Nine months of the Gaza war have proven that the idea of resistance adopted by Hamas and the rest of the Palestinian factions is based on several foundations. The most important of these foundations are waging guerrilla warfare, patience and steadfastness, depleting the occupation’s human and economic resources, depriving it of enjoying a stable fabric of life, damaging its strategic military and civilian goals, neutralising its defences and intelligence using precision weapons, deep coordination between the fronts and accumulating unprecedented international pressure on it, which is gradually pushing it to appear isolated, like someone infected with leprosy.
These principles, and others, prompted large sectors of the Israelis to demand that their army and government stop the war on Gaza. These demands are not out of pity for the Palestinians, nor out of concern for their blood, but because Israelis have become firmly convinced that the war will not lead to the collapse of Hamas