"And I have found both freedom and safety in my madness, the freedom of loneliness and the safety from being understood, for those who understand us enslave something in us. But let me not be too proud of my safety. Even a Thief in a jail is safe from another thief. "

Khalil Gibran (How I Became a Madman)

Lübnan Marunîleri / Yasin Atlıoğlu

NEWS AND ARTICLES / HABERLER VE MAKALELER

Saturday, October 05, 2024

Elie Barnavi, former Israeli ambassador to France: 'Israel is winning battles but losing the war' - Le Monde

In an article for Le Monde published the day after October 7, 2023, I wrote that this cataclysm was "likely to upset regional balances." An easy prediction. What I couldn't imagine was that, 12 months later, we'd still be here, only worse. Israel now faces seven fronts. Seven fronts! In the south, we're up against Hamas, in the north against Hezbollah, in the east, in the West Bank, against an as yet unnamed intifada, in Syria and Iraq against a myriad of terrorist groups, further afield against the Houthis in Yemen, and finally against Iran, the master of them all. It took a strategic genius to find ourselves in such a bind.

Let's move on quickly to the question of who is responsible for what. I said a bit about Benjamin Netanyahu's responsibility in the aforementioned article. As for Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, and the late Hassan Nasrallah of Hezbollah, their jihadist ideology blinded them to the realities of their adversary. The former is a perfect Hebrew speaker, the latter prided himself on being an expert on Israel, but both understood nothing of the country's power and drew false conclusions from its momentary weaknesses. In a famous speech, didn't Nasrallah declare that Israel, despite its nuclear and air power, was "weaker than a spider's web?" A quarter of a century later, the spider's web finally suffocated him.

That said, the only valid question is this: Can we still climb out of the quagmire into which the barbaric assault of October 7 plunged the region? Yes, provided we bear three facts in mind. The first: a return to the status quo ante is impossible. Obscured by Netanyahu's toxic personality, his destructive policies and the composition of his government, the root cause of the situation we're struggling with is the presence on Israel's borders of over-armed proto-states whose ultimate goal is its elimination. It's all very well to laugh at Netanyahu's promise of "total victory," i.e. the annihilation of Hamas and Hezbollah once and for all. But there is no doubt that they must be deprived of their power to cause harm, in other words, of their power at all.

https://www.lemonde.fr/en/opinion/article/2024/10/05/elie-barnavi-former-israeli-ambassador-to-france-israel-is-winning-battles-but-losing-the-war_6728281_23.html