As I have outlined in the past -- this war will involve two steps. Step 1 is the complete elimination of Hamas as a political and military entity in Gaza. This is pretty straight-forward and Israel will not be bullied by the international community into stopping their offense until this is achieved.
Step 2, the post-war plan, is much more messy in regards to politics in Israel. The right-wing coalition led by Netanyahu is fractured and includes some extreme voices. A good portion of this political coalition supports evicting all the Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank to some other nation . Some cabinet ministers of the Israeli government has been
negotiating with Congo and other nations to take in these Palestinians. On top of this it appears
a large majority of Israelis now support the complete removal of Palestinians from Gaza -- which influences the politics.
Despite
trying to frame this proposed displacement as voluntary. We all know this "voluntary" is not true and is more akin to ethnic cleansing if it takes place.
In the mean time,
the Israeli President has been proclaiming that forced displacement of Palestinians is not the plan. While at the same time
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has been outlining a post war "four corner" plan for Gaza that has little international buy-in.
The bottom line is that Israel needs to put forward a single post war plan with a unified voice with no cabinet ministers pushing alternative plans. The post-war plan needs support of the international community in order to have any realistic chance of success.
Achieving a reasonable post war plan would have regional benefits for Israel. Certainly it won't stop Iran and its terrorist proxies from waging aggression against Israel. However it will bring the Sunni nations in the region back to the table to normalize relations -- including
Saudi Arabia which is actively proclaiming its ambition for a deal to normalize relations post-war. Many of these Sunni nations are also dealing with Iranian funded terrorism via proxies as well -- which would make Israel a useful ally from a regional perspective.