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Opinion

The sad streets of Sderot are deserted but the politicians never stop

Politics is officially on hold but the blame for the failures of October 7 will remain long after residents return

November 2, 2023 14:09
Deserted Sderot Credit Flash 90 (2)
Israeli bomb squad team inspect the scene of a rocket hit , fired by Hamas from Gaza, in the Southern city of Sderot on October 21, 2023. Photo by Gili Yaari/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** מלחמת חרבות ברזל מלחמה עזה חמס טילים שדרות דרום עוטף עזה פגיעה נפילה חבלן חבלני משטרה
4 min read

Time has stopped for nearly four weeks in Sderot. A city of 34,000 residents remains emptied of its people since it was evacuated in the days after the Simchat Torah massacre.

I’ve been visiting Sderot under fire for two decades now. Local residents were killed back in 2004 from Hamas Kassam rockets, even while Israel was still in the Gaza Strip before disengagement. But it has never been totally evacuated. Not even for a day, let alone weeks on end.

The cats and birds have taken over the deserted marketplace. The birdsong is almost deafening, drowning out the jet aircraft and buzz of surveillance drones, only punctuated by distant booms.

They are not of rockets landing in and around Sderot, though those are still coming through at a much lower frequency, but now most of the explosions are those of Israeli forces operating just a mile and a half away, in Gaza’s northern Beit Hanoun township, one of the first places the IDF entered when the ground offensive began last Shabbat evening.

With no one to talk to, you start seeing other things you haven’t noticed before. Like there’s a David Elazar Street, named after the IDF Chief of Staff who commanded the army during the Yom Kippur War, was forced to resign after the war when the Agranat commission of inquiry reported, and died heartbroken in 1976.

In Israel’s national historic memory, General Elazar is remembered more kindly, as the man who led the IDF out of that historic debacle. Israelis tend to blame Prime Minister Golda Meir and Defence Minister Moshe Dayan for that catastrophe. And all get streets in their name.

Who will have streets named after them in Sderot in another 50 years, when the city is full again of people, and new neighbourhoods have been built?

The current IDF Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General Herzi Halevi, has already taken responsibility publicly, as has commander of military intelligence Aharon Haliva, twice.

But the public are still with them, at least according to a survey by the Israel Democracy Institute (IDI) this week showing that about 50 per cent of Israelis trust the IDF commanders to lead this war more than Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Twenty per cent trust them equally and only a few per cent trust Netanyahu more than the generals.

The IDI survey had not even been conducted at 1.10am on Saturday when Netanyahu posted on X (formerly Twitter) his angry message “in contradiction to lies” in which he accused the chiefs of military intelligence and the internal intelligence agency Shin Bet of supplying him and the cabinet with erroneous assessments of Hamas’s intentions. Whether it’s his immediate political survival or his historic record, he’s fighting that battle while Israel is at war.