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Israel’s Moment of Decision on Hamas

Israel’s Moment of Decision on Hamas

by 

Published March 23, 2025, 7:45 PM

Surprise Attack and Israel’s Dilemma

On October 7, 2023, Hamas launched a brutal surprise attack on Israel, killing over 1,200 through rape, torture, kidnappings, and child executions shocking the world with its barbarity. This assault immediately presented Israel with an impossible moral dilemma of having to choose between eradicating Hamas to secure its future or negotiating for the return of hostages, thereby allowing Hamas to survive. Israel must decimate Hamas and cleanse Gaza for whatever post-war structure emerges, or prioritize hostage recovery at the cost of national security.

Victory will not only deliver peace and security to Israel but also deal a crushing blow to Islamism — benefiting the entire world.

Hostages as Currency  

Hamas has strategically leveraged hostage-taking, fully aware of Israel’s deep commitment to individual lives — even at a national cost. The 2011 Gilad Shalit exchange, which freed over a thousand Palestinian prisoners for a single Israeli soldier, was initially hailed as a great success. However, it set a dangerous precedent, emboldening Hamas to repeat the strategy. In a tragic irony, one of those freed in 2011 was Yahya Sinwar — the Hamas leader who orchestrated the October 7 massacre.

Purgatory, Israel Style

Seventeen months into this war, Israel stands at a crossroads. After significant battlefield successes against Hamas and the broader Iranian axis, Israel now possesses the military capability, moral justification, and unparalleled American support needed to decisively eliminate Hamas, significantly weaken Iran — likely with American assistance — and reshape the Middle East.

Yet, the fundamental dilemma persists: How can Israel finish the war without Hamas executing the remaining hostages? Initially, on October 8, 2023, most Israelis agreed that coexisting with an entity sworn to their destruction was no longer an option. However, by July 2024, public sentiment had shifted. A Research poll revealed that 72 percent of Israelis prioritized a hostage deal over eliminating Hamas. Ceasefires aimed at rescuing hostages have repeatedly allowed Hamas to regroup, rearm, and amplify anti-Israel propaganda — especially on American college campuses.

Israel Is Hard on Itself. The World Is Harder

Adding to Israel’s internal struggle over war priorities are external pressures, including a deeply entrenched anti-Israel legacy media bias. Less than 24 hours after the October 7 attacks, mainstream outlets began their usual moral equivalence — or outright blame — against Israel.

For example, the BBC faced accusations of violating editorial guidelines 1,553 times in its coverage of the war, associating Israel with genocide 14 times more than Hamas. CBS went as far as to instruct journalists not to refer to Jerusalem as an Israeli city, effectively erasing Israel’s capital from the map.

The Biden Administration’s Undermining of Israel

After a brief show of solidarity, the Biden administration began hampering Israel’s war effort — delaying critical arms shipments and publicly condemning civilian casualties, despite Israel’s restraint against Hamas’s human-shield tactics.

During an October 2024 campaign event at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, an activist accused Israel of genocide. Instead of outright rejecting the claim, Vice President Kamala Harris responded, “Listen, what he’s talking about, it’s real.” Though her campaign later tried to walk it back, the damage was done. When the American president and vice president accuse Israel of war crimes in an existential war it did not start, it emboldens global antisemitism and weakens Israel’s position.

The United Nations’ Systemic Bias

The UN’s anti-Israel bias is well-documented and spans decades. In 2024 alone, the General Assembly adopted 17 resolutions against Israel — compared to just six for the rest of the world combined. Even after Hamas’s October 7 atrocities, the UN refused to pass a resolution explicitly condemning the terrorist attacks.

The UN Human Rights Council, since its establishment in 2006, has adopted over 100 resolutions condemning Israel — more than those against Iran, Syria, and North Korea combined. Meanwhile, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has been complicit in Hamas’s operations, with its facilities being used to store weapons and launch attacks against Israel. The UN’s enabling of Hamas is undeniable.

The Antidote: Donald Trump and This Republican Congress

The shameful Biden-Harris era — marked by moral equivalence and thinly veiled anti-Israel bias, fueled by the far-left influence of “The Squad” — is over. President Trump and his administration have consistently upheld Israel’s right to self-defense. His robust military support has already delivered $8 billion in weapons to Israel, providing the Jewish state with the means to decisively defeat its enemies.

Trump offers Israel a rare and crucial opportunity: the political cover to win this war, unimpeded by leftist anti-Israel forces, the legacy media, the UN, and the International Criminal Court. For the first time, Israel has the chance to fight for its survival without global interference.

Israel is closer than ever to achieving lasting peace — if it can reconcile the profound dilemma of prioritizing hostages or defeating its enemies. The two objectives may not be mutually exclusive; winning the war could provide the hostages their best chance for survival.

The 2011 hostage deal led directly to the October 7 massacre. The lesson should be clear: Israel must resume the war, withhold Gaza aid, and fight with the same resolve the U.S. demonstrated against ISIS in 2017.

Victory will not only deliver peace and security to Israel but also deal a crushing blow to Islamism — benefiting the entire world.

Marc Weisman

Dr. Weisman is a quadruple board-certified physician and author. He has authored books in his Geriatric Medicine specialty, and politics including radical Islam. He has written scores of articles for popular online websites and magazines. Dr. Weisman completed a medical terrorism training course with the Israeli Defense Forces. He practices and resides in Michigan.
Israel’s Moment of Decision on Hamas
2025-09-04T00:35:20+00:00 March 23rd, 2025|

EU and Ukraine: Stop Blaming Trump, Look in the Mirror

American Thinker

EU and Ukraine: Stop Blaming Trump, Look in the Mirror

It is deeply ironic for European leaders to criticize Donald Trump for allegedly undermining President Volodymyr Zelensky as he seeks to create space for negotiations — especially given their own failure to prevent Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in the first place.  Ukraine’s pursuit of NATO membership, despite Russia’s explicit warnings, combined with the inability of President Joe Biden and European leaders to deter Vladimir Putin’s aggression, directly contributed to the war.  By ignoring Putin’s repeated signals that NATO expansion posed a “threat” to Russia’s security, Ukraine took a gamble — one that ultimately failed, as the West proved too weak to deter him.  Instead of condemning Trump for recognizing this reality and pushing for a negotiated peace, his efforts should be welcomed.

Trump’s Position: Acknowledging Reality

Despite claims to the contrary, President Trump has openly recognized Russia as the aggressor in the ongoing conflict with Ukraine.  In a recent interview, he stated, “Russia attacked,” clearly acknowledging Moscow’s role in initiating hostilities.  Unlike European leaders and many on the left in America, Trump also understands the sobering reality that achieving peace requires bringing both sides to the negotiating table — almost certainly involving Ukraine ceding some eastern territories.  Although no one wants Putin to benefit from launching a brutal invasion against his neighbor and former Soviet satellite, the blame rests squarely on the Biden administration and the European Union’s failure to prevent the war during the eight months of Russian military buildup on Ukraine’s border.  European leaders, so quick to criticize Trump for supposedly cozying up to Putin, should have considered the consequences of their collective weakness when they failed to act before the full-scale invasion began.

Expensive Stalemate

Despite the E.U. spending approximately $130 billion and the U.S. around $200 billion in military and financial aid, the war remains largely stagnant.  As of February 2025, Russia controls roughly 20% of Ukraine’s territory, primarily in the south and east.  Over the past month, Russian forces have gained an additional 130 square miles (about 336 square kilometers), advancing into areas like Pokrovsk. but at a staggering cost — over 420,000 Russian casualties in 2024 alone.

There is little reason to believe that in one year, or even three, Ukraine will reclaim its lost land through military action.  So what is the rationale for indefinitely funding this war?  The toll on human lives has been catastrophic, and the risk of escalation into a wider conflict — potentially between nuclear powers — only adds urgency to the need for diplomacy.  This is the core premise of Trump’s position: pushing for negotiations now rather than prolonging a war that continues to drain resources and lives with no clear path to victory.

Pre-War Deterrence: A Missed Opportunity

Prior to the invasion, several deterrence strategies existed but were rejected by the West:

  • Provision of Military Equipment — Supplying Ukraine with advanced military assets, such as MiG fighter jets from Finland and Poland — aircraft that Ukrainian pilots were already trained to fly — could have enhanced its defensive capabilities and signaled a stronger commitment from Western allies.
  • Economic Sanctions — Implementing comprehensive pre-emptive sanctions targeting key sectors of the Russian economy, particularly energy exports, might have exerted enough economic pressure to deter an invasion.  However, Western nations delayed decisive action, weakening the sanctions’ potential impact.
  • International Diplomatic Isolation — A unified, global diplomatic effort to isolate Russia could have increased the political and economic costs of an invasion, potentially influencing Putin’s calculations.  Instead, Western leaders engaged in half-measures, emboldening Russian aggression.  Biden even went so far as to state that small Russian incursion into Ukraine may not require a U.S. response.
  • The E.U. Failed to Boycott Russian Energy — Reports indicate that the European Union has spent more on Russian oil and gas than on financial aid to Ukraine.  According to the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), in the third year of the war, the E.U. paid approximately $23 billion for Russian fossil fuels, surpassing the $20 billion allocated for Ukraine’s financial support in 2024.

Big Talk, Little Action

European leaders now express strong rhetorical support for Ukraine, but their past inaction contributed to the crisis.  Their continued failure to offer a realistic path toward peace beyond funding the war only prolongs the suffering.

  • French president Emmanuel Macron has insisted that Europe was “right to help Ukraine and sanction Russia three years ago and must continue doing so.”  Yet these weak sanctions did little to stop the war or weaken Russia’s resolve.
  • Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni has warned of a “divided West” following Trump’s meeting with Zelensky, urging negotiations to prevent further discord among Western allies.  However, this unity should have been prioritized before the war began.
  • British prime minister Keir Starmer has emphasized Europe’s responsibility for its own defense, proposing a U.K.-French ceasefire plan to the U.S. while pledging additional funds for Ukrainian air defense.  However, without a comprehensive diplomatic strategy, such actions remain piecemeal efforts.

Conclusion: A Preventable War, a Necessary Peace

The war in Ukraine is a stark reminder of the failures of weak Western deterrence and the complexities of international diplomacy.  Although alternative strategies could have prevented this conflict, the current priority must be securing a just and lasting peace — one that, realistically, will require Ukraine to cede some territory, a painful but unavoidable price that Ukraine will pay for its and the greater West’s missteps along the way.

As the saying goes, “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”  Had European leaders and the Biden administration acted decisively before the invasion, this war might never have begun.  Now, as the conflict drags on with mounting casualties and economic costs, a new approach is urgently needed.

Donald Trump remains the only leader advocating for a pragmatic resolution — one that acknowledges the realities on the ground and prioritizes stopping the bloodshed over prolonging an unwinnable war.  While European leaders continue their posturing, Ukraine continues to suffer.  Without decisive leadership, this war will persist, draining resources, lives, and global stability.  The time for serious negotiations is now.

2025-03-13T01:14:24+00:00 March 13th, 2025|