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Yaakov Lappin

By

Yaakov Lappin,

Jewish News Syndicate

Analysis

Hamas is looking at the 60,000 dead and the Western hatred of Israel and thinking: job done

With the terror group having survived the war, another meeting with the US in the bag and Israel-hate peaking in the West, Hamas sees the last two years as a success

November 20, 2025 16:35
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Hamas fighters secure an area before handing over an Israeli-America hostage to a Red Cross team in Gaza City on February 1, 2025 (Photo by SAEED JARAS/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

The best prism through which to understand how Hamas assesses the war is the disturbing saga over the return of the hostage bodies. 

Shalom Arbel, a former senior member of the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) who served from 1988 to 2013 in roles involving human intelligence recruitment and operations, told me that the delay was a key part of a long-term survival and recovery strategy.

"I believe that there are objective difficulties in finding the three bodies. But at the same time, Hamas is not too frustrated by this. It is not angry about it, and it does not make sounds of despair that it is having difficulty. This arranges things nicely for it," he assessed.

This, Arbel argued, is part of Hamas's wider agenda of "stretching out time to survive and rebuild."

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