Friday Dec 5, 2025
NEWSLETTER
www.israelhayom.com
  • Home
  • News
    • Israel
    • Israel at War
    • Middle East
    • United States
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
  • In Memoriam
www.israelhayom.com
  • Home
  • News
    • Israel
    • Israel at War
    • Middle East
    • United States
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
  • In Memoriam
www.israelhayom.com
Home Commentary

Hamas has taken the Israeli spirit hostage too

A hostage deal, as much as we wish for it, exists only in our imagination – we're mainly negotiating with ourselves, caught in a spiral of self-flagellation.

by  Nadav Shragai
Published on  09-03-2024 18:50
Last modified: 09-03-2024 18:53
Hamas has taken the Israeli spirit hostage tooMahmud Hams/AFP

Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar holds the child during a rally in Gaza City on May 24, 2021 | Photo: Mahmud Hams/AFP

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Through our tears and with hearts shattered six times over, here's a sobering truth that cuts through the emotion: Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar doesn't want a deal right now. He needs the hostages to ensure his survival and to keep extorting us. His strategy is to wear us down, to prolong our internal conflicts indefinitely, stretching them out for months and years to come. As long as possible. And we're playing right into his hands.

The public, guided by the "Kaplan protesters" – meaning the masses protesting in Kaplan St. in Tel Aviv, and the understandably distraught families of hostages, unwittingly dances to the tune of Sinwar, the chief executioner. While no one can stand in those families' shoes or criticize them, they're unknowingly actors in a play Sinwar has written and continues to direct. Although Hamas is the murderer, the blame and protests are directed at Netanyahu and his ministers, as if they were the killers. This only gives Sinwar more reasons to dig in his heels. In this case, it's not God hardening Pharaoh's heart, but the public – awash in a flood of uniform media messages – failing to see that they're hurting the hostages more than helping them.

Instead of tens or hundreds of thousands gathering at the Egyptian and Gaza borders, or thousands protesting outside Qatari embassies worldwide, crowds are massing at the wrong address. The hostages aren't being held in the city of Caesarea or Tel Aviv's Ayalon road. Believe it or not, despite his many critics and undeniable missteps, even Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants to bring the hostages home.

Israelis protesting along with the families of the hostages in Tel Aviv on Sept, 1, 2024. Photo credit: KOKO ????

Israel agreed to President Joe Biden's proposal and even its revisions. It might agree to further updates, but Sinwar isn't interested. So Netanyahu and his government, whose negotiating positions can be debated, aren't really relevant right now. That is unless someone's willing to agree to Israel's complete surrender and total withdrawal from Gaza "lock, stock, and barrel." Even then, the international community won't give Israel the green light to return to the Philadelphi Corridor. Even if the world turned upside down, and the weapons caches, Hamas terrorists, and rockets waiting in Sinai for Israel's withdrawal made their way back into Gaza – which has become a modern-day Sodom.

The most clear-headed response to the execution of the six hostages by these new Nazis came from Washington. President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris declared Hamas guilty and vowed they would pay. The question of how they'll pay should be answered in Israel. We should set the price. The first step, which I proposed here two days after the Oct. 7 massacre, is to pass a law to bring Hamas and its collaborators to justice. We should conduct an expanded "Eichmann trial" against them – a trial that will expose, over time, the full scope of the atrocities Hamas has committed here in the last ten months and stretching back decades.

The second step is to make it crystal clear that Israel will permanently maintain a security buffer zone inside the Gaza Strip, along the border. The loss of this "holy ground" is the surest way to make the Hamas scums understand there's a price for their murderous actions. Additional steps include further dividing the Strip into smaller, controlled areas and continuing to hunt down Hamas leaders in Gaza and worldwide. We should pursue them just as we did the murderers of the Munich Olympics athletes during Operation "Wrath of God" in former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir's time – terrorists who also killed their hostages.

A deal, as much as we wish for it, exists only in our imagination right now. There's no agreement on the table. We're mainly negotiating with ourselves, caught in a spiral of self-flagellation. It's not just the hostages who need to be freed, but the Israeli spirit itself, which Hamas continues to batter and manipulate within us.

Tags: Gaza WarHamasIsrael

Related Posts

Netanyahu is gambling with Israel's security

Netanyahu is gambling with Israel's security

by Yoav Limor

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has named Roman Gofman as director of the Mossad, despite Gofman having no background in intelligence...

Netanyahu's Washington visit comes with a hard decisionChip Somodevilla / POOL / AFPף EPA/WILL OLIVERף Stephanie Lecocq/Pool via AP

Netanyahu's Washington visit comes with a hard decision

by Danny Zaken

While the US is set to request curbs on IDF operations, officials acknowledge that no comprehensive Middle East arrangement is...

Netanyahu spoke with Qatari prime minister, apologizes for Doha strikeAP

The real meaning behind Netanyahu's White House invitation

by Danny Zaken

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to travel to Washington in the coming weeks to meet President Donald Trump. On...

Menu

Analysis 

Archaeology

Blogpost

Business & Finance

Culture

Exclusive

Explainer

Environment

 

Features

Health

In Brief

Jewish World

Judea and Samaria

Lifestyle

Cyber & Internet

Sports

 

Diplomacy 

Iran & The Gulf

Gaza Strip

Politics

Shopping

Terms of use

Privacy Policy

Submissions

Contact Us

About Us

The first issue of Israel Hayom appeared on July 30, 2007. Israel Hayom was founded on the belief that the Israeli public deserves better, more balanced and more accurate journalism. Journalism that speaks, not shouts. Journalism of a different kind. And free of charge.

All rights reserved to Israel Hayom

Hosted by sPD.co.il

  • Home
  • News
    • Israel at War
    • Israel
    • United States
    • Middle East
    • Sports
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
    • Environment & Wildlife
    • Health & Wellness
  • In Memoriam
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Submit your opinion
  • Terms and conditions

All rights reserved to Israel Hayom

Hosted by sPD.co.il

Newsletter

[contact-form-7 id=”508379″ html_id=”isrh_form_Newsletter_en” title=”newsletter_subscribe”]

  • Home
  • News
    • Israel at War
    • Israel
    • United States
    • Middle East
    • Sports
  • Opinions
  • Jewish World
    • Archaeology
    • Antisemitism
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Culture
  • Magazine
    • Feature
    • Analysis
    • Explainer
    • Environment & Wildlife
    • Health & Wellness
  • In Memoriam
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Submit your opinion
  • Terms and conditions

All rights reserved to Israel Hayom

Hosted by sPD.co.il