The Israeli-Gaza Campaign: An early assessment

“Never hate your enemies. It affects your judgment.” Don Corleone, The Godfather by Mario Puzo

Israel’s strategic objectives are crystal clear. First, get the hostages back from Hamas. Second, obliterate Hamas as a military and political force. This assessment analyses the Israeli Defence Force’s (IDF) tactics in achieving those strategic objectives.

The Israeli Airforce

The IDF’s air force has perfect wartime conditions. Their enemy is at their mercy. Hamas don’t have ground to air missiles, or an air force, or anti-aircraft artillery. The Israeli air force have mastery of the skies.

The Israeli air force is obliterating the urban environment of the Gaza Strip at enormous human cost. The USA has supplied Israel with ultra-sophisticated F-35 fighter-bombers, which cost $80m each.1 The purchase price conceals the very high operating costs of using the planes. Operating F-35s requires expertise demanding an elite workforce. The F-35 is lethal and its capabilities are used to their fullest extent by the Israel.

The Israelis use ferociously effective bombs to destroy Gaza’s urban areas. The infrastructure has been destroyed. Roads, piped water and the sewage system no longer operate. This is responsible for a major public health crisis with two million people unable to access the basics of civilised urban life. Polio has emerged as childhood disease after being dormant for decades in Gaza. Desalination units, in the Mediterranean sea, have been destroyed making Gaza dependent on imported clean water from aid agencies.

The 2,000lb bomb is notorious for its immense destructive power. It is used to crater areas where Hamas leaders are thought to be concealing themselves,

“Israel had tried—and failed—to kill Hamas’s top military leader, Mohammed Deif, several times. So when intelligence emerged he was hiding in a compound in southern Gaza, Israel struck with overwhelming force, hitting it with eight 2,000-pound bombs….”2 (my emphasis)

Each crater extends over an enormous area in an urban environment and are the antidote to ‘precision’ weapons,

“The heavy munitions, mostly manufactured by the US, can cause high casualty events and can have a lethal fragmentation radius – an area of exposure to injury or death around the target – of up to 365 meters (about 1,198 feet), or the equivalent of 58 soccer fields in area.

Weapons and warfare experts blame the extensive use of heavy weaponry, such as the 2,000-pound bomb for the soaring death toll.”3

In addition to terror bombing, Israel’s air force use attack drones. These are used for assassination.4 The murder of seven aid workers in April 2024 showed their power.5 (The IDF’s ground forces made an even worse ‘error’ when they murdered three Israeli hostages who’d escaped from Hamas. Undisciplined, panicky soldiers saw three men and shot them.) Western aid workers were hunted by drones and murdered. The IDF brushed it off as ‘one of the things that happen in war,’ a strange version of collateral damage.

The IDF’s first tactic is clear even if its strategic purpose is opaque. They want to make the Gaza Strip uninhabitable prior to ethnic cleansing. This is puerile. The Gaza Strip is a prison enclosed by walls with the sea constantly patrolled by the Israeli navy. The people of Gaza can’t leave, even if they wanted to, which they don’t.

They won’t leave because they’ve suffered this tactic before in 1948. The Palestinians call this Nabka (catastrophe).6 They know if they leave Gaza they will live in refugee camps for ever more. And there’s only one place they could flee to, which is the Sinai desert. Egypt won’t permit this because they would have to accept responsibility for two million refugees.

The IDF’s second tactic is slaughtering the Hamas leadership to leave it bereft of direction. They believe once the leadership has been assassinated Hamas will cease to exist. This is puerile. Assassination is a favoured Israeli tactic and the result is always the same: others step into the leadership space.

The IDF air force is making catastrophic errors because they need spectacular wins. The October 7th atrocities humiliated the IDF. The incursion by Hamas was a ‘Never’ event.It destroyed every principle underpinning Israeli security.Obliterating Gaza looks purposeful. The Israeli population can see the IDF is asserting their military authority and securing the country against myriad enemies. They’re wrong.

Obviously the IDF’s air attacks on Gaza don’t do anything towards achieving the strategic targets laid out by politicians. IDF have deliberately ignored the inconvenient truth that only one war has ever been won by terror bombing. That unique event was the ‘A’ bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ending the Pacific war in August 1945. Every other terror bombing campaign has been indecisive.7

The Israeli Army

The IDF’s army, until October 7th 2023, had a stellar reputation. This was based on past glories. Israel’s last competitive war was in 1973: 51 years ago.8 The Hamas incursion overran a military base. They then slaughtered 274 soldiers plus a further 38 security personnel. This massacre was facilitated by complacency. A mile from the Gaza frontier Israel lost a well-equipped military base and their reputation for invincibility.

The Israeli army have fought a series of quasi-colonial wars since 1973. The first Intifada, 1987, was brutal but non-competitive unlike the current war. It meandered over four years without becoming a full-scale ‘military’ campaign.9

“During the whole six-year intifada, the Israeli army killed at least 1,087 Palestinians, of which 240 were children.”

The IDF adopted poor tactics during this conflict. They used disproportionate force and utter brutality. Their tactic was suppression and has been ever since. Using suppression is a ‘one golf club’ approach by becoming bounded rationality. That is, they firmly believe the tactic is correct, which means failure only happens because insufficient force was used and therefore more must be employed next time. A nihilistic treadmill.

The second Intifada was more violent because of the failure to suppress the first Intifada. Palestinians were provoked by a senior Israeli politician, Ariel Sharon.10 The casualty rate increased as the IDF’s response used more force than they’d done in the first Intifada and it morphed into punishment,

“…combined casualty figure for combatants and civilians, the violence is estimated to have resulted in the deaths of approximately 3,000 Palestinians and 1,000 Israelis, as well as 64 foreign nationals.”

In 2021 IDF ramped up their response to Hamas’s hugely provocative rocket attacks on Israel.11 Unknown to the Israelis Hamas were preparing for war: underground. The IDF knew tunnel networks existed but they under-estimated their scale and ambition. Hamas had a parallel universe.

After the October 2023 atrocities. the IDF invaded Gaza to release the hostages. This failed because Hamas had planned an asymmetric war. Hostages were secreted in an extensive tunnel system. Hamas knew they were incapable of fighting a conventional war. The IDF have tanks, heavy artillery, machine guns, armoured troop carriers and highly trained soldiers and Hamas doesn’t. Hamas adopted guerrilla tactics avoiding battlefield situations. Their principal tactic was ‘hit-and-run’. Asymmetrical warfare can only be combatted with sophisticated counter-terrorism operations, which the IDF ignored, trusting entirely in their overwhelming logistical supremacy.

Fifteen months12 of miliary superiority fighting an enemy which they out-number, out-gun and control the food and water supply and the IDF still haven’t brought Hamas to its knees.

The IDF haven’t achieved either of Benjamin Netanyahu’s strategic objectives and have, therefore, failed.

The Media War

Hamas conceded Israel the high moral ground on October 7th 2023. Hamas’s reputation as a terrorist organisation was confirmed by their atrocities. The hostage-taking confirmed the consensus. The natural allies of Hamas didn’t applaud. This included Iran who are alleged to direct Hamas’s actions. If Hamas was expecting the Occupied West Bank to rise up in spontaneous support they were disappointed.

The day after the incursion the world unanimously declared support for Israel. Sir Keir Starmer said,

“…October 7 2023 as “the darkest day in Jewish history since the Holocaust…”

Starmer, British prime minister since July 2024, added on the first anniversary of the atrocity that,  ‘…..”collective grief has not diminished” …’

The media war was won by 8th October 2023. And then Israel blew it.

The Israeli’s excluded international journalists from Gaza: a tactical error. During wars, journalists are on a very short leash and those that transgress are repatriated. Briefings from military spokespersons are obligatory and aren’t subject to hostile critiques. Being denied access to Gaza forced journalists to search for alternative sources of information, They didn’t wait long before a flood of commentary accompanied by heartbreaking images arrived. The IDF failed to recognise that, ‘smart phones’ make everyone a photo-journalist.

The control of the narrative shifted from potential Israeli control to vox populi independent agents. This loss of control was worsened by the impact of the Palestinian diaspora. Influential expatriated Palestinians made their voices heard. Layla Moran, is a British-Palestinian MP, with family living in Gaza. She spoke in detail, in Parliament, about the horrors her family were enduring. Humza Yousaf, the former first minister of Scotland, had extended family in Gaza. His family escaped because he used his privileged position to pressure the Israeli government. To lessen the embarrassment of a major political figure making ‘waves’ in the media, his family were fast-tracked out of Gaza.

Stories didn’t only come from amateur photo-journalists. Al Jazeera13 was represented in Gaza both prior to the atrocities and after the Israeli counter-attack. Al Jazeera have an international presence and is the voice of the non-western media in the middle-east. The ban on professional international journalism was negated immediately. Western journalists had to use Al Jazeera sources because they had a monopoly on the images and personal stories which are crucial for wartime journalism. Al Jazeera was reporting from the front line. They interviewed the people of Gaza; filmed the aftermath of bombing raids, and revealed the way that Israel used preventative detention. Their slick professionalism gave them credibility.

Al Jazeera and amateur photo-journalists opened a credibility gap with the IDF’s media statements, which looked and sounded like propaganda. The IDF’s version of events didn’t jell with the alternative sources of information on the ground. Endless assertions about bombing being ‘precise’ and targeted at Hamas militants didn’t match the scenes of carnage. Hospitals, universities, schools and other public buildings were destroyed, alongside thousands of residential buildings. The IDF’s further assertion that it was Hamas that was ‘responsible’ because they were using the civilian population as a ‘human shield’ is risible. Gaza is a small densely populated area and Hamas inevitably will be found in residential areas. They don’t have barracks like a conventional military force.

That Al Jazeera and amateur photo-journalists were given international coverage enraged the IDF. They have responded with two tactics. Firstly, Al Jazeera has been banned from Israel and the West Bank. Israel accuses them of being a front organisation for Hamas. Al Jazeera is unhelpful to the Israeli media war programme but claiming they are an arm of a terrorist organisation is a step too far.

Secondly, IDF’s use of assassination as a method of resolving problems entails disproportionate casualties. Assassination has repeatedly failed and is notoriously inefficient. Targeting journalists sours the opinion of other journalists,

“At least 133 Palestinian journalists and media workers have been killed, several have been injured and others are missing during the war in Gaza.”14

IDF have assassinated 133 journalists who have been ‘replaced’ by 1000s of amateur-photojournalists. The IDF’s obsession with assassination is hope over experience.

Conclusion

  • Hamas

The October 7th 2023 atrocities are difficult to explain on a tactical or strategic level. They had a moment of ‘glory’ for their terrorist organisation, which promptly led to a crushing and devasting response causing untold misery. This looks like a further iteration in the Israeli-Palestinian ‘Forever War’.

  • The IDF

Failing to prevent the incursion, followed by 15 months of warfare has shattered their swaggering ‘invincibility’. Lashing out at Hamas couldn’t lead to a ‘day-after’ negotiated treaty. Even worse than that is the reported ‘mission creep’, which is being contemplated. Incorporating the Trumpian fantasy of Gaza as a resort without any Palestinians, subduing southern Lebanon, annexing the West Bank and war with Iran is insanity. IDF isn’t a learning organisation.

Final Word

The February 2025 ceasefire/hostage release agreement is a public relations disaster for the Israelis. Hamas is badly wounded but struts in front of their hostage release platform. This illustrates that the IDF has failed in their number one objective. Hamas has not been obliterated and retain a military presence even if much diminished. It’s ludicrous to say that Hamas have ‘won’ but by not being obliterated they’ve achieved a pyrrhic victory.

Notes

1 F-35’s price might rise, Lockheed warns – Defense One

2 To Target a Top Militant, Israel Rained Down Eight Tons of Bombs – WSJ

3 Gaza: Israel dropped hundreds of 2,000-pound bombs, analysis shows | CNN

4 Israel – RUSI | Armed Drones in the Middle East

5 World Central Kitchen aid convoy attack – Wikipedia For the IDF’s murder of Israeli hostages see Killing of Alon Shamriz, Yotam Haim, and Samer Talalka – Wikipedia

6 Nakba – Wikipedia

7 Bombing Civilians Doesn’t Win Wars | Odeboyz’s Blog Also see The bombing of Laos: Obama and an American War Crime | Odeboyz’s Blog

8 List of wars involving Israel – Wikipedia This is being written in November 2024.

9  First Intifada – Wikipedia

9 Authorities name 772 soldiers, 68 police officers killed in Gaza war | The Times of Israel Updated 28th October 2024

10 Second Intifada – Wikipedia

11 2021 Israel–Palestine crisis – Wikipedia

12 This was written in February 2025

13 al jazeera – Search

14 Palestine: At least 133 journalists and media workers killed in Gaza – IFJ

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Love Poem

I see my future in your eyes
My destiny unfolding blissfully
Walks through mist clad South Downs
Snow crunching beneath our boots
Our new born baby smelling sweetly
Eyes shut with a loving smile
My destiny is in your eyes
There is nothing else
My world is your universe.

We are together for ever.

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Biblical Studies

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Gambling: Fuelled by hope

“It’s as bad as alcohol or heroin….they can’t stop themselves. In some ways, it’s even worse. People drink and do drugs to escape despair. Gambling has that element, too, but it also offers you the friendly hand of hope. You always got hope when you gamble. You always believe that you’re just one bet away from turning it all around. It’s a catch-twenty-two. If you got hope, you keep on gambling.”

Coben, Harlan. Fade Away: (Myron Bolitar Book 3) (p. 224). Kindle Edition.

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Film Reviews: Bank of Dave (part one)(2023) and Bank of Dave: The loan ranger (part two)(2025) Netflix

Rory Kinnear as Dave Fishwick is outstanding. Dave is a self-made millionaire selling second-hand vehicles. Second hand vehicle salesmen are notorious for skullduggery, which makes the story even more astonishing. Tales of hardship and negative banking experiences from people he knew personally had led them, inexorably, to loan sharks and financial horror-stories.

Dave decided to lend his money to people he knew. In brief, both sides were making personal commitments. Not paying loans back would be an act of betrayal. Trust is very powerful and few people let Dave down. Dave turned the ‘bank’ into a ‘community’ enterprise with profits distributed to good causes in Burnley.

Bank of Dave (1) is about Dave establishing his legitimacy. A wonderful story with Dave emerging heroically victorious. Bank of Dave (2) is Dave’s campaign against Payday Loans. Dave calls them loan sharks. A terrific side-story of British Payday Loan companies being front companies for New Jersey Mafia gangsters adds spice to the story.

Two wonderful witty feel-good films, which warm the heart. See them as a sequence. Recommended

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They are amongst us

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Parental Advice

Little Jimmy: Dad, I want an exciting career in crime and deception

Wise father: Politics, banking, or accountancy. They’re the places to go, Jimmy.

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Should we care about the Unborn?

Life is risky

Let us consider a historical example. People living in Nagasaki on the 8th August 1945 were unaware they would be obliterated on the 9th. They had, thus far, been spared the saturation bombing the Americans were inflicting across Japan.

“Bombs dropped from 279 Boeing B-29 Superfortress heavy bombers burned out much of eastern Tokyo. More than 90,000 and possibly over 100,000 Japanese people were killed, mostly civilians, and one million were left homeless, making it the most destructive single air attack in human history.”1

They might have thought they were spared because Nagasaki was the only predominantly Christian city in Japan.2 They were, of course, wrong.

Being obliterated by ‘A’ bombs is dramatic but road traffic accidents are worse because they’re unpredictable.3 It’s impossible to knowingly avoid an accident. Some people in Nagasaki might have, shrewdly, left the city between the 6th and 8th August because of the bombing of Hiroshima and worries that they might be next. But you can’t predict a road traffic accident.

Global deaths in road traffic accidents are 1.8 million annually. Motorists planned journeys and died. Additionally, “Between 20 and 50 million more people suffer non-fatal injuries, with many incurring a disability.”4 These were injured people, some of whom had life changing injuries and had their lives wrecked in an accident whilst they were planning on doing something else.

Day-to-day planning

Life is risky and today could be your last day. Planning is, nonetheless, necessary for everyday living even if it’s minimal. Eating requires a view of the future.

The philosophy of mealtimes is interesting. Ingredients imply trust. Suppliers are, very unlikely to sell harmful foods and can be trusted. Obviously, trust can be betrayed, and when it happens it’s disappointing. The Tesco horsemeat scandal,5  was a betrayal because ingredients were falsely labelled. The food wasn’t lethal but customers were deceived. Some customers might have bought the product because it was horsemeat and cheaper. Other customers might have been repelled if they’d known. Using false labelling means informed choice is denied.

Assuming the ingredients are trustworthy, preparing a meal is routine, either following a recipe or repeating a previous experience. Ingredients are brought together ready for cooking (or plating up) and consumption.

Preparing meals depends on believing that previous experience is a good guide for the future. The past is replicated every time a meal is eaten and confidence is reinforced on successive occasions. That this meal is safe becomes an obscure question, which needn’t be asked or answered. (This wasn’t an assumption that Medieval princes made.)6

Future Generations: Dynasties

Nobile families want to establish and maintain dynasties. This was done legally through primogeniture.7 Estates are prevented from being cannibalised and diluted with multiple succeeding families taking a portion. Primogeniture is a crisp policy for shaping the future. The British royal family use primogeniture for monarchical succession. The only criterion to be a monarch is to belong to the royal family and be the eldest child. The British monarchy is held within a single family legally.8

Ordinary families don’t plan for twelve successive generations like the dukes of Marlborough.9 The dukes of Marlborough intend that the rewards gained from early 18th century wars continue forever in their family. The property gifted by a grateful monarch is still theirs 300 years later. The stellar qualities which led to the creation of the dukedom of Marlborough have disappeared. The current 12th duke is a convict and scallywag. He probably isn’t what the first duke had in mind when he established his dynasty.

“In a bid to safeguard the Blenheim Palace estate from the then Marquess’s [now duke] excessive behaviour, his father won a court battle in 1994 to ensure his son never won control of the family seat…”

Prince Andrew would be king if he’d been born before his brother Charles. Dynastic thinking is illogical. Dynasties are protected by the single mindedness of families who use political power and networks to protect their privileges. Dynastic thinking is ludicrous and alive and well in Britain.

Future Generations: Unknown People

The dukes of Marlborough and the British royal family plan for future generations. Should governments plan for future generations? That is, should there be policies specifically made to maintain or improve the living standards of the unborn?

The greatest future catastrophe that is claimed to be known is climate change. Whether it will be the single greatest catastrophe is unknown. Other known catastrophic events might occur which could diminish climate change to a historical footnote. An asteroid collusion springs to mind, as does a pandemic. The Covid-19 pandemic diseases caused global disruption.10

But what of climate change? There is a widely made claim that climate change is understood and strategies can be employed to mitigate its impact. Climate change activists believe there will be a dystopian future. Activists say, ‘Life will be impossible’ because of climatic change. Taken literally, this means an uninhabitable earth with humanity eliminated. And that might be the case but is it sufficient for the current population of the world to do anything about it? Why should we care?

Lurid tales of humanity being wiped out by Artificial Intelligence (AI) abound. This, it seems, might be an unintended consequence of humanity creating something more intelligent than themselves. And if humanity isn’t wiped out they will become slaves in an AI  controlled world. The apex of technology, AI, could be the cusp of humanities’ collapse. What to do? A clear cost/benefit analysis is hard at work. Current benefits are in the ‘here and now’ and future generations will have to take their chance. It might be that humanity isn’t destroyed but is improved beyond our wildest dreams: Heaven. Or, humanity might be destroyed and earth becomes a humanity free zone. It’s unknowable.

The debate about future generations is predicated on them existing. Humanity might be wiped out by an asteroid collision in 2026. Resources consumed for the protection of the future generations would have been wasted. The question is: We don’t know if humanity will exist next year never mind the far distant future so why bother? Humanity could be in the same position  as the people of Nagasaki on the 8th August 1945 – blissfully ignorant. If they can’t plan for their survival are we being arrogant planning for them?

Let us consider the first duke of Marlborough who died in 1722.11 What plans would he have envisaged for future generations of the Churchill family? He’s a historical alien. All his strategies were ‘Gospel’ but are obsolete. As a courtier, he firmly believed in the primacy of the monarchy, who are now a quaint relic. As a general he would find today’s battlefield odd. Soldiers are secondary to unmanned drones. The first duke has nothing interesting or useful to say in 2025.

Why do we believe that we have anything useful to say about the 22nd century?

Let us suppose there are future unborn generations. Why should I sacrificeanything for unknowable people in the future?12 Is there any benefit in spending anything on future generations? Spending on future generations is a category error. It is futile because we can’t know what challenges they are facing or what the significance of those challenges are.

Climate change activists are demanding global society act altruistically by investing resources for the benefit of future generations. They can’t know today’s sacrifices aren’t a mistake and unborn generations need more climate change. Human effects on the world are a fact but we don’t know whether they’re benign or not. We don’t know because the future is unknowable. We can only say that change means things will be different. That a change means things are different is trite but is the limit of our conceptual knowledge.

Climate change activists propose a global response to constantly rising carbon emissions, hoping to avoid a catastrophe. They prophecy that climate change is a change for the worse. Whether change will be worse is an untestable value judgement.(The counter-proposal that climate change is a change for the better is also untestable.) There’s can be no resolution between these positions as both are held without evidence. There is overwhelming belief that climate change is a change for the worse. Implicitly this is predicated on the theory that our world is ‘The best of all possible worlds’.13  And as Voltaire destroyed that thesis in his novel Candide,14  in 1759, it’s intellectually shaky.

Conclusion

Should we care about the unborn? In this case ‘care’ means formulating policies that we believe will enhance their well-being. On the basis of this discussion the answer is no we shouldn’t. This isn’t a callous disavowal but a straightforward analysis of how meaningless, or even harmful, those policies could be. The future is unknowable and formulating strategic responses is quixotic. The unfolding of climate change, AI , and whatever is the next pandemic are future events, which will have to dealt with by the generations living at that moment.

Notes

1 Bombing of Tokyo (10 March 1945) – Wikipedia

2 The two churches that survived the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki

3 Road traffic injuries

4 loc.cit.

5 Horsemeat scandal: Tesco reveals 60% content in dish – BBC News

6 Food taster – Wikipedia In medieval times the nobility often had food tasters as they didn’t believe that they could confidently eat food that was put in front of them at mealtimes

7 primogeniture meaning – Search The British royal family keep the monarchy in their hands.

8 The 17th century civil wars eventually removed the Stuart family with a messy succession in 1714.

9 James Spencer-Churchill, 12th Duke of Marlborough – Wikipedia In this way the dukedom and Blenheim estate has survived for 12 generations.

10 In comparison to the ravages of the Black Death it was mild. See Black Death – Wikipedia

11 John Churchill, 1st duke of Marlborough | English General & Military Strategist | Britannica

12 For a very subtle analysis see How much will it cost to cut global greenhouse gas emissions? – Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment

13 Best of all possible worlds – Wikipedia

14 Candide – Wikipedia

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Two geriatric criminals reminisce

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Oscar Wilde’s wise words on Parliament

Now that the House of Commons is trying to become useful, it does a great deal of harm.

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