OPINION:
A version of this story appeared in the daily Threat Status newsletter from The Washington Times. Click here to receive Threat Status delivered directly to your inbox each weekday.
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, who masterminded the Oct. 7 invasion of Israel and the worst single-day slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust, is believed to be lurking in the subterranean labyrinth beneath the Gaza Strip.
With funds provided by the “international donor community,” Hamas has constructed more than 300 miles of tunnels — a network more extensive than the London Underground.
We may assume that Mr. Sinwar is somewhere below Khan Yunis or Rafah in southern Gaza, and that he is surrounded by hostages abducted from Israel and barely clinging to life. On the streets above, Gaza residents serve as his shields — some voluntarily, some not.
I’d wager that Mr. Sinwar is pondering four options.
Option 1: He can wait, betting that President Biden will pressure the Israelis to accept a “cease-fire,” a deal that would allow him to rise, praise Allah for victory, resume ruling Gaza, and prepare for the next round of atrocities.
Mr. Sinwar was surely encouraged to learn that Mr. Biden last week said that Israel’s “conduct of the response in Gaza has been over the top.”
That charge is entirely unfounded. In truth, despite Hamas’ human shields strategy, the ratio of civilian-to-combatant casualties is unprecedentedly low for urban warfare, as historian Andrew Roberts last week explained to Britain’s House of Lords, and as John Spencer of the Modern War Institute has attested.
War is always hell, but Israelis have done more than any other nation ever to spare civilians — despite the fact that they are fighting a genocidal enemy backed by Iran’s rulers. The battle against Hamas is not one the Israelis can afford to lose, or even end in a stalemate.
Option 2: The Israelis let Mr. Sinwar go into exile, say in Algeria, in return for his release of hostages he hasn’t yet murdered. He may be giving serious thought to that way out.
Option 3: “Martyrdom in the way of Allah.” To jihadis everywhere, Mr. Sinwar would be a hero and an inspiration.
I’ll come to the fourth option in a moment.
Though Mr. Sinwar has plenty of food and fuel — stolen from the aid that has been pouring in for noncombatants in Gaza — life in the tunnels cannot be pleasant.
But he may derive occasional amusement from hearing Western leaders and U.N. apparatchiks solemnly pronounce their support for “territorial compromise,” “land-for-peace negotiations” and a “two-state solution.”
Last week, Secretary of State Antony Blinken went further, calling for “a concrete, time-bound and irreversible path” to a Palestinian state.
Note that Mr. Blinken is not saying that the leaders of such a state would forswear terrorism and peacefully coexist alongside Israel. Nor is he guaranteeing that such a state will not become a vassal of Iran.
All he has said is that Israelis will have “security assurances.”
Like the security assurances Israelis received from the U.N. Security Council after they withdrew from Lebanon?
Like the security assurances Ukrainians received from the U.S. when they gave up their nuclear weapons?
Like the security assurances Hong Kong received when the British turned the territory over to China?
Mr. Sinwar is not fighting for a Palestinian state. He is fighting for the extermination of the Jewish state and its replacement — “from the river to the sea” — by an Islamic emirate, a jewel in the crown of the mightier-than-ever caliphate that is to come.
For Mr. Sinwar, a “two-state solution” would solve nothing unless it provided an improved platform from which to launch Oct. 7-style attacks.
Also, for all intents and purposes, was there not a Palestinian state on Oct. 6? What attributes of statehood has Gaza lacked since Hamas took power in 2007 after forcibly expelling the Palestinian Authority?
What expressions of sovereignty do Luxembourg, Liechtenstein and Malta possess that Gaza under Hamas did not? A vote in the U.N. General Assembly? Oh, big whoop!
I know you’ve heard that, despite Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, the territory continued to be “Israeli-occupied.” That charge was based on the claim that Israelis had “hermetically sealed” Gaza, turning it into the “world’s largest open-air prison.”
You were misinformed.
Yahya R. Sarraj, the Hamas-appointed mayor of Gaza City, recently expressed his distress over the destruction of his municipality’s theater, library, zoo, cultural center, parks, seaside promenade, restaurants and recreation areas.
We now know that senior Hamas officials lived in luxurious villas by the sea. Fighters went to Lebanon and Iran for training.
There were poor people in Gaza, to be sure, but they were provided welfare and social services by U.N. agencies, in particular the U.N. Relief and Works Agency. Its employees include Hamas members, Hamas sympathizers and the beneficiaries of Hamas patronage. They turned a blind eye to the terror tunnels, even those built right under their headquarters. Some participated in the atrocities of Oct. 7.
The Israeli “blockade” was nothing more than an attempt to prevent Hamas from receiving tons of weapons and ammunition, mostly from Iran. We now know that this mission failed. Gaza’s border with Egypt appears to have been porous.
Hamas has amassed an enormous arsenal, which is why, four months after Oct. 7, Mr. Sinwar’s fighters are still firing missiles and shooting Israelis.
Israeli forces are battling a Hamas brigade in Khan Yunis and have begun “pinpoint raids” in Rafah, where four battalions reportedly remain. On Sunday night, Israeli commandos rescued two hostages in Rafah.
Which brings us to Mr. Sinwar’s fourth option. He could emerge from the depths, surviving hostages in tow, and order his troops to cease firing.
That would save the lives of many in Gaza, both his comrades in arms and those serving as Hamas pawns.
But that option, I’d wager, is the one Mr. Sinwar is least likely to choose.
• Clifford D. May is founder and president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and a columnist for The Washington Times.
Please read our comment policy before commenting.