Hamas Must Be Brought to Its Knees

Ahnaf Kalam

Hamas’s terrorist invasion of Israel on Oct. 7 left unspeakable scenes in its wake. The elderly murdered or abducted, children stolen, dead bodies desecrated, the murder of 260 young people at an Israeli rave for peace and the kidnapping of dozens more. Witnesses report that women were raped beside the bodies of their friends and then killed in turn.

Eighty years ago, such scenes were not uncommon at the edge of death pits, during ghetto liquidations and at the threshold of the gas chambers. And here we are in 2023, seeing them again, only this time in Israel.

This is a paradigm-shifting moment. After previous Hamas attacks, Israel has responded with aerial bombardment of targets in Gaza or, at most, limited ground incursions. Israel has followed this framework since Hamas took power in Gaza in 2007. But after these new atrocities, this framework can no longer stand.

Hamas has showed the world what they are: A medieval Islamist death cult with strong echoes of Nazism that seeks the destruction of Israel and the genocide of its people.

Hamas has showed the world what they are: A medieval Islamist death cult with strong echoes of Nazism that seeks the destruction of Israel and the genocide of its people. The terrorists were not driven to murder, rape, desecrate, humiliate, terrorize and kidnap Israelis in the pursuit of a two-state solution. The voices that have already, predictably, called for a ceasefire and issued bland statements about two states are utterly irrelevant, nonsensical and profoundly misguided, if not purposefully malevolent.

The terrorists were driven by their fervent conviction that Palestine is theirs, from the river to the sea, and that the whole area should be Judenrein, other than perhaps a handful of quiescent and wholly powerless individuals. They believe that Palestine belongs to Islam and that the State of Israel is an affront to God, a historical aberration that can only be rectified and redeemed by the blood of martyrs. Hamas has never been shy about enunciating these views. It is their Western apologists who have tried to sell the absurd idea that Hamas believes anything else.

Israel cannot coexist with such an entity. There can be no compromise between existence and non-existence. Israel cannot respond to the murder of more than 1,000 people (the equivalent, proportionally, of more than ten 9/11s) in the old way. This can never happen again.

The only way forward is the destruction of Hamas as a political and military entity. Israel has besieged Gaza and is pummeling Hamas from the air. It must now send in ground troops to destroy Hamas root and branch. Because of the ambitious nature of this necessary military action, it will take time. This is not something that the IDF, or any military for that matter, can successfully achieve within a week or two.

Israel unilaterally withdrew from Gaza in 2005. All Israelis left the territory. Corpses were even exhumed from Jewish cemeteries. The Palestinians could have taken the opportunity to prove that they were ready for statehood. Instead, they poured their energy and resources into building military infrastructure and sophisticated tunnel networks. Hamas has repeatedly launched rockets at Israeli population centers and provoked military responses over the 16 years it has controlled Gaza.

The only way forward is the destruction of Hamas as a political and military entity. Israel has besieged Gaza and is pummeling Hamas from the air. It must now send in ground troops to destroy Hamas root and branch.

The situation is reminiscent of late 1970s/early 1980s Lebanon. The Palestine Liberation Organization, ensconced in a state-within-a-state in southern Lebanon after attempting to overthrow the Jordanian monarchy in Sept. 1970, launched several terrorist attacks into Israel, including taking more than 100 children hostage and killing 22 of them in Ma’alot. After an assassination attempt on the Israeli ambassador to the United Kingdom in 1982, Israel had enough.

The IDF invaded Lebanon with the aim of destroying the PLO’s infrastructure. It was successful, and Yasser Arafat and his cronies fled to Tunis, where they were for all intents and purposes exiled and forgotten until Israel invited them to negotiate the Oslo Accords in the early 1990s.

This could serve as a template for the IDF in 2023. This time around, it will be much more difficult, given the weaponry and training Hamas can bring to bear and the cooperation it enjoys with a terrorist state (Iran) and an organization that is effectively a terrorist state (Iranian-controlled Hezbollah).

But Israel has no choice.

There is no alternative but to bring Hamas to its knees, the way the Allied forces brought Nazi Germany to its knees during World War II. Anything less would be a strategic failure and a recipe for more horrors in the future.

Gregg Roman is director of the Middle East Forum.

Gregg Roman functions as the chief operations officer for the Forum, responsible for day-to-day management, communications, and financial resource development. Mr. Roman previously served as director of the Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh. In 2014, he was named one of the ten most inspiring global Jewish leaders by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. He previously served as the political advisor to the deputy foreign minister of Israel and worked for the Israeli Ministry of Defense. Mr. Roman is a frequent speaker at venues around the world, often appears on television, and has written for the Hill, the Forward, the Albany Times-Union, and other publications. He attended American University in Washington, D.C., and the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) in Herzliya, Israel, where he studied national security studies and political communications.
See more from this Author
As Turkey Doubles Down on Its Islamist Agenda, the Kurds Remain One of the Region’s Few Forces Pushing In the Opposite Direction
Assad’s Chemical Weapons Stockpiles and Military Infrastructure Are Vulnerable to Exploitation, Transfer, or Misuse
The World Often Rewards Those Who Shout the Loudest Rather than Those Who Anchor Their Claims on Solid Ground
See more on this Topic
I recently witnessed something I haven’t seen in a long time. On Friday, August 16, 2024, a group of pro-Hamas activists packed up their signs and went home in the face of spirited and non-violent opposition from a coalition of pro-American Iranians and American Jews. The last time I saw anything like that happen was in 2006 or 2007, when I led a crowd of Israel supporters in chants in order to silence a heckler standing on the sidewalk near the town common in Amherst, Massachusetts. The ridicule was enough to prompt him and his fellow anti-Israel activists to walk away, as we cheered their departure. It was glorious.