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Sunday, October 08, 2023

Israel at War - Recriminations - Netanyahu Must Go

Early Sunday morning, Army Radio began reading the names of the 500 dead from yesterday’s Pearl Harbor-like attack by Hamas Gaza on Israel. Over two thousand were wounded. The number of Israelis – men, women, and children – taken captive by the enemy is unknown.

The final number of dead from yesterday will go higher as the fog of war lifts and bodies are recovered.

Some 24 hours after the initial attack, the security situation in two kibbutz settlements on our side of the Gaza border is unclear.

Hamas managed to occupy parts of Israel within the Green Line for the better part of a day. That is something no other enemy has achieved since 1948.

Day two of the 2023 war has dawned.

I hear this is not the time for recriminations. I beg to differ. At the very least, let's put the cards on the table.

Binyamin Netanyahu is responsible for our predicament. When the situation stabilizes, he should resign. 

The heads of the IDF and security services repeatedly warned him that his putsch to transform Israel into an illiberal majoritarian democracy and the vehement mass opposition it was engendering was undermining our deterrence. Yet he plowed on. 

He formed the most extreme insular government in Israel’s history. Not since Oslo has the national consensus and esprit de corps been so undermined.

Seeing their leaders in the cabinet emboldened Hardal messianics to dance their way up, around, and into the Temple Mount. The Palestinian Arab leadership exploited this reckless behavior to argue that the Jews were “storming” their holy shrines. In recent weeks, they tied up the army with midnight visits to “Joseph’s Tomb” in Nablus. These pilgrimages require an incursion into an enemy city, invariably leading to clashes and casualties.  

The most right-wing government in Israel’s history lost control of the security situation inside the country. Violence in the Arab sector spiked. Spitting and other attacks by Hardalim and other ultra-Orthodox louts on Christians became routine. The government was obsessively focused on changing the regime. Nothing else mattered.

It shoveled millions of shekels to the Haredim and to runaway settlement building. 

Netanyahu was scheming to find legislative ways to institutionalize Haredi draft dodging.

He lied about stopping Iran from getting nuclear weapons. For all intents and purposes, the mullahs can now put an atomic bomb together within two weeks.

He bet on building up Hamas to the detriment of the PLO. He gave the green light for Qatar to deliver suitcases stuffed with millions of dollars into the hands of the Islamists.

And, of course, he released from prison all the prominent Hamas chieftains who went on to rebuild the terror infrastructure in Gaza and the West Bank. 

He was derelict in repeatedly appointing unqualified defense ministers who failed to ask the right questions about our Maginot Line along the Gaza Strip.

He is accountable for the intelligence failure of Israel being caught with its pants down precisely 50 years after the Yom Kippur War. He has to answer for the military being so stretched that it could not push the invaders out for a full day. He is liable for not addressing the nation on a timely basis.  

As soon as it is propitious, Binyamin Netanyahu and his incompetent government must go. 

Until then, he should bring in Yair Lapid and Benny Ganz and create an emergency war cabinet. 

When this is over, we can get down to more substantive recriminations and a State Commission of Inquiry.


13 comments:

  1. Anonymous10:01 AM

    So well written......Jeff

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  2. Anonymous10:15 AM

    As always, you tell the truth.

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  3. Anonymous11:52 AM

    Good piece. Hard to disagree with any of it. Of course,“ storming Al-Aksa” has been their go-to excuse and war-cry going right back to the founding of the state and even before.

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  4. Anonymous11:53 AM

    I have forwarded you to many friends. Devastating.

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  5. Anonymous5:09 PM

    I would say that 95% of what's written here has no connection whatsoever to what's happened. The only relevant 2 questions are 1/ why did this (and every other government post Rabin) nurture Hamas rather than destroy it and 2/ why was our intelligence so poor that we decided that not only would they never attack, but that we could leave the border effectively unguarded? These questions lie at Netanyahu's feet, but also at almost every other politician's who has sat in government for more than the past 20 years. Netanyahu has made a balls up of everything else in this latest government, but tying those failings to what is a massive and systematic failure of strategy and understanding is greater than just him. I agree that once this is over he should resign. But he should take with him a large percentage of the Knesset and Matkal as well and fresh blood should be allowed to rise up just like it did after '73

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  6. Anonymous10:26 AM

    Well written Elliot. And with every question the scene becomes grimmer. Lots more to say.

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  7. Anonymous10:28 AM

    What new solutions to this ongoing Gaza dilemna do our leaders have? Bombing the shit out of them hasn't worked in the past. Might increasing the bombing a hundred fold bring the desired result? And if not, then what? - Joe

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  8. Elliot Jager10:37 AM

    Until now, the strategy of successive governments has been to keep Hamas in power and the Palestinian polity divided. We have met enemy violence with violence, but the approach has been to maintain the Islamists in power in Gaza to undermine the PLO in the WB. So, maybe a change in strategy? It seems that Hamas can't be allowed to remain sovereign in Gaza.

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  9. Spot on. I underwrite every word you wrote. Keep up the good work.

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  10. I thought that the PLO is a lame duck vis-a-vis future leadership.... because they lack popular support. Or maybe popular support doesn't matter.

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  11. Elliot Jager11:04 AM

    The PLO is corrupt and discredited. It has little popular support. This played into our hands since we wanted to keep the WB and Gaza divided. Refashioning and reconstructing a new Palestinian Authority is within the realm of the possible, especially since doing so will have international support. And BTW, if Israel had allowed the Palestinian Arabs in Jerusalem to vote by mail as we did in the past, the PA would have had new elections, and Abbas would have retired. We want him there, old and teetering.

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  12. Kathryn May4:03 PM

    So insightful and well written. Will be sharing.

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  13. Elliot Jager5:32 PM

    Here we are, 60 hours into the war, and Netanyahu can't bring himself to form a national unity war cabinet composed of himself and Gallant, alongside Ganz, Lapid & Eizenkopf. How pathetic.

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I am open to running your criticism if it is not ad hominem. I prefer praise, though.