
Israel insists that its campaigns in Gaza and Lebanon are about security, not conquest. The stated objective is straightforward enough, destroy organizations that have spent years launching rockets, organizing attacks and openly declaring their desire to eliminate the Jewish state. After the horrors of October 7 many Israelis concluded that deterrence had failed and that merely containing militant groups was no longer an option. From that perspective, the war is not a geopolitical choice but a grim necessity.
Yet history has a way of intruding on military logic. The question hanging over the region is whether Israel is truly eliminating its enemies or merely participating in another cycle that has defined the conflict for generations. Terrorist organizations can be weakened, their leaders killed, their infrastructure shattered. Armies are very good at destroying things. They are often less successful at destroying ideas, identities, grievances and the political ecosystems that produce armed movements in the first place.
One does not need to romanticize Hamas or Hezbollah to recognize this dilemma. Organizations built around militancy frequently survive devastating losses. They mutate, fragment, rebrand, recruit new generations and return under different names. The Middle East is littered with examples of movements declared defeated only to reappear in altered forms a decade later. Military victory and political resolutions are not the same thing.
This is where another, a more uncomfortable question emerges. Critics of Israel argue that the war cannot be viewed separately from the broader issue of territory and settlement expansion. They point to the steady growth of Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and to statements by some nationalist politicians who speak openly about permanent Israeli control over Palestinian lands. To these observers, the conflict begins to resemble a familiar historical pattern, a stronger power defeating armed resistance while simultaneously expanding its footprint.
That accusation is fiercely rejected by many Israelis, who note that Gaza was not settled in the years leading up to the current war and that the immediate military objectives are directed at armed groups rather than territorial acquisition. They see comparisons to imperial expansion as simplistic and often blind to the genuine security threats Israel faces.
Still, perceptions matter in politics almost as much as facts on the ground. Every new settlement announcement, every provocative statement from an extremist politician, every image suggesting permanence where temporary security measures were promised, strengthens the argument of those who believe the conflict is about more than terrorism.
The tragedy is that both narratives contain elements that resonate. Israel faces real enemies committed to violence. Palestinians face a reality in which land, movement, and sovereignty remain deeply contested. Each side can point to evidence supporting its fears. Each side can produce a catalogue of historical wounds.
The result is a conflict trapped between military necessity and historical memory. Israel may succeed in severely damaging Hamas and Hezbollah. It may even achieve periods of relative calm. But if the underlying political questions remain unanswered, today's victory could become tomorrow's prelude.
History rarely repeats itself exactly. It prefers variations on old themes. The danger for everyone involved is that this war may eventually be remembered not as the end of a threat, but as another chapter in a story that neither side has yet figured out how to conclude.








