DAVID PASSIGJ
Many ask what the long-term consequences of the fighting in the Gaza Strip are for the Middle East and the world. Let’s take a wider scope to try to answer this question. After World War II, it became clear that democracies had the upper hand for many reasons, including the moral values that characterized them, the technologies, the sciences, and the democratic governance system. Let it be clear that those who live in a democratic regime tend to ignore the shortcomings of the democratic system. Others living in totalitarian regimes or even in meritocratic regimes, such as Singapore, see the shortcomings of democracies and are ready to fight them to prove the superiority of their methods.
Strategists in non-democratic regimes tirelessly searched for a combat doctrine that would provide an adequate response to the superiority of the democratic state. It seems that we are in another chapter in that ongoing cultural confrontation. They studied the history of the wars fought in many places over thousands of years and found a solution that we currently see in the battle in Gaza. In this respect, Gaza is the testing ground of a new combat doctrine against democratic nations. Some call the doctrine that Hamas is trying “asymmetric warfare.” After all, every reasonable person asks: How does Hamas start a war knowing that it will be defeated on the battlefield and that its population will pay a heavy price? In conventional warfare doctrine, no army starts a war when it knows it will be defeated. What do they want to achieve in a war in which thousands will die, and their military power will be reduced beyond recognition in the end? All those who claim that their whole purpose is to show destruction so that the world will feel sorry for them are underestimating the intelligence of the thinking behind it.
It is important to remember that many regional powers are financing this Hamas campaign, and they certainly would not want to see their investment go down the drain. In order to invest so many millions of dollars, they must be convinced that it has a chance of subduing the enemy, which at the moment is Israel; but in the future, these will be other democratic countries.
Hamas, as every Israeli knows, will not be satisfied with anything that is not a total annihilation of the Zionist entity. So why are they “wasting their assets” in a battle that will not achieve a decisive victory but just some damage to their enemy?
What is their combat doctrine, and what do they want to achieve by massacring children, raping women, kidnapping elderly citizens, and launching 100 rockets a day toward empty fields and some population concentrations? Many are still trying to understand the logic behind this tactic from a military point of view. Understanding the broader context of this campaign could hint to what might happen in the upcoming campaign with Hezbollah.
Palestinian fighters from the armed wing of Hamas take part in a military parade to mark the anniversary of the 2014 war with Israel, near the border in the central Gaza Strip, July 19, 2023.
Destroying Israel's most critical asset: The trust between government, army, and citizens
If you want to defeat an enemy, you have to identify its most critical asset and try to damage it. So, what is the most essential asset of democracies? It is not free speech as people think. In terms of totalitarian regimes, this is precisely the Achilles heel of democracies. From their point of view, given enough time, personal freedoms can accelerate the collapse of democracies. So, what is the most crucial asset that gives democracies a comparative advantage over any other non-democratic system of governance?
They found that the alliance between democratic citizenship, their army, and their government is the most vital asset that ultimately results in democratic supremacy on the battlefield and gives democratic countries a scientific, cultural, and technological advantage that overwhelms non-democratic cultures.
In a democracy, citizens feel that their government works for their safety, happiness, and well-being. The election mechanism is a means to ensure that the elected will continue to work for them. This contrasts with non-democratic countries, where citizens do not expect much from their governors, who mainly exist to ensure their own survival. In most non-democratic regimes, the citizens groan under the burden of the army and its politicians. How, then, do you dismantle or at least cause a lot of damage to the unsigned treaty among these three parties? Non-democratic regimes believe that long-term shocks to this foundation can bring about the collapse of a democracy. To this end, they developed a multi-layered combat doctrine to break this link between the democratic citizen and his state’s institutions. Hamas and its allies have found that in order to shake the trust that democratic citizens have with his leaders and military commanders, they need them to start doubting the ability and good intentions of their leaders and soldiers. They need to cast doubts in the hearts of Israeli citizens that their leaders are not succeeding, despite all efforts and budgets they are pouring into their army to stop the trickling of 100 rockets a day.
As far as Hamas leaders understand, the longer they prolong the time in which they can continue to send 100 rockets a day, the more they will destroy the trust that the Israelis have in their army and leaders, and they will demand to stop the fighting because it doesn’t bring the decisive victory they claim to achieve. If Hamas leaders succeed, despite the many losses their population suffers, in continuing to fire rockets, they are sure that Israelis will resent their leaders and army, and thus over time the long-awaited rift will form that will limit the technological and economic advantages of Israel as a democracy, and it will only be a matter of time until it will be defeated.
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