Netanyahu mismanaged Gaza—can he shift focus before it’s too late?

by

in

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has failed to win the war in Gaza. Now, his only move should be to bring the hostages home and then re-launch the war—this time, against Palestinianism rather than Hamas, according to Mideast expert Einat Wilf.

, Wilf said, “The prime minister has to accept that the whole operation in Gaza was mismanaged, that he failed, and that he needs to cut his losses.” She urged Netanyahu to “ransom” the kidnapped individuals through the current hostage-for-ceasefire deal and get them out of Gaza.

“Enough with the drip, drip, week after week of operations,” Wilf said. Once the hostages are freed, she argued, Israel should shift focus to “the actual war that should have been fought.”
• None Netanyahu or Hamas: Who’s Really to Blame for the Ceasefire Delays?

Wilf explained that the October 7 attack was not just perpetrated by Hamas but “the Palestinian ideology of no Jewish state.” She described Hamas as “merely the executive arm” of this ideology and said Netanyahu must now fight “the actual war that should have been waged 15 years ago” to dismantle the belief system preventing peace.

While Iran is often viewed as Israel’s greatest existential threat, Wilf argued that it is only the most recent backer of Palestinianism. She pointed to past supporters, including the Nazis, pan-Arabists, and the Soviets.

“The Ayatollah regime will fall because all previous supporters of Palestinianism have always ended in the dustbin of history—unfortunately, not before causing a lot of damage to the Jewish people,” Wilf said.

“If you’re not going to deal directly with the enemy and keep running away to projects that you feel are more appropriate to your station, you’re not going to deal with the real threat,” she said.

“When you have a wounded totalitarian regime that understands it’s lost the support of its people, they’re capable of anything at that point,” Pollard told ILTV. “The trick is to defuse their nuclear threat, bring down the government, and allow a popular uprising to occur without destroying the country.”

“I think using a nuclear weapon is absolutely something of the absolute last resort,” stressed author and analyst Ilan Evyatar.

He argued that before Israel takes action, it should give newly elected U.S. President Donald Trump a chance to impose sanctions and pressure the regime. However, he acknowledged that by then, if intelligence reports are correct, Iran may already have a nuclear weapon.