Hamas rejects ceasefire, Israel resumes attack, update from Tel Aviv
What happened?
Beginning last night, almost all of the experts had said that there was going to be a ceasefire. Overnight, hardly any missiles had fallen. What changed?
First, we had all assumed that the Hamas was not going to say no to the Egyptian President Sisi once again. Second, we assumed that the Hamas was ready for a ceasefire.
What we did not understand was that first, Hamas, at this point, does not care what Sisi thinks. We further did not understand that Hamas was not willing to end the war without achieving anything.
The Egyptian plan did not provide Hamas with any gains at all after a week of fighting and not killing any Israelis. Finally, Hamas has concluded that Israel is weak and not willing to launch a ground assault. Under those conditions, Hamas made the conscious decision to reject the ceasefire and resume the missile attacks.
It is now clear that we are not going to have a ceasefire any time soon. Hamas has only one of two goals- either kill us or make sure that we kill so many of their own people that the world will turn against us. I am not sure they are leaving us too many choices.
When I began writing this update, we, in Tel-Aviv, had not been attacked yet. Moments after I finished writing, as the piece was being edited, the sirens went off. Three more missiles were headed towards Tel-Aviv, and all were downed by the Iron Dome. At the same time 20+ missiles were sent at other parts of Israel. It looks like it’s just another day of living under occasional missile fire.
Marc Schulman has a BA and MA from Columbia University. His MA is in Political Science and his specialization was the Middle East. He has lived in Israel at different times for a total of twelve years and served as officer in the Israeli Air Force several decades ago. He has been putting the Daily Analysis together as part of the Historycentral.com web site for seven and half years.
In September 9, 2007, Marc broke the story of the Israeli attack on the Syrian nuclear facility three days before it broke in the regular press.