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Why captured Israeli soldier raises the stakes for Israel and Hamas

The IDF is bombing the southern Gaza Strip after a soldier went missing this morning in a clash with Hamas militants. Captured Israeli soldiers can give Hamas significant leverage.

By Christa Case Bryant, Staff writerKristen Chick, Correspondent
Jerusalem

The suspected Hamas capture of an Israeli soldier this morning has sparked a heavy Israeli bombardment in the southern Gaza Strip, shattering the 72-hour cease-fire that began at 8 a.m.聽and scuppering talks in Egypt for a final agreement.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed that 2nd聽Lt. Hadar Goldin聽was dragged into a tunnel at聽9:30 a.m.聽in clashes involving a Palestinian suicide bomber that killed two other soldiers.聽Hamas military wing Al Qassam聽Brigades聽said in a statement that its fighters had wounded and killed 鈥渕any鈥 soldiers in Rafah, but did not mention a capture. 聽聽

If Goldin is confirmed to be in Hamas hands, it would represent a major triumph for the Islamist movement, which seeks the release of more than 400 operatives arrested last month as well as a lifting of the Israeli blockade of Gaza. The capture of Israeli soldiers resonates deeply in Israeli society, with each soldier seen as a son whom the nation has the responsibility to bring home. In 2011, Israel released more than 1,000 Palestinians prisoners for聽Israeli Cpl. Gilad Shalit, who became a household name during his five-year captivity, with everyone from activists to pop artists lobbying the government to secure his release.

A capture at this juncture in the war could lead to a significant Israeli escalation with even greater public support. That would be devastating for Palestinians, more than 1,400 of whom have already been killed, the vast majority of them civilians.

鈥淚sraeli society's intolerance for its soldiers languishing in captivity is such that these casualties of a historical conflict (and the popular movements that arise to free them) end up having a momentous impact on strategic decisions taken by Israeli governments,鈥 says Ronen Bergman, author of 鈥淏y Any Means Necessary 鈥 Israel's Covert War for Its POWs and MIAs.鈥 鈥淚 have seen how often the issue, instead of being an outcome of history, has become a generator of history, the tail that wags the dog.鈥

Trading cards

A member of Goldin's community say he is a person with his head in heaven and feet on the ground, who takes his connection to God and the Torah seriously, studying for two years in a yeshiva before entering the army. He was quiet and studious, someone who took responsibility.

Hamas considers the capture of an Israeli soldier an important victory, both because it shows the organization's ability against better-equipped forces, and because it could give the group substantial leverage in negotiations with Israel. It has demanded the release of prisoners and the lifting of the blockade, which has driven up food and fuel prices, led to widespread power and water shortages, and tightly controlled trade and travel.

When Hamas captured Shalit in 2006, it held him聽for five years,聽until Israel released聽1,027 Palestinian prisoners, many of whom had been convicted of carrying out attacks that killed more than 500 Israelis. Hamas trumpeted the deal as a major success, and last year Hamas political chief Khaled Meshaal explicitly called for more聽captures of Israeli soldiers聽to win the release of聽Palestinian prisoners.

The IDF says that since the beginning of 2013, it thwarted 64 Hamas聽attempts to abduct聽Israelis. Last month, Israel arrested more than 400 Hamas members in the West Bank 鈥 dozens of whom had been released in the Shalit deal 鈥 in retaliation for the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teens. Israel immediately accused Hamas of the kidnappings, though six weeks later it has yet to offer any proof of the organization鈥檚 involvement in what was more likely a local initiative.

Adnan Abu Amr, a Gaza analyst who is close to Hamas, says the capture of Israeli soldiers has been an explicit goal since the beginning of the conflict. 鈥淗amas wants to use this to free all Palestinian prisoners from Israeli prisons,鈥 he says.

When Al Qassam announced it had captured an Israeli soldier on July 20, posting his ID tag, the streets in Gaza City erupted in celebratory gunfire and shouts of 鈥淎llahu akbar!鈥 meaning 鈥淕od is great!鈥 The soldier, Staff Sgt. Oron Shaul, was later pronounced killed in action.聽Al Qassam has not released video or pictures other than of the dog tag to prove possession of the soldier or his remains.

Another Shalit deal unlikely

Gershon Baskin, who helped establish the backchannel talks that led to Shalit鈥檚 release, says it鈥檚 unlikely Hamas will be able to leverage a new capture to the same effect as in 2011.

鈥淎l Qassam just signed the death sentenced [sic] of many Hamas leaders. There will not be another Schalit deal,鈥 he tweeted this morning.

Since Shalit鈥檚 release, the IDF reinstated the Hannibal Protocol, which essentially authorizes the military to take any steps necessary to ensure the captors cannot make off with an Israeli soldiers 鈥撀爀ven if it means endangering the captured soldier's life.聽

There are two reasons for that, says Daniel Nisman, president of the Levantine Group, a geopolitical risk consultancy in Tel Aviv.

鈥淥ne is because it puts the whole society through that trauma,鈥 he says. 鈥淪econd, it鈥檚 an actual security threat, because they have to release prisoners in exchange and those Palestinians go on to launch their attacks.鈥

Palestinians near Rafah, where the soldiers clashed with Hamas while working to destroy a tunnel, are reporting heavy bombardment that has killed 40 as of press time.

Al Qassam says the soldiers entered areas of Rafah around聽2 a.m.聽that had not previously been under Israeli control and accused Israel of breaking the cease-fire, which it agreed to last night. Israel has insisted on continuing to destroy tunnels during the temporary cease-fires, which Hamas argues allows Israel to continue its military objectives while preventing Hamas from taking action.

鈥淭he occupation's announcement of the capture of a soldier is an attempt to mislead and justify its retreat from the cease-fire and a cover for the brutal massacres in Rafah,鈥 Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri told local media.

The pounding in Rafah may be the beginning of an escalation of the overall operation, and a refusal to engage with future cease-fire attempts. Many Israelis are blaming Hamas for using the prelude to today鈥檚 cease-fire to launch the sophisticated attack this morning.

鈥淵ou cannot talk and shoot at the same time, and Israel doesn鈥檛 agree to that,鈥 says Maj. Gen. (ret.) Israel Ziv, former head of the IDF Gaza Division. 鈥淲e might see a change in public opinion, an understanding that we may have to go much further.鈥

Kristen Chick reported last month from Gaza. She contributed to this report from Pristina, Kosovo.