On this first anniversary of October 7, I have a bit of an unusual observation. I don't even know if it's correct, but here goes.
On the Israeli side of things, there's no shortage of people who will publicly say exactly what they think Israel should be doing. Their point of view is pretty simple: Hamas and Hezbollah are murderous terrorist groups that will never cease their attacks on Israel. They need to be destroyed, full stop, and Iran's sponsorship of terrorism needs to be hit hard enough to make them give it up. If a brutal war is the only way to accomplish this, then so be it. Enough is enough.
This may or may not have any chance of working, and you may or may not agree. But it's all pretty clear.
Now consider the pro-Palestinian side—here in the US anyway. During the campus turmoil earlier this year it was striking that the protesters were reluctant to talk to the press. It was specifically discouraged, in fact. More generally, the pro-Palestinian side never really says what they think Israel should do.
Don't get me wrong. In the short term they think Israel should stand down. They support a permanent ceasefire. That much is self-evident. But over the longer term, what is it they think Israel should do? The obvious answer is that Israel should stop fighting; should stop oppressing Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank; and should allow Palestinians a free and clear homeland with no restrictions.
But the TV talking heads and newspaper pundits rarely actually say this—or so it seems to me. Am I just watching the wrong TV? Or are they, in fact, reluctant to say this publicly?
If reluctance there is, the reason is probably not hard to figure out: it's because they know nobody would buy it. If Israel literally retreated to its borders, took down its walls, and foreswore any further military action, they would instantly be the target of endless, sustained terrorism. Eventually they would be destroyed. It would not be a "genocide" in the sense of killing 2% of Gaza, it would be a genocide in the sense of killing every Jew in Israel.
Help me out. Where am I wrong? Who should I be listening to on the Palestinian side that has sensible things to propose that don't presume the extinction of Israel?