David Hazony: The horror of Hamas and why we Israelis will finally defeat it
Since Israel’s founding, every military conflict has taken place with foreign governments, especially America’s and Europe’s, holding a platinum stopwatch.Eli Lake: Delusion in the White House. Bloodshed in Israel.
At a certain point — usually just days or weeks into the war — we are told, “That’s quite enough.”
It has nothing to do with military objectives or whether we’ve uprooted the terror.
It’s about what they can handle politically.
After that time, they turn to the UN Security Council and start talking about sanctions. Pressure becomes quite real.
Such premature cessation inevitably sets the stage for further conflict.
Follow along with The Post’s live blog for the latest on Hamas’ attack on Israel
It gives terror organizations, whether Hamas or Hezbollah or Islamic Jihad, the opportunity to regroup, rearm and redouble their efforts to murder civilians.
World leaders need to know this time is different.
If you are our friends, if you are truly disgusted by what you have seen and believe in our right to defend ourselves, you’ll let us get the job done.
Defeating Hamas will take time and patience.
But it must happen, not just because it is right but also because what starts with Jews never ends with Jews.
Hamas glories in its ability to make Jewish children and elderly suffer on camera.
But with every gruesome image, Israeli resolve is further steeled.
This is an enemy of almost unthinkable evil.
Now you have all seen it — and you must not forget what you have seen.
We will bounce back from our shock and horror and defeat Hamas. Stay tuned.
The Biden administration must now reckon with the fact that it has done a deal with Hamas’s most powerful and important patron. Biden’s efforts to restore a nuclear deal with Iran and its lax enforcement of secondary sanctions have freed up capital for the Islamic Republic to invest in its terrorist proxy.Daniel Greenfield: This is Not About Israel, It’s About Islam
And let’s not forget Biden’s strategy with Qatar, another backer of Hamas. On January 31, 2022, President Biden named Qatar as a “major non-NATO ally.” This designation was a major diplomatic reward for a country that to this day allows much of the senior leadership of Hamas, including its political leader, Ismail Haniyeh, to live there. (That U.S.-Qatari deal did not include conditions to expel these figures.)
On Saturday, Qatar’s foreign ministry issued a statement that said Israel was “solely responsible for the ongoing escalation.”
The U.S. response?
Silence, except for a report that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Qatar’s Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani “agreed to remain closely coordinated.”
Considering their many missteps, it’s no surprise the White House is on the defensive. Responding to Republicans who brought up the $6 billion hostage deal, National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson said on Saturday, “These funds have absolutely nothing to do with the horrific attacks today, and this is not the time to spread disinformation.”
Ah yes, another case of “disinformation” misleading Americans into thinking their government’s policy is misguided. In this case, though, the real deception is the one that has led so many in the U.S. foreign policy establishment to think that with enough patience, engagement, and money, fanatical regimes like those in Tehran and Gaza can be enticed to join the civilized world.
This war was declared over 1,000 years ago
Flying planes into skyscrapers, running over French pedestrians with a truck, massacring Indian families, and Israeli concertgoers is the same war.
Islamic terrorists and their allies try to make every attack about the specific context of a situation in a particular corner of the world.
That’s a lie that too many fall for.
Even countries that are the victims of Islamic terrorism often draw lines between the “good” and “bad” Islamic terrorism. We do it ourselves. But there is no such line. Whether a country is good or bad makes no difference. Islamic terrorists come for every country eventually. There is no major nation that has not faced Islamic terrorist attacks as long as it has a significant Muslim population within or near its borders.
America, India, Canada, Europe, Russia, China, Australia, Argentina, and Brazil (a planned Olympic massacre) are just a few of the examples. The smaller countries that have come under attack are nearly endless. If you exist, you’re a target.
Hamas is just an arm of the Muslim Brotherhood which is a global operation. Its Al Qaeda splinter group has carried out attacks all over the world.
What happened in Israel is not about Israel: it’s about Islam.
It’s all too easy to nod along with the propaganda, the claims about “Palestinian oppression”, and ignore the historical context of over 1,000 years of Islamic violence against non-Muslims that follow the same exact model, or the global reach of Islamic terrorism today. The pattern is easy to spot and so people have to be indoctrinated into ignoring it.































