Why Hamas went rogue on October 7 and how the West could end the war
A Middle East scholar who predicted a mass attack on Israel six months before the fall attack by Hamas says Gaza should be split along clan lines

The mass attack against Israel came from all sides, coordinated by Iran. Lebanon fired tens of thousands of missiles and sent combat units across the border. Syria, Yemen, Iraq all sent missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles. Meanwhile from Gaza, Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad followed, firing so many missiles as to overwhelm the Iron Dome.
Roads, electricity, communications system, army bases, airports, all destroyed.
It was the doomsday scenario that never was — at least not yet. Dr. Mordechai Kedar, a Middle East scholar, predicted this scenario six months before October 7.
“The Iranian plan was a barrage to destroy Israel within a week,” Kedar told the National Post during a recent Toronto visit.
But Hamas went rogue on October 7.
The terror group was supposed to wait until the order came from Iran for a coordinated assault. The Islamic Republic wanted to attack, when their nuclear capability was ready, to deter any retaliation.
But Hamas smelled weakness and a fissure in Israeli society when 200 Israeli F-15 pilots were boycotting training to protest judicial reforms in March 2023. The in-fighting and mass demonstrations “destroyed the image of Israel as a powerful country” to its neighbours.
“It inflated the Jihad glands in the bodies of our neighbours. They went out in the streets to celebrate. ‘No fighters, no pilots!’ It encouraged them to start the war,” Kedar said. They were looking for the right time, and the Nova Music Festival was a welcome opportunity — thousands of unarmed party-goers in a single place.
At the same time, Hamas sought to derail negotiations between the Saudis and Israel on a path to normalization. According to Kedar, the result would have been a kind of peace domino effect: Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Mauritania, Tunisia, Mali, Chad and Niger would have followed, “mainly because of the American goodies.” But it would have diverted attention from the Palestinian cause, Kedar said, which is unacceptable to Hamas.
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The calculation, then, was to kidnap hundreds of Israelis, with the expectation that Israel would swap them for manifold more Palestinian prisoners. As precedent, in 2011 a single IDF soldier, Gilad Shalit, was exchanged for a thousand Palestinian prisoners — and the anticipated trade-math was exhilarating. Obviously, they miscalculated the aftermath.

Still, jihadists believe that the destruction and civilian casualties are the cost necessary to destroy Israel, Kedar said. The Quaran preaches that dying for Islam is praiseworthy, he said, and therefore “the tantrum over civilians killed is for the foreign media. It’s good PR.”
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