The Wisdom of Hamas
Matti Friedman The Free Press
Palestinians wave their national flag and celebrate by a destroyed Israeli tank at the Gaza Strip. (photo: Yusef Masoud/AP)
They understand the war they’re fighting. Many in the West still don’t.
But as I write nearly three months later, with several acquaintances dead in battle and one still held hostage in Gaza, it’s easier to understand what Hamas leaders were thinking. Indeed, it’s increasingly worth considering the possibility that they weren’t wrong.
In many ways, Hamas understood the world better than we Israelis did. The men who came across the border, and those who sent them, may have grasped the current state of the West better than many Westerners. More than anything, they understood the war they’re fighting when many of us didn’t—and still don’t.