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Israel-Gaza Megathread #2

This is a refreshed megathread for any posts on the conflict between (so far, and so far as I know) Hamas and the Israeli government, as well as related geopolitics. Culture War thread rules apply.

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[NYTimes, Friedman] Why a Gaza Invasion and ‘Once and for All’ Thinking Are Wrong for Israel

When The Times’s Israel correspondent Isabel Kershner recently asked an Israeli Army tank driver, Shai Levy, 37, to describe the purpose of the looming Israeli invasion of Gaza, he said something that really caught my ear. It was “to restore honor to Israel,” he said.

All these Islamist/jihadist movements — the Taliban, Hamas, ISIS, Al Qaeda, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, the Houthis — have deep cultural, social, religious and political roots in their societies. And they have access to endless supplies of humiliated young men, many of whom have never been in a job, power or a romantic relationship: a lethal combination that makes them easy to mobilize for mayhem.

And that’s why, to this day, none of these movements have been eliminated once and for all. They can, though, be isolated, diminished, delegitimized and decapitated — as America has done with ISIS and Al Qaeda. But that requires patience, precision, lots of allies and alternatives that have legitimacy within the societies from which these young men emerge.

Perhaps the greatest political challenge is what to do with surplus young men. It is this group that lies behind most terrorism, ISIS, inceldom, much of the dissident right, most challenges with policing and crime. Rich countries have more options than poorer ones, as do countries with lower birthrates compared to higher ones (due to reductions in the proportion of violent, dispossessed young men as a percentage of the total population).

All these Islamist/jihadist movements — the Taliban, Hamas, ISIS, Al Qaeda, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, the Houthis — have deep cultural, social, religious and political roots in their societies. And they have access to endless supplies of humiliated young men, many of whom have never been in a job, power or a romantic relationship: a lethal combination that makes them easy to mobilize for mayhem.

This, of course, fails to reflect the situation of Islamist terrorists that have lived in the West. The men (and woman) that did 9/11, the Bataclan, San Bernadino, Pulse, the Boston Bombing, and so on weren't desperately poor and humiliated men. They did have something in common, and it certainly does reflect deep cultural, social, religious, and political roots, but that doesn't really do the work of generating sympathy for their desire to slay infidels.

Perhaps the greatest political challenge is what to do with surplus young men.

Ya know, surplus Mormons don't seem to be causing all that much trouble in Utah, or fanning out to murder people that aren't that into Kolob. I know that it's considered a downright Philistine position to take, but I think the actual, specific tenets of religion have something to do with the behavior of their practitioners.

Surplus Mormons don't do this because Utah is a highly prosperous and functioning society, even by American standards. Unfortunately we haven't figured out how to bring those societies to most of the world, so the problem of surplus violent young men is more salient elsewhere.

Unfortunately we haven't figured out how to bring those societies to most of the world

But strangely we could a few decades ago at gunpoint. Desperately poor pre-industrialization mostly-farmers South Koreans could be administrated by the US Army and then a local dictator selected by the US Army and uplifted into a different sort of society. Not without negative consequences, birthrates etc. But it was done.

Not until after a coup. Syngman Rhee wasn't interested in raising the standard of living of the peasants.