'We have to finish it': Former Israel prime minister discusses Gaza war at Halifax security gathering - Action News
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'We have to finish it': Former Israel prime minister discusses Gaza war at Halifax security gathering

Ehud Barak, who led Israel from 1999 to 2001, says his country must continue its fight to destroy Hamas's military capabilities, amid a rising civilian death toll in Gaza.

Ehud Barak says his country must destroy Hamas's military capabilities

Two men wearing suits sit and speak at a conference.
Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak, left, speaks with PBS correspondent Nick Schifrin at the 2023 Halifax International Security Forum in Halifax on Saturday. (Kelly Clark/The Canadian Press)

Israel must continue waging war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip until the organization's military capacity is destroyed, one of the country's former prime ministers said Saturday, despite the mounting civilian death toll in the conflict that has drawn increased criticism from world leaders.

Ehud Barak's remarks came on the second day of the Halifax International Security Forum during an early morning "chat" with PBS correspondent Nick Schifrin.

"We have to finish it," the Israeli former general told the 15th annual running of the three-day conference, which has attracted about 300 delegates from around the world to discuss ways to promote democracy.

"We have to complete it. It's a compelling imperative. Israel's government cannot survive if it cannot live up to its basic commitment to its citizens [and] if Hamas can ... come back to power."

Barak's remarks came the day after a group of protesters chanting "free Palestine" gathered outside the hotel where the conference is being held.

The latest war in the Middle East was triggered on Oct. 7 when Hamas militants stormed into Israel, killing an estimated 1,200 people and taking some 240 others back into their stronghold in the Gaza Strip as hostages.

Israel immediately declared war and has launched daily retaliatory attacks.

Gaza authorities on Saturday raised its death toll since Oct. 7to more than 12,300, including 5,000 children. Authorities have recently estimated that another2,700 people have been reported missing.

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Taking stock of global insecuritySome of the worlds top foreign policy and security minds are in Halifax to talk about crises and conflict and theres no shortage of urgent topics. The House asks Comfort Ero, head of the International Crisis Group, how she makes sense of this time of polycrisis and how the world can make peace. Evgenia Kara-Murza, Russian democratic activist and wife of jailed Russian opposition figure Vladimir Kara-Murza, talks about her spouses struggle. And Taiwanese politician Vincent Chao explains his fight to stop the island from becoming the next Ukraine.

Barak, who was prime minister from 1999 to 2001, described himself to conference delegates as a fierce critic ofPrime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, likening some of his cabinet members to the U.S.-based, far-right group Proud Boys.

But the former military chief of staff said Israelis of all political stripes are united in their desire to complete the war and argued Israel follows rules of engagement that seek to minimize civilian deaths.

"For Israel, any target is searched, sometimes more than once, and a legal adviser and expert on international law is consulted to ensure everything is done, as far as possible, in a way to minimize the risk of killing people," said Barak.

"People (in Gaza) are warned from Day 1 that if they are in a place where there is any activities by Hamas, whether a munitions depot, command post, training site, launching pad, they should leave this place for this is a target and we are going to hit it."

"We are sorry for any life lost, but that's part of war."

Israeli campaign not moving region toward peace, critic says

Schifrin, however, said he personally witnessed the Israeli military in 2014 targeting Hamas leaders, even when they were surrounded by their families and neighbours. "The United States doesn't have that policy and wouldn't take that shot," he said.

During a panel after Barak's presentation, several participants said they understood Israel's distress over Oct. 7but said the logic of the Gaza war is flawed.

Nancy Okail, president of the U.S.-based Center for International Policy, said there "has been a complete absence of a serious political path for Palestinians to live with dignity and rights."

WATCH | The growing civilian death toll in Gaza:

More than 12,000 people have died in Gaza, Health Ministry says

11 months ago
Duration 3:17
As the number of people killed in Gaza surpasses 12,000, another Israeli hostage has died as well. But Israel continues to say there will be no ceasefire until all the hostages are released, despite increasing international pressure.

Mouaz Moustafa, director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force, said the creation of hundreds of thousands of refugees and civilian deaths doesn't further the cause of democracy, whether in Gaza or elsewhere.

"One out of 57 people in Gaza have been killed or injured since Oct. 7, and we have dozens of journalists who have been killed, food and water and other necessities have not been allowed in," said Moustafa.

"Such a campaign, where there are thousands and thousands more children being killed than Hamas fighters, is not something that makes Israel or the West safer," he said.

In an interview later in the day with several journalists, Barak said his hope is that the Palestinian Authority, based in the West Bank, would govern Gaza after the latest war comes to an end.

"Bring back the original, internationally recognized owner ... that might be the solution. Of course that's not the current [Israeli] government's position. I think they're wrong and I'm right," he said.

He also said that while the time "is not right" to pursue a two-state solution, creating a sovereign Palestinian state remains the ultimate pathway to peace. In 2000, he pursued that option during failed peace talks held at Camp David, with former president Bill Clinton attempting to mediate.

WATCH | How Hamas came to rule Gaza:

What is Hamas? The story of its origins and rule of Gaza

11 months ago
Duration 5:08
A spotlight was cast on the Islamist militant group Hamas after it unleashed a surprise attack in Israel Oct. 7, killing more than 1,200 people and taking about 240 hostages. How did the group come to be designated a terrorist organization and rule Gaza? CBC's Ashley Fraser explores its origins.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has repeatedly called on Israel to show "maximum restraint" to protect civilian life in Gaza, and has said, "the world is witnessing this. The killing of women and children, of babies."

Barak said he would prefer to hear Trudeau "following the tone of the first days" after the Oct. 7 Hamas incursion, when the focus was on condemning the attack and the taking of hostages.

"But we will send our fighters anyhow to destroy Hamas even if most of the leaders in the world say it's not the right thing. We have no other way to protect our people," he said.