Try GOLD - Free
What Israel should learn from 2 years of conflict
Bangkok Post
|October 09, 2025
If the war in the Gaza Strip ends this week —nota sure thing — it will be followed by a long battle about its lessons. Here are mine:

File photo dated Oct 7, 2023, shows a woman running to her concrete shelter moments after rocket sirens sounded in Ashkelon, Israel.
(NYT)
'BELIEVE PEOPLE WHEN THEY TELL YOU WHO THEY ARE.’
Maya Angelou’s classic warning should have been believed in 1988, when Hamas declared in its founding covenant its intention to slaughter Jews. Instead, Israel continued to tolerate Hamas out of a combination of ideological convenience — itsuited Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, to have a divided Palestinian polity — and international reluctance to topple the group. That was until Oct 7, 2023, too late for the 1,200 people slaughtered that day.
BRILLIANT TECHNOLOGY IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR SOUND STRATEGY.
Successive rounds of fighting between Hamas and Israel never altered Israel's policy of containment toward Gaza. Why? Because, as Yaakov Katz, a coauthor of the excellent new book While Israel Slept, wrote me, technologies like the Iron Dome gave Israel the false sense that “it was impenetrable”.
Yet when Oct 7 came, Israel’s high-tech marvels in signals intelligence, missile interceptors, smart fences and underground barriers proved useless against Hamas’ low-tech paragliders and bulldozers.
‘WEAKNESS IS PROVOCATIVE,’ SAID DONALD RUMSFELD. SO IS THE APPEARANCE OF WEAKNESS.
Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ late leader, already believed that Israel was weak when he and hundreds of other Palestinian prisoners were released for the sake of a single Israeli hostage, the soldier Gilad Shalit. But Israel had never looked so weak in the months that preceded Oct 7, thanks to the Netanyahu government's heedless push for a judicial “reform” that looked to millions of Israelis like a lunge toward authoritarianism. As it turned out, it was the stumble before the fall.
ISRAELIS ARE BETTER THAN THEIR GOVERNMENT.
This story is from the October 09, 2025 edition of Bangkok Post.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Bangkok Post

Bangkok Post
Chinese cinch belts during long holiday
China's longest stock rally in years has done little so far to encourage households to shell out more money during a major holiday this month, a worry for an economy already entering a slowdown.
2 mins
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
Djokovic vanquishes fatigue
Novak Djokovic banished exhaustion and played through an ankle injury scare on Tuesday to make it to the quarterfinals of the Shanghai Masters, beating Spain's Jaume Munar 6-3, 5-7, 6-2.
2 mins
October 09, 2025

Bangkok Post
How Bari Weiss engineered a meteoric rise at CBS News
At The Free Press, she battled 'wokeness' and buddied up with billionaires. Now she has shot to the top of CBS's crown jewel, writes Jessica Testa from New York
5 mins
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
Prosecutors defend spy case failure
British prosecutors on Tuesday said they did \"everything possible\" to bring a trial of two men accused of spying for China to court, but it collapsed when the government declined to label Beijing an enemy.
1 mins
October 09, 2025

Bangkok Post
WHAT'S WRONG WITH LAS VEGAS?
Fewer visitors and rising prices are forcing a rethink in Sin City
5 mins
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
SoftBank to buy ABB’s robotics unit for $5.4bn
SoftBank Group said yesterday it has agreed to buy the robotics business of Swiss engineering group ABB in a $5.4 billion deal.
2 mins
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
Tesla’s ‘affordable’ Model Y and 3 are still expensive, some say
Tesla rolled out “affordable” versions of its bestselling Model Y SUV and its Model 3 sedan, but the starting prices of $39,990 (about 1.3 million baht) and $36,990 were too high, some said, to attract a new class of buyers to the electric vehicle brand.
3 mins
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
Govt 'has legal grounds' to end MoU with Cambodia
The government can revoke the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU 43) signed with Cambodia without a referendum due to serious breaches by the Cambodians, said Panthep Puapongpan, chairman of the Thailand Watch Foundation.
1 min
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
Gold crosses $4,000 for first time, in historic rally
Gold pushed through $4,000 (about 130,000 baht) an ounce to hit a record yesterday, driven by investors seeking safety from mounting economic and geopolitical uncertainty, alongside expectations of further interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve.
2 mins
October 09, 2025
Bangkok Post
Iran dismisses Israel PM missile concern as ‘fantasy’
Iran dismissed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s warnings over its missile programme as fabricated, after he alleged the Islamic republic was developing rockets capable of reaching US cities.
1 min
October 09, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size