The parallels were striking—and surely not coincidental.
Exactly 50 years and a day after being taken completely off guard by a coordinated military attack by its neighbors—Egypt and Syria—Israel was again caught by surprise.
Early on Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas militants invaded southern Israelby land, sea and air, and fired thousands of rockets deep into the country. Within hours, hundreds of Israelis were killed, hostages taken and war declared. Fierce Israeli reprisals have already taken the lives of hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza, and many more will surely be dead by the time this war is over.
Because war it is. After the Hamas attacks began and the Israeli death toll grew, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared the country is at war, just as it was 50 years ago.
And that is not where the parallels end.
Both wars began with surprise attacks on Jewish holy days. In 1973, it was Yom Kippur, a day of atonement for Jews. This time it was Simchat Torah, when Jews celebrate reading the Torah.
Hamas, the Palestinian militant group in control of the densely populated Gaza Strip that adjoins Israel, seemingly hopes to send the same message that Egypt and Syria delivered in October 1973: They will not accept the status quo, and Israel’s military might will not keep Israelis safe.
Palestinian militants infiltrated towns across the border from Gaza in an unprecedented assault. Map: The Conversation, CC-BY-ND Created with Datawrapper
The 1973 war proved to be a watershed moment not only in the Arab-Israeli conflict but also for the politics of Israel. Will this war be the same?
Caught Flat-Footed Both Times
Certainly, the sudden outbreak of war has again left Israelis deeply shocked, just as it did 50 years ago. This war, like the one in 1973, is already being framed as a colossal intelligence failure.
Although Israeli military intelligence had warned the government that the country’s enemies believed Israel vulnerable, the intelligence establishment did not expect Hamas to attack.
Rather, the intelligence assessment was that Hamas was most interested in governing the Gaza Strip and didn’t want to have
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