Clearly your views are in line with what Hamas predicted. Therefore would you argue that this has been a success for Hamas? It's not a facetious question, I was arguing with my wife the other day that strategically they've actually played a blinder if you consider them willing to deal with this level of death and destruction to turn the world against Israel and elevate the issue to the forefront of geo-politics. I just don't understand the mindset where a 'good plan' can involve this much civilian death, but maybe in the course of history it will go down differently.
Quite an interesting way to interpret my predictions.
It's been an enormous success in a particularly wicked way.Do not forget that beyond the horrible massacre of innocent Israeli civilians, it's been a historic blow to Israel's military might and its legendary intelligence agencies. Suddenly Israel doesn't seem that invincible anymore and that leaves marks for decades, if not centuries. The sheer rage and Israel's brutal response is a direct reaction to it.
For you to understand it, you have to put yourself in the mindset someone's who's been colonized, stolen from, brutalized, humiliated, oppressed their whole life and has absolutely nothing to lose. Hamas' goal was never to win but to survive, and it will survive one way or another. Just like Palestine. You can't kill an idea and there's never been a military solution to this kind of conflicts. A few centuries or millenia ago, sure, kill enough natives, steal enough land and get over with. Even then, chances were high that it would blow right in your face. But after WWII and the decolonization? Not a single chance in hell. Therein lies Palestine's only chance to survive.
However for it to work, you first have to inflict a massive shock to the (colonial) public opinion. Traumatize, enrage and radicalize them just like your own population and hope for the worst. All bridges are burned, no more status quo that saw Palestine being slowly eaten away and no turning back. Winning the war of opinions on the international scene is the only thing that matters, as a military victory is off the table. Two or three weeks after the 10/7
@2cents pointed me to the Phillipeville Massacre (1955) during Algeria's war of independence. It's one of the best analogies, along with Finkelstein's Nat Turner's slave rebellion.
It's an all or nothing gamble in a 75 years long colonial war. People often talk about existential threats to Israel, but the reality is that Palestinians actually were and still are in danger of being eradicated from the History books.