Yedioth Ahronoth: Israeli army faces unprecedented crisis in Gaza war

The Zionist newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth wrote: Over the past two weeks, discussions among senior Israeli military, security, and intelligence officials have taken place, yielding ambiguous results.
These Zionist officials concluded that the Israeli regime’s army has entered a war through which it cannot achieve one of its stated objectives, namely the release of hostages.
According to the report, they believe that, given the heavy cost of military dominance and presence in the Gaza Strip for several years, some leaders doubt the feasibility of achieving the war’s second goal, which is defeating Hamas.
The report states that Zionists genuinely fail to understand why the war has resumed, and even the army itself struggles to comprehend what it is doing and where this will lead. On the other hand, the families of the hostages believe that this operation poses a significant risk without real hope.
Another section of the report notes: The army is now in its most severe predicament, as it has been engaged in a war for a year and a half—the longest war in its history—and has so far failed to defeat Hamas. Even with its new leadership, the army is struggling to find a solution to occupy the Gaza Strip by any means possible.
Recently, British analyst and editor-in-chief of Middle East Eye, David Hearst, emphasized in an article that the Zionist regime will inevitably lose the Gaza war, and its efforts to eliminate Hamas from the Palestinian map are a carbon copy, and even a larger version, of the futile and failed U.S. military operation against Vietnamese revolutionaries.
In his article, the British writer stated: Two factors played a role in ending the Vietnam War and, with it, a century-long struggle to liberate that country from colonialism: the determination of the Vietnamese people to fight and a shift in American public opinion.
He added: These same two factors will lead Palestinians toward their homeland: the resolve of Palestinians to stay and defend their land to the death, and the rapidly shifting Western public opinion against Israel.
The British analyst noted: Observe closely—this trend was initially more prevalent among the ruling right-wing, but it is now fully evident among leftists as well. Labeling critics of the genocide project as “antisemitic” is futile. It’s too late.