defeat Hamas. The Israel Defense Forces previously waged war in northern Gaza and appeared to defeat Hamas there, but without a strategy to hold the territory. So Hamas rose there once more, and Israel’s lack of any coherent plan for Gaza suggests that this could go on indefinitely.
Either Hamas dies, or Israel dies. I pick Hamas. So does Israel.
Biden doesn't.
Biden is wrong.
It's the one thing he is good at.
@JoyfulCardinalPatriot2yrs2Y
Dearborn prefers Hamas to prevail. Enough said.
@DunbirdRodVeteran2yrs2Y
Israel is creating the next generation of terrorists:
"“It is likely that the Gaza conflict will have a generational impact on terrorism,” Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence, warned in March."
@MindCoyoteSocialist2yrs2Y
Republicans accuse Biden of betraying America’s friendship with Israel by pausing the transfer of 2,000-pound bombs and taking other steps to discourage a full invasion of Rafah.
I’d say it’s the opposite, a measure of Biden’s concern for Israel’s own interests. On balance, it seems to me that Biden is more clearly on Israel’s side than Netanyahu is.
@9MRJ6GHLibertarian2yrs2Y
The world is in a sad state of affairs. Cancel culture has taken over, public opinion virtually sits on either one end of an extreme or another. People are no longer allowed to have opinions, beliefs, or ideas that differ without being ostracized and attacked both physically and metaphorically.
Israel is unlikely to eradicate Hamas, any more than the United States eradicated the Taliban in Afghanistan, the Vietcong in Vietnam or violent militias in Iraq.
Israel is unlikely to eradicate Hamas, any more than the United States eradicated the Taliban in Afghanistan, the Vietcong in Vietnam or violent militias in Iraq.
@ISIDEWITH2yrs2Y
@ISIDEWITH2yrs2Y
@ISIDEWITH2yrs2Y
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