Israel’s neighbors and regional players also want to be rid of Hamas.
Israel recently struck Hamas leadership in Qatar. The uproar from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar, and others is loud. The idea that this kind of operation is unusual – or unacceptable – is false.
Historical parallels
In 1986, French jets bombed Libya’s Ouadi Doum airbase to protect France’s strategic interests and its ally Chad. Libya protested, but the world moved on. Again in 2019, French jets hit rebel convoys entering Chad from Libya. Outrage was short-lived; there was no retaliation. Other examples involving Turkey, India, Russia, Israel, Ethiopia, and Colombia (to name but a few) exist. Such sovereignty violations are common. They are regularly condemned but rarely punished.
One can’t help but wonder what Macron thought of Libya’s sovereignty when he authorized France’s attack on rebels in 2019. Similarly, Qatar’s Foreign Ministry whined that the strike was a “cowardly Israeli attack” and a “blatant violation of all international laws and norms,” ignoring, of course, the well-established norm against providing aid and shelter to known terrorists.
Performative criticism
In my view, these responses are purely performative. They are kabuki theater for domestic political consumption and reflect nothing of the real power exercised between states or their desire to stabilize the region without Hamas. They sound furious, cost nothing, and forecast no genuine willingness to escalate. What most of these governments say for the cameras is the inverse of what they pray for in private.