Israeli PM said to have turned down proposal in early talks and continues to take tough line

  • Overzeetop@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    Well, lucky for him he didn’t even entertain the ceasefire to see if he could have gotten them all back.

    • mwguy@infosec.pub
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      8 months ago

      The ceasefire would have happened in return for some of the hostages. Why would they give them more?

      • hitmyspot
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        8 months ago

        Ceasefires end, otherwise it’s called a truce. Hamas probably didn’t want to give up their strongest negotiating chip. In saying that, keeping hostages in this way is a war crime too.

        Negotiating is the only path forward. Netanyahu rejecting the offer outright leads to more death and violence in the short and long term.

        If Israel don’t negotiate in good faith, why would Hamas stop terrorist attacks? Your rhetoric goes both ways.

        • mwguy@infosec.pub
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          8 months ago

          Netanyahu rejecting the offer outright leads to more death and violence in the short and long term.

          Just the short term really. The least deaths in the long term from a game theory perspective is to make the value of the hostages zero or even negative.

          Israel’s biggest mistake in the hostage back and forth was in the past giving up like 1000 fighters for some hostages.

          Instead Israel should occupy like an additional acre of Palestine everytime a hostage/day is taken. Domestically the loss of territory seems to be the only thing that matters to Palestinians, in terms of political support. So they need to take that away.

          • hitmyspot
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            8 months ago

            Your game theory is only considering the lives of hostages in the short and long term. Thousands are dying in the meanwhile.

            • mwguy@infosec.pub
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              8 months ago

              Thousands more would die in the next war for hoatages if they’re allowed to be viable. Long term, peace on the '67 borders is the only way to minimize total casualties.

              Hamas has proven over the last 20 years that it will continue to attack Israel no matter what. It’s proven that it doesn’t care about the lives of Palestinians.

              • hitmyspot
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                8 months ago

                I took agree that peace leads to less death. The question is how to get there.

                Hamas are a terrorist organisation who committed a horrible act. Hamas are not in power in the west bank, yet the Palestinians there have suffered apartheid and lose land to Israeli settlers in breach of international law. This is happening for years.

                If we look at stats from before October, the loss of lives is clearly on the Palestinians side to a much higher degree. If we look at since October, it’s the same.

                Hamas commits horrible acts. Israel commits horrible acts.

                Keeping civilian hostages as human shields is a war crime. Indiscriminately bombing civilians and civilian infrastructure is a war crime.

                • mwguy@infosec.pub
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                  8 months ago

                  Indiscriminately bombing civilians and civilian infrastructure is a war crime.

                  Israel clearly isn’t indiscriminately bombing Gaza.

                  If we look at stats from before October, the loss of lives is clearly on the Palestinians side to a much higher degree. If we look at since October, it’s the same.

                  That should be expected since only one side spends money on defensive technology. Hamas has been complaining about Israeli air strikes since it came to power. It’s spent billions on unguided rockets and ripping up infrastructure. But it’s built zero bomb shelters for it’s people, even admonishing civilians trying to use the built tunnels for shelter. It’s installed zero radar systems. It’s purchased zero anti-aircraft guns. It’s done absolutely nothing to protect it’s citizens and continues to start new wars.

                  Why would we expect the death tolls to be equal? That’s like me, an American complaining that healthcare in America isn’t available for everyone like it is for Canadians and demanding that Canada fix that problem.

                  • hitmyspot
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                    8 months ago

                    I would call bombing hospitals and refugee camps indiscriminate bombing. Some people are given warnings. Some are not. So perhaps I should clarify that not all of their bombing is indiscriminate. Much is.

                    Proportional response and efforts to minimse civilian casualties are required under war conventions. This is not happening.

                    Your point about only one side having the capability to be hugely aggressive onky bolsters my point. Israel is the aggressor in such a situation.

                    I am not saying Hamas is a good government. Both sides can be terrible. However, Hamas not building bomb shelters does not make it ok for Israel to bomb citizens indiscriminately.

                    I don’t expect the tolls to be equal. I do however take note that when Israel uses aggressive actions by Hamas for justification, that they are in fact the aggressors in the majority of cases with injury or death.

                    War is horrible. Civilians die. However, Israel’s policy seems clearly, with the current and past events, to be genocide. They are trying to eliminate the Palestinian people from land they want.

              • filister@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Oh and Israel cares so much about civilians lost. Perhaps you should check the numbers of killed and injured people on both sides even before 7.10, to get a bit of perspective.

                • mwguy@infosec.pub
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                  8 months ago

                  I mean they clearly do. A cheap and WW2 era artillery bombardment of the region could have killed an easy 200k in a week.

                  The UN believes a modern conflict will kill about 9 civilians for every militant. Hamas’ government last I checked reported about 11k casualties, 100% civilians. If that’s the IDF would need to have killed 1,200 Hamas fighters to meet that ratio. Given that there’s an estimated 20-40k fighters in Gaza we should expect 180k-360k casualties if the IDF nominally completes their goal of eliminating Hamas military.

      • Overzeetop@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        The way I read it was a ceasefire in return for some of the hostages. Nobody floats their final offer with the first contact.

        • Some of the hostages for humanitarian lanes
        • Most of the hostages for a 7 day ceasefire with monitored evacuations
        • All of the hostages for a 14 day ceasefire
        • All of the hostages and known leaders of HAMAS for an indefinite ceasefire, contingent on zero future incursions or military operations (you have to offer at least one impossible option past what you want)
        • mwguy@infosec.pub
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          8 months ago

          Israel needs to reset the value of hostages in the long run. They can’t afford for hostage taking to be viable in the long run. And as long as they are successful militarily; there’s no real reason for them to budge from their position.