• Gormadt
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    271 year ago

    Shelling civilians will definitely make more Hamas members out of people still there as well

    • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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      -71 year ago

      I don’t believe so. I think the question will be “What the fuck were they thinking and what did they achieve for this tremendous cost?”

      If Hamas had coordinated a simultaneous attack from the West Bank along with air strikes from Syria etc., it would have been something. I personally think they still probably would have lost, especially because the US would surge weapons, but it would show a strategy.

      This was just throwing lives away for less than nothing. You cannot deal with Netanyahu. Even the president of the fucking US couldn’t get him to fall in line with a less than far right policy. Hamas just dealt him the best hand he has yet held.

      • @Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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        151 year ago

        People don’t join terrorist groups because they think they can win, they do it because they’re so pissed off at the target they want to strike back.

        • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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          01 year ago

          People do think they can win. I do not consider the Taliban a terrorist group, but they were irregular forces that fought a war, and they won, in a limited sense. The IRA won, in a sense, both with the creation of the Free State and with the end of the Troubles. Mandela won, although the ANC was designated as a terrorist organization. Vietnam won.

          The Black Panthers were an actual threat to the racist institutions in the US. The Weathermen were not. The Panthers had a strategy. The Weathermen were angry college students without training.

        • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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          21 year ago

          I have literally no idea what you’re referring to here. I said absolutely nothing about ignoring history or the justification of either side.

          I am saying this attack was stupidly executed. I could not think of a more stupid way of doing it. They exactly pissed off everyone while making zero impact on either Israeli occupational strength or military capability. In chess, they opened with pawn to F3. I have seen that memorably described as “the worst opening move, other than just resigning.”

          It’s so astoundingly stupid that I just know something’s going to come to light later about it. Right now my best guess is a within-party struggle in Hamas. I would not be surprised if there’s factional fighting going on as well, or overtures being made. But I do not think Israel is going to make a compromise that doesn’t leave them toothless and involve the surrender of a lot of leadership.

          • @Madison420@lemmy.world
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            121 year ago

            History as in every country that has gotten bombed the fuck out in the last 100 or so years has spawned terrorist cells who then spawn others. What makes you think this time will ignore all of history and somehow be different.

            • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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              11 year ago

              I am not saying that this current conflict is going to end “terrorism” in Israel. I am saying it is going to end Hamas as a political force. The IDF will kill many, and intelligence services will target others in a “gloves off” fashion.

              I am equally sure there will still be bombs on busses.

              • @Madison420@lemmy.world
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                51 year ago

                I don’t think it will, Hamas leadership are likely cloistered in friendly countries and will continue regardless.

                There always will be because it gets headlines, both sides of this conflict are quite familiar with civilian bombings.

                • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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                  01 year ago

                  Generally speaking - and we’re getting a bit more theoretical here - you cannot lead an organization like Hamas remotely. There are people on the ground in country who have a level of … enthusiasm … that when combined with charisma and their carefully maintained support networks will dislocate persons who have the disadvantage of communication delay and not being in the room for the meeting, as it were. Someone particularly famous can pull it off for a time if they have trusted lieutenants, but it’s precarious.

                  I doubt that Osama was in active control of Al Qaeda from Pakistan. These aren’t organizations that send an email that cc’s your boss. These people will shoot you if they think you’re weak or ineffective.

                  • @Madison420@lemmy.world
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                    11 year ago

                    Figureheads aren’t leaderships and that is generally what is referred to as “leadership”. Almost every fighting force at this point is lead at ground level and coordinated with other services, even the cartels do it.