A dangerous liquidation

By Alex Fishman

Yediot Aharonot, Nov. 25, 2001

 After raising our hats to the Shabak and the IDF for the liquidation of Mahmud Abu Hunud, the so-called "No. 1 wanted Hamas terrorist" - interesting, those  who are liquidated are always "No. 1", does Hamas have no No. 2 or No.3? - we  again find ourselves preparing with dread for a new mass terrorist attack  within the Green Line [Israel's pre-'67 border].

    Whoever gave a green light to this act of liquidation knew full well that he is  thereby shattering in one blow the gentleman's agreement between Hamas and  the Palestinian Authority; under that agreement, Hamas was to avoid in the near  future suicide bombings inside the Green Line, of the kind perpetrated at the  Dolphinarium [discotheque in Tel-Aviv A.K].
  Such an agreement did exist, even  if neither the PA nor Hamas would admit it in public. It is a fact that, while  the security services did accumulate repeated warnings of planned Hamas  terrorist attacks within the Green Line, these did not materialize. That cannot  be attributed solely to the Shabak's impressive success in intercepting the  suicide bombers and their controllers. Rather, the respective leaderships of  the PA and Hamas came to the understanding that it would be better not to play  into Israel's hands by mass attacks on its population centres. This  understanding was, however, shattered by the assassination the day before  yesterday - and whoever decided upon the liquidation of Abu Hunud knew in  advance that that would be the price. The subject was extensively discussed  both by Israel's military echelon and its political one, before it was decided  to carry out the liquidation.

   Now, the security bodies assume that Hamas will embark on a concerted effort to  carry out suicide bombings, and preparations are made accordingly. Even before  the expected major terrorist attack takes place inside the Green Line, we could  already see the breaching of the "fire barriers" which were established after  the army's withdrawal from the West Bank cities, as Hamas responded [to the  killing of Abu Hunud] with a widespread series of attacks.

   There is little doubt that Abu-Hunud was an arch-murderer whose liquidation  would damage, at least temporarily, Hamas' operational capabilities in the  Samaria Sector [northern part of the West Bank]. Nor is it to be doubted that any such liquidation constitutes an impressive Israeli operational achievement. But does this string of operational successes serve any political aim, any strategy leading anywhere? Do 20 liquidations or  50 ones make any substantial difference, either in the campaign against  terrorism or on the political arena? Do these liquidations - successful as they  may be - detract even a little from the motivation of the terrorist  organizations? In the fast-widening "pockets of despair", to be found all over  the [occupied] territories, there is an inexhaustible supply of potential  suicide bombers. While in the past Israel's Military Intelligence tried to keep  up a current numerical estimate of the arsenal of potential suiciders, nowadays  the terrorist organizations have no problem to get as many as they want, and  can even afford to pick and choose among the potential recruits.

   The coming act of retribution which is now "in the air" has gotten complete  legitimacy - both in the Palestinian society at large and in the Palestinian  Authority - because of the death of the five children killed by an IDF  explosive charge at Khan Yunes. It was a tragic accident, and it is  inconceivable that anybody in the IDF would have dared to lay an explosive  charge with the conscious knowledge that it may hurt children. Still, the case  of this explosive charge is a horrifying side-effect of the method of targeted  killings, a method which had become Israel's central instrument of fighting  terrorism.

   The string of successes has made this method into a daily routine. The  political echelon is constantly pushing the military one to produce more and  more activities of this kind. For example, the number of "special operations"  in the Gaza Strip - i.e., secret penetrations into the [Palestinian-controlled]  "A" area for the purpose of prevention, arrests, ambushes and liquidations -  has arisen by 400% in the past three months. When this kind of activity  becomes a routine, one might lose sensitivity and caution. That is how an  explosive charge can find its way to a place where children are also to be found.