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As perilous ground war looms in Gaza, Israelis brace for sacrifice

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Ronen Zvulun/Reuters
Israeli soldiers listen to Defense Minister Yoav Gallant as he meets with them in a field near the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel, Oct. 19, 2023.

In Israel鈥檚 conflict-ridden 75 years, there have been countless military raids and operations, but only eight campaigns were officially considered a war.

The current one between the Jewish state and Hamas in the Gaza Strip is the ninth, immediately declared as such after the Palestinian militant group鈥檚 devastating Oct. 7 cross-border assault into southern Israel.

After nearly three weeks of retaliatory airstrikes and shelling on Gaza, and ahead of a threatened ground operation, Israeli military officials, analysts, and even the general public maintain this war will be drastically different from almost all that have come before.

Why We Wrote This

Israeli military officials, soldiers, and the public all know that a ground war against Hamas in Gaza will entail a heavy loss of Israeli life. But after the trauma of the Oct. 7 鈥渆arthquake,鈥 they are resolved to bear it.

In many respects, it already is. For the first time in decades, Israel is actively countenancing a prolonged campaign and is signaling to both its foes and citizens that it is willing to pay a heavy price to achieve its stated objective: the destruction of Hamas as a military and governing force in Gaza.

The messaging from the government doesn鈥檛 mince words.

鈥淰ictory will take time; there will be difficult moments. ... Sacrifice will be required,鈥 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last week in parliament.

And for now, the Israeli public seems unflinching. A snap poll taken in the wake of the Hamas attack by Agam Research, an Israeli firm, showed over 92% of Israeli Jews supporting a ground offensive into Gaza against Hamas.

Lisi Niesner/Reuters
Amid several freshly dug graves, people mourn Cpl. Dvir Lisha, 21, who was killed following the infiltration by Hamas fighters from the Gaza Strip, at his funeral at Israel's Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem, Oct. 15, 2023.

Israeli media have, for weeks now, been airing morale-boosting interviews with soldiers and reservists in staging grounds all across the country. The message from them is uniform: 鈥淭his is a battle for our home.鈥

A society only recently described as brittle as a 鈥渟pider鈥檚 web,鈥 in the words of Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia in Lebanon, now appears ready to make the ultimate sacrifice.

鈥淔or years it did seem like Israeli society put the idea of quality of life over the collective,鈥 says Danny Orbach, a professor of military history at Jerusalem鈥檚 Hebrew University. 鈥淚srael was richer, more Western, more liberal.鈥

All of that has apparently changed after Oct. 7, he adds.

The shift, Israeli officials and analysts explain, is due to both the scale of the death toll suffered on that fateful 鈥淏lack Saturday,鈥 as Israelis now call it, and the barbarity of the Hamas atrocities committed.

The initial Hamas attack inflicted the heaviest loss of life, certainly in a single day, in Israel鈥檚 history: 1,400 killed, the vast majority civilians, and over 220 taken captive back to Gaza including children, women, and older people.

According to government health officials in Gaza, some 7,000 Palestinians have been killed inside Gaza, making this war, on both sides, the deadliest Israeli-Palestinian conflict since 1948.

鈥淥ct. 7 was an earthquake,鈥 says Meir Elran, a retired Israeli brigadier general and expert on civil-military relations at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv. In a matter of weeks 鈥淚sraeli society has undergone a major psychological change 鈥 it鈥檚 furious, it wants revenge ... and the public is saying, 鈥榃hatever it takes.鈥欌

Ammar Awad/Reuters
Residents of Tel Aviv show support for and solidarity with the families of hostages being held in Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Oct. 21, 2023.

Yet the ground invasion by the massed Israeli armor and infantry divisions that in the first days of the war appeared imminent has yet to materialize. The reasons for the delay are multifaceted, according to several Israeli and U.S. sources with knowledge of the matter.

The Biden administration has requested that Israel provide it more time to deploy American military assets to the Middle East in anticipation of a possible regionwide escalation with Iran and its allied militias, including Hezbollah.

The United States has also urged Israel to allow more time for the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza, the exit of foreign nationals (including U.S. citizens) from the besieged territory, and the possibility of additional hostage releases, beyond the four women so far.

Complicating matters, Israel has yet to finalize a coherent 鈥渆xit strategy鈥 and postwar plan for Gaza, a key U.S. request and the topic of frenetic Israeli deliberations both inside and outside official bodies.

The Israeli military has in the interim continued preparing its troops, especially rusty reservists, training them for the urban battles to come after years spent on policing and counterterror duties in the West Bank, according to one person familiar with Israeli thinking. And one Israeli military officer, when pressed at a briefing on the delayed ground invasion, insisted that 鈥渢he air force is striking [Hamas] hard and preparing the ground for our land forces鈥 when the time comes.

But Israeli officials including Mr. Netanyahu have been clear: A major ground offensive is coming, with the military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, saying this week that the military was 鈥渞eady for the [ground] maneuver, and we will make a decision with the political echelon regarding the shape and timing of the next stage.鈥

Even Israeli officials and officers admit that taking on a well-equipped and dug-in foe like Hamas would be extremely time-consuming and bloody 鈥 including to Israeli forces.

Violeta Santos Moura/Reuters
An Israeli soldier searches a house that was raided during the deadly Oct. 7 attack by Hamas fighters from the Gaza Strip, in Kibbutz Holit in southern Israel, Oct. 26, 2023.

鈥淭his war was imposed on us and is already a huge wound in Israel society,鈥 adds Mr. Elran, the retired brigadier. 鈥淢ilitary fatalities are not the primary thing [the public] are thinking about.鈥

Already among the Israeli dead are more than 300 soldiers and some 50 police personnel,聽including some two dozen from fighting after Oct. 7 鈥 around Gaza, in the West Bank, and against Hezbollah on the Israel-Lebanon frontier.

This war鈥檚 toll has already outstripped the monthlong 2006 campaign against Hezbollah, in which 121 soldiers fell. Israel鈥檚 previous military occupation of a 鈥渟ecurity zone鈥 in southern Lebanon claimed the lives of some 400 soldiers 鈥 over the course of 15 years.

A grassroots movement by mothers of soldiers ultimately pushed the government to withdraw from Lebanon in 2000.

According to Professor Orbach, societies are ready to 鈥渋nvest crazily鈥 if they believe a goal is both worthwhile and achievable. The late stages of Israel鈥檚 occupation of Lebanon, he says, met neither criterion, and therefore the public turned against the slow drip of 鈥渙ur boys鈥 coming home in body bags.

Now, with Hamas in Gaza, things are diametrically different, he adds.

鈥淚sraelis truly believe that destroying Hamas is an objective that can be met, and that it鈥檚 essential for the future of the state. That鈥檚 why they鈥檙e willing to sacrifice fatalities,鈥 Professor Orbach says.

Lisi Niesner/Reuters
An Israeli soldier in the armored corps stands near tanks near Israel's border with Lebanon, in northern Israel, Oct. 19, 2023.

Mr. Netanyahu and other senior Israeli officials have said the war is necessary not only to eliminate the threat of Hamas and allow traumatized survivors to return to their shattered communities in southern Israel, but also to send a message to the wider Middle East.

鈥淚ran has created a 鈥榬ing of encirclement鈥 around Israel鈥 via its allied militias and proxies 鈥渇rom Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, and beyond,鈥 Professor Orbach says. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e already had the depopulation of entire regions鈥 on the Gaza and Lebanon borders. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 deal with Hamas now, you鈥檒l then have to deal with the rest of the 鈥榬ing.鈥 Israeli society intuitively understands this.鈥

And, over the course of the last three weeks, Israeli society has responded. Over 300,000 military reservists have mobilized, with one recent Bangkok-to-Tel Aviv flight allowing passengers 鈥 mostly military-age males 鈥 to sit and sleep in the aisles. Some Israel Defense Forces reserve units have recorded over a 100% response rate for duty, according to Israeli military officers. 聽

鈥淚 have no problem dying,鈥 said one baby-faced paratrooper last week to Channel 12鈥檚 鈥淯vda鈥 program, the Israeli version of 鈥60 Minutes.鈥

鈥淵ou know why? Because they鈥檒l do it again, when? Another time, another few years?鈥 he continued. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to die, I love life. ... But if it鈥檚 for this objective, and to make history, then I鈥檒l fight.鈥

Mr. Elran rejects comparisons between the nation鈥檚 current move and that which existed during prior military campaigns.

鈥淭here has never been a war like this,鈥 Mr. Elran says. 鈥淚t started differently, and will be conducted differently.鈥

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