The Daily - The War That Won’t End
Episode Date: August 28, 2024It’s been nearly a year since the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks in Israel and the subsequent war in Gaza.Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for The New York Times, explains why the war is still... going, and what it would take to end it.Guest: Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for The New York Times.Background reading: Here’s a look at the twists and turns over months of talks and what the main sticking points have been recently.Cease-fire talks will continue in Cairo, officials said.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
Israel has been fighting Hamas in Gaza for almost a year.
But despite catastrophic losses, Hamas seems no closer to declaring defeat.
And despite considerable military gains, Israel seems no closer to declaring victory.
Today, my colleague Patrick Kingsley
on why the war in Gaza is still going
and what it would take to end it.
It's Wednesday, August 28th. So Patrick, we wanted to hear from you in Israel today because we're coming up nearly
on a year since October 7th.
And it really feels like every week you write at least one story about the ceasefire negotiations.
Some weeks it looks like progress toward a ceasefire deal, other weeks no progress.
Meanwhile the threat of a wider war in the Middle East is deepening.
Just this weekend there was a huge exchange of rocket fire in Israel's northern border
with Lebanon.
That doesn't seem likely to end while the war in Gaza is still going So we all felt like it was really time to come to you and ask a basic question
Which is why can't they agree to a ceasefire and perhaps more fundamentally?
Why is this war in Gaza still going on?
So these are very good questions
both the questions come down to two men, essentially, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel
and Ehya Sinwar of Hamas.
And to understand why they have such fundamentally mutually exclusive positions on the war, we
have to start with the ceasefire, which is the most basic building block for stopping the war.
And the two leaders have a fundamental disagreement here. Netanyahu, the Israeli leader, essentially wants a temporary ceasefire.
Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, wants a permanent ceasefire.
So, Patrick, explain that. Start maybe with Netanyahu. Explain that position.
So for Prime Minister Netanyahu, the professed goal of the war is to destroy Hamas, to destroy
this group that invaded Israel on October 7th, killed more than a thousand people and
abducted roughly 250. And key members of his far-right coalition will accept nothing less than Hamas'
total defeat. Netanyahu needs that far-right coalition to stay in power. And so if the
ceasefire is temporary, it will allow him to present the truce to his base as just a brief measure to free some of the roughly 100 hostages still
left inside Gaza, after which Israel can easily return to the fighting and to defeating Hamas.
So it will allow him to get some of the hostages back, thus placating the many Israelis whose
top priority is the release of the hostages.
And it'll take away some of Hamas' key bargaining chips, and it would allow him to say to his
base that, don't worry, the war will continue and Hamas will be defeated after this brief
pause in hostilities.
And what's the calculation for Sinwar?
Walk us through his reasons for pushing through a permanent ceasefire. Well, if he goes for a temporary one, he gives up key bargaining chips, the Israeli hostages
who Hamas captured on October 7th, and he doesn't get much in return. He doesn't secure Hamas's
survival, and he leaves open the possibility that fighting will resume, that Israel will continue its campaign after a few weeks,
and will continue to erode Hamas's fighting capability
and governing capability, and eventually secure its defeat.
A permanent ceasefire, by contrast,
essentially allows Hamas to survive the war intact
as a political movement, intact
as a depleted but still active governing force that controls Gaza.
It may not be enough to save his life, his rubble will probably pursue him for the rest
of his days, but it allows Hamas as a movement to survive the war.
Okay, so these sides are pretty dug in on their respective very far apart positions.
But of course, talks have been bumping along, right?
And they are bumping along with the help of the United States and Secretary of State,
Antony Blinken. What, if anything, has the US involvement
in the talks meant for this process?
The US has brought key energy at times
when it feels like both the sides, Israel and Hamas,
and the mediators, Egypt and Qatar,
have lacked energy, political will,
or desire to sit down at a negotiating table.
In particular, they've been trying to bridge the gaps between the different sides, and
their main approach has been a kind of constructive ambiguity in the language that is written
in the draft agreements that the two sides have been haggling
over.
What does that mean exactly, constructive ambiguity?
It means having enough fluidity in the language of the deal so that both sides can sell the
agreement to their bases as something that achieves what those bases want.
So in other words, not be so forensic in the wording of the agreement, like keeping the
language loose enough so that both sides can sell it to their populations.
So this is essentially a political fix the US is trying to bring here.
Exactly.
And just to give an example of how that constructive ambiguity in the language worked.
At one point in the negotiation, there was a standoff over the extent to which Israel would retain a military presence along a particular thoroughfare dividing northern Gaza from southern Gaza.
Israel wanted to maintain checkpoints there to stop Hamas moving weapons between those two areas.
Hamas didn't and doesn't want Israeli checkpoints in that location.
So the way that the negotiators bridged that gap, at least at one point, was to include the
principle of that idea within the draft agreement, but not the enforcement mechanism by which
that plan would be enacted.
And that would have allowed the Israeli leadership Netanyahu to go back to his right-wing base
and say, no, the principle of preventing Gazans from moving
weapons around Gaza has been maintained.
And it would have allowed Hamas to argue internally that, well, yes, that principle is in there,
but there is nothing mentioned in that draft agreement about an enforcement mechanism.
Right.
There's no checkpoints there.
What checkpoints are you talking about? We are free to move. Exactly. But then in July we got a window into how
this constructive ambiguity doesn't quite work. While the two sides seem to
have agreed on this ambiguous terminology in May, by July, two months
later, Israel had come back with a new demand to
replace that ambiguity with greater clarity. They wanted clarity on that
principle of stopping Ghazans from moving around the territory with guns
could be enforced. And of course that removed the ambiguity and remains
something that Hamas does not
want to agree to and it is one of many stumbling blocks that is preventing a deal between the
two sides.
Okay, so from all we can tell, the talks are not working. Or at least they're proving
very cumbersome as you're laying out here. But let's talk about how wars normally end,
which is that one side admits it can no longer win. And in this case, that would appear to
be Hamas. I mean, as of this month, 40,000 Gazans were dead, according to Gazan health officials,
and vast swaths of its territory are in ruins. So why doesn't all of that add up to Hamas
viewing this as a defeat? Well, that's a very reasonable question,
because when you look at Gaza and you see all the astonishing destruction. More than half the house is damaged.
Tens of thousands of people killed.
Huge harm to infrastructure and to the health system.
You do wonder why doesn't Hamas surrender in most other wars,
a side that is lost materially to this extent,
would have surrendered by this point.
But this is not a normal war.
The sides have very unusual thresholds for victory.
Israel has a very high threshold for victory.
Its leader Netanyahu says he wants the total destruction of Hamas.
Hamas has a very low threshold for victory.
It just wants to survive.
And neither threshold is very typical.
Usually when one side so convincingly destroys another,
think of Japan in 1945, the Japanese surrendered.
Alternatively, if you look at other moments in the Second
World War when France realized it was losing, its leaders did not wait for the total destruction
of France to either flee or give in. And what we have here is we have a side that by conventional
measures is losing, but doesn't want to surrender because its own threshold
for victory is so low that it kind of thinks that it might actually be winning.
So for Hamas, as long as it has one fighter standing, essentially, it's still in the war
and hasn't lost the war.
It's still going.
Exactly.
And what makes all this doubly unconventional is the fact that the Israeli army is itself
not fighting in a particularly normal way.
It is not holding the territory that it conquers.
And what that means is they are not controlling Gaza, despite the fact that they have captured
most of it by now at some point during the last 10 months. And because they haven't established control, that leads to this very
bizarre form of whack-a-mole where Israel goes into an area, has a very
destructive battle with Hamas leaves, Hamas returns, forcing Israel to come
back, fighting a second, sometimes a third and a fourth time, and still
then abandoning its control, retreating again to key strategic positions within Gaza or even within
Israel. And the whole cycle begins again. So it leads to extraordinary destruction, but it doesn't
particularly lead to a change in
who actually controls Gaza on the ground.
And Patrick, why don't they occupy the areas that they've taken?
Well, we should say here that for a lot of Palestinians, Israel never stopped occupying
Gaza.
They maintained a physical presence inside Gaza between 1967 and 2005,
when Israeli soldiers and Israeli settlers left the territory.
But ever since, they've still maintained some degree of control over trade,
the airspace, the phone networks, entry and exit.
The debate among Israelis is whether they should go back to maintaining
a physical presence
as they did until 2005.
And for the moment, those opposed to that physical presence seem to have worn out.
Why?
Because installing soldiers throughout Gaza is really difficult.
It requires vast amounts of resources.
It's complicated and it's also dangerous.
It has to be protected by
thousands of Israeli soldiers. They can be killed at any time if you try and hang on to
a territory the size of Gaza. And because of that, it seems like Israel's leadership does not want
to entertain that possibility, at least for now, even if there are people within government and in vast ways of the
Israeli right-wing public that would actually like to see Israel return to building military
bases across the Gaza Strip.
So if the situation on the ground won't end the war and a ceasefire seems improbable,
at least for now, then how does the war end?
That is starting to become the key question. How do these two sides get out of this war?
How do they find a way through what feels like it has become an intractable situation?
And it's beginning to feel like we're going to need some kind of game changer,
something maybe we haven't quite conceived up so far, a Black Swan event,
that is going to shift the tectonic plates of how this conflict is being fought.
We'll be right back. So Patrick, we're at this current impasse in large part because of these two leaders
and their political calculations, and it feels like maybe only something really big could change things, as you're saying.
What sort of game changer are we talking about?
Well, there's a few different things that could shift the needle. One could be in the
US, one could be with the Israelis, and one could be a regional war that would change the dynamic
across the Middle East.
So maybe start with the United States, which is obviously coming up on a big election.
Exactly.
And whoever wins that election, we will be left at the end of it with a different president,
and that different president could have a slightly different focus and attitude to,
if not Israel itself, then the
way that Israel is prosecuting this war and that might in turn change Benjamin Netanyahu's
calculations at the negotiation table.
Right.
What else?
Another wild card would be the killing of Yahya Sinwa, the leader of Hamas.
That is perhaps Israel's top goal in Gaza right now.
They've killed several other key leaders of Hamas.
Yahya Sinwa is the last man standing essentially.
If he goes, if the leader of Hamas goes,
that would allow Benjamin Netanyahu to say to his base,
mission accomplished.
And that in turn might allow him to agree to a ceasefire
under terms that he previously hadn't agreed to.
In other words, the far right leaders in his coalition
perhaps would be satisfied if Sinwar was killed.
Exactly.
And on the other side of the border,
it's possible that with Sinwar dead,
with the most powerful leader within Hamas
dead, his subordinates would be more likely to compromise, to surrender in his absence.
Of course, that's a big if, and it's very possible that Sinuad's death would not actually
change their thinking on a ceasefire or on the war itself, all that much. But the possibility remains.
And Patrick, what about the pressure on Netanyahu and the Israeli government on the part of
the hostage families?
Just on Tuesday, one hostage was actually freed.
So does this pressure, you know, the protests, everything we've been seeing, amount to some
sort of game changing dynamic for Netanyahu?
I don't think it's game-changing. For a start, it's been going on for a while,
and it obviously hasn't shifted his calculations thus far.
And secondly, it's interesting you mentioned this hostage rescue on Tuesday,
because for some, that actually supports Netanyahu's argument that it's only through more military
action that you can free the hostages.
Not a truce, but further action on the ground by the Israeli military in Gaza.
And while it's true that there are lots of protesters calling for Netanyahu, for the
Israeli government to prioritize the hostages'
well-being and to cut a deal basically at any price in order to get the
hostages home. The people who are pushing most loudly for that deal are not
Netanyahu's own supporters. His base, their priority, is Hamas' defeat and while
they may care about the hostages and want them home at some point,
their immediate release is not their first priority.
And Patrick, you mentioned regional war as something that could potentially really shift the dynamic here. Talk to me about that.
Well, alongside the Gaza war, we also have smaller simmering conflicts between Israel and Hamas' allies across the region.
Those are Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and the benefactor of all those
three groups, Iran.
And to varying degrees, those proxies of Iran and Iran itself have been fighting this low-level
conflict against Israel in parallel with the Gaza war since October.
Now, at any moment, all these smaller conflicts could erupt into much bigger ones.
If either side, if Israel makes a mistake or a miscalculation, if Hezbollah makes a mistake or a miscalculation, Iran the same, suddenly these conflicts could erupt into
an all-out regional war involving all these actors firing on full cylinders.
So far, no side has appeared truly willing to do that.
They've always stepped back from the brink and on Sunday we saw Hezbollah and Israel
doing exactly that. But if it does escalate into an all out regional war,
then that would at the very least consume Israel's energies,
draw down its resources, its munitions supplies,
and possibly make Israel much likelier
to agree to a truce in Gaza
in order to get all of these conflicts to wind down.
And how would a regional war change the calculations for Sinwar?
The feeling is that Sinwar would benefit from a regional war.
A regional war would distract Israel and potentially even endanger the existence of the Israeli
state depending on how long and how intense that war got. All of this benefits
Hamas and all of it benefits Sinwa because the weaker the Israeli state is, the more
likely it is to compromise in ceasefire negotiations with Hamas and agree to something that Sinwa
thinks is more favorable to Hamas's long-term survival. And presumably, on the most extreme scenario, the destruction of Israel is something that he's
actually rowing toward, and a big regional war would raise the specter of that.
It would certainly increase its chances a notch or two. Israel is a very strong state. It has
perhaps the strongest military in the Middle East, and it would take a lot to dislodge its presence
in the region. But Hamas has never rescinded the call it made in its founding charter to destroy
Israel. And anything that makes Israel less safe would be construed by Hamas as a step toward that
goal. Now, interestingly, there are those who believe that the Israelis
themselves or some Israelis are also seeking a regional war.
Why?
Well, by this theory, it would create the pretext by which Israel could attack Iran
in a much more brazen and intense way than it ever previously has done.
Prime Minister Netanyahu and many Israelis see Iran as their biggest foe, and they fear
that the nuclear weapons program that Iran is working on is a much more existential threat
to Israel than anything Hamas or other Palestinians might throw at the Israeli population. And therefore, by this argument,
some Israeli leaders, perhaps Netanyahu himself, is searching for a pretext to hit Iran hard to
destroy that nuclear capacity, and perhaps even drag in the U.S., Israel's biggest ally, into a
regional war that it doesn't seek, but would be forced to join in order to defend its key Middle Eastern ally.
And all of that would create the pretext and the opportunity to destroy Iran's nuclear capability.
So as much as many Israelis and Palestinians are desperately looking for a way to end this war. There are people on either side who have reasons to not just continue the war, but also escalate
it into an all-out regional conflict.
I mean, it's remarkable.
We started this conversation by talking about these two men, their political ambitions,
and why it's making it difficult for them to get to a ceasefire. But we're ending it in a place where it seems not only are they not wanting to get to a
ceasefire, but potentially they actually want the war to get bigger.
They're not going away from conflict but running toward it.
That's a possibility.
We can't know what either man is thinking exactly. We're not inside their heads.
What we can say for sure, though, is that both Israel and Hamas,
and by extension, both Netanyahu and Sinwa,
are still involved in negotiations for a ceasefire.
Those negotiations do not currently seem
very likely to succeed, but they do continue. There was a big meeting on
Sunday between senior officials from Israel and the mediating countries. The
possibility of a ceasefire very much remains even if the chances of an all-out
regional war are also growing.
Patrick, thank you.
Thank you, Sabrina.
On Wednesday, hundreds of Israeli troops mounted a major military operation in the West Bank,
targeting Palestinian militants in the occupied territory
where nearly three million Palestinians live
under Israeli military rule.
The operation followed months of escalating Israeli raids
in the area, and Israeli officials
said that at least nine people had been killed.
Hamas denounced the operation, accusing Israel
of expanding the war in Gaza.
As of Wednesday morning, the operation was ongoing.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
On Tuesday, Donald Trump announced plans to name his former rival, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,
along with former U.S. Representative Tulsi Gabbard, as honorary co-chairs of his presidential
transition team.
The team, which includes Trump's sons as well as his running mate, J.D. Vance, would
help him select the policies and personnel for a second Trump term.
The appointments were a bid by Trump to show that his support extends beyond party lines.
Both Kennedy and Gabbard spent most of their public lives as progressives, and both started
their presidential runs as Democrats.
Kennedy ended his independent campaign for president last week and endorsed Trump.
Gabbard has since left the Democratic Party and rebranded herself
as a celebrity among Trump's base of support.
Special counsel Jack Smith revised his indictment accusing former President Donald
Trump of plotting to overturn the 2020 election in an effort to help it survive the Supreme
Court's recent ruling granting former presidents immunity for official acts in office.
In its decision on immunity, the Supreme Court
ruled that a president's dealings with the Justice
Department are considered official duties of his office.
Smith's revised charging documents
exclude the accusations that Trump conspired
with Justice Department officials
to support his false claims that the election had
been stolen from him.
If you want more of today's top stories, go check out our other daily news show. It's called The Headlines. It's the biggest stories of the day in 10 minutes or less.
Subscribe to it wherever you get your podcasts.
Today's episode was produced by Sydney Harper, Ricky Nowetzki, and Stella Tan, with help from Nina Feldman.
It was edited by Mark George, with help from Paige Cowitt, contains original music by Marian Lozano and Alicia Beatu, and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for the daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.