Why the global anti-Hamas coalition pushed by Macron is a bad idea
By: Rachel Marsden
The French president has suggested repurposing an international anti-IS effort, feeble to begin with, to help Israel fight its war
Last week, standing beside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a
visit to Jerusalem, French President Emmanuel Macron suggested recycling the
global coalition of 86 nations against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) to
focus on Hamas.
“Hamas is a terrorist group, whose objective is the destruction of the state of
Israel. This is also the case of ISIS, of Al-Qaeda, of all those associated with
them, either by actions or by intentions,” Macron said, betraying a short and
selective memory. The stated goal of IS wasn’t to eradicate Israel – it was to
establish a caliphate in Syria and Iraq, then broaden it into Arab countries. IS
was first and foremost a threat to the stability of Syria – the same country
whose government the US and its Western allies actively hindered in its fight
against terrorism by making a failed attempt at overthrowing President Bashar
Assad through Pentagon and CIA-backed training and equipping of “Syrian rebel”
jihadists. As for Al-Qaeda, Israel was even reportedly at one point helping
treat wounded militants from the group who were fighting their common enemy, the
Iranian-backed Hezbollah, in Syria – in turn effectively hindering the fight
against IS, as Syria and Hezbollah worked to destroy it.
The Global Coalition against Daesh (another name for IS), founded in 2014,
explicitly excluded Russia, whose invitation by Damascus to help it eradicate
the terrorist threat can be largely credited for Syria’s stabilization, and the
fact that it’s rare to even hear any talk of IS anymore. Russia’s involvement in
neutralizing the terrorist group, coupled with former US President Donald
Trump’s refusal to continue funding Washington’s incursion into Syria, beyond
hunkering down in the oil-rich Kurdish part, was the ultimate key to IS’ defeat.
So with apparently little left for it to do now, Macron recommends that the
coalition that mostly sat and watched – while Russia, Iran, and Syria did the
heavy lifting – take on Hamas. Who does he think is going to do the work this
time? Russia, which is still excluded from the coalition? Syria, which has
recently taken incoming missile fire from Israel? Iran’s Hezbollah allies, who
lost 1,000 men fighting IS in Syria – and whom Netanyahu has placed in the same
basket as Hamas as an enemy of Israel? Good luck with that.
So with the most effective anti-IS fighters excluded from fighting Hamas,
who’s left in Macron’s proposed coalition? There’s the Global South, including
some African countries that just kicked out French troops for their own failed
counterterrorism missions which had led to multiple coups and the flourishing of
jihadism. It’s doubtful these nations will now be keen to embark on yet another
counterterrorism mission alongside the same forces that they just expelled.
Then there are all those members of the international community who are quietly
thinking what United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres dared to say
aloud last week – that Hamas’ brutal attack on October 7, which left close to a
thousand civilians and hundreds of military and security personnel dead, “did
not happen in a vacuum.” He was, of course, hinting at Israel’s longstanding,
UN-recognized oppression of civilians in Gaza. His statement begs yet another
question: Is Hamas really a global threat? Or is it just Israel’s problem?
Anti-Israel unrest has reverberated outside of the immediate conflict zone,
including in Western Europe and the US, but these protests have nothing to do
with Hamas. Instead, citizens elsewhere in the world are merely reacting to
perceived injustices, particularly in light of what they consider to be an
overwhelmingly pro-Israel bias on the part of the Western establishment, which
initially and drastically minimized concerns over the protection of Palestinian
civilians. So any global action against Hamas seems futile.
The anti-IS coalition targeted the terror group’s propaganda, with its website
stating that IS’ “use of social media tied to acts of terrorism is
well-documented. In response, Coalition partners are working together to expose
the falsehoods that lie at the heart” of its ideology. They’re free to do that,
but why bother when there’s already open debate among those who have the
opportunity to see reports from the ground and assess the situation for
themselves? Governments can’t be trusted not to promote their own propaganda
under the guise of combating it – all to secure an advantage for their preferred
narrative.
Just consider the recent example of propaganda emitted by one of the
self-styled gatekeepers of truth: European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen. "Russia and Hamas are alike... their essence is the same,” she said. Nah,
actually they aren’t the same at all. And not even Israel has been saying that,
but still, “Vladimir Putin wants to wipe Ukraine from the map. Hamas, supported
by Iran, wants to wipe Israel from the map,” von der Leyen explained. Besides
the hot take on Putin’s intentions regarding Ukraine, that’s like saying that
since Warren Buffet has a bank account, and I have a bank account, then I’m also
a billionaire. This is exactly the kind of nonsense that Western anti-propaganda
campaigns end up spewing.
The anti-IS coalition was made to tackle IS. If that’s no longer an issue, then
just toss it in the trash. How many interventionist entities does the West need
to spearhead, anyway? There are already more than enough vehicles and
coordination mechanisms for intelligence sharing, propagandizing, and security
operations. Besides, there’s no proof that better intelligence could have helped
Israel when Egyptian and American officials have claimed that Netanyahu had
warning of the impending Hamas attack. About the only thing that more useless
Western-led bureaucracy would help is the West’s own hunger for more of it.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN