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Written by Bitterlemons.org Bitterlemons.org
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Category: News News
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Published: 01 April 2008 01 April 2008
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Last Updated: 01 April 2008 01 April 2008
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Created: 01 April 2008 01 April 2008
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A PALESTINIAN VIEW
There is a clear alternative
by Ghassan Khatib
Since the violent Hamas takeover of Gaza some nine months ago, the US,
Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all seemed to follow roughly
the same strategy to reverse both Hamas' control over Gaza and the
parliamentary election results of two years ago. This strategy has
simultaneously sought to weaken Hamas and empower the Palestinian
"peace camp" led by Fateh and President Mahmoud Abbas.
The strategy has been articulated in different statements and speeches
by US President George W. Bush, advocated verbally by Israel and
pursued by both the US and Israel as well as the PA. It comprises
several components. Overall, the strategy seeks to make the "West Bank
model" more attractive to Palestinians than the "Gaza model". The idea
is to do this by imposing political and economic sanctions on Hamas in
Gaza and at the same time providing increased economic aid to the
Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and, possibly, through the PA to
Gaza. Finally, the strategy is to re-launch a political process of the
kind that would empower Abbas politically, partly by reducing Israeli
restrictions in the West Bank to improve the conditions for
Palestinians there.
Hand-in-hand with the strategy came a proposal by Abbas that early
elections should be held before national unity and order could be
restored. This, of course, was assuming that the above strategy would
work to shift public opinion and ensure victory for the opponents of
Hamas.
Nine months on the strategy needs to be revised, with all indications
showing that it is failing. Hamas has been able to survive not only by
depending on the use of force, but also because it has pursued policies
and practices that have earned the movement public support.
For a start, the sanctions on Gaza were just that. Rather than target
Hamas, they targeted all Gazans, thus forging solidarity between the
people and the movement. In addition, the sanctions were easily
fingered by Hamas as the primary cause of Gazan misery. Finally, when
the siege became too draconian, Hamas masterfully orchestrated the
breach of the Egyptian border, something that afforded the movement
immense public goodwill.
At the same time, Israel consciously stymied any success of the "West
Bank-model", and the occupation has instead embedded itself deeper
there. The failure of the Annapolis process to achieve any tangible
results, as well as the continuation of Israeli measures to consolidate
the occupation of the West Bank by expanding settlements, restricting
movement and fragmenting the territory, have in fact almost reversed
the stated aims of the above strategy. Public opinion polls show that
the long-term trend of increased public support for Hamas and decline
in support for Fateh and the peace camp continues.
The strategy therefore needs to be revised from its fundamentals. The
alternative is to go back to the Mecca model and pursue an inclusive,
rather than exclusionist, strategy. Had the Mecca agreement been
pursued properly, this inclusive strategy could have maintained
Palestinian unity and kept at least the relatively moderate elements in
Hamas closer to the PA and the peace camp.
More importantly, an inclusive strategy would have continued the trend
of moderation in the political thinking and positions of Hamas that was
already evident. Witness the difference in the platform of the unity
government and that of the Hamas government that preceded it. The unity
government endorsed the Arab peace initiative and committed the
government to already signed agreements. There is little doubt that the
survival of the unity government would have resulted in a much
healthier situation than the present one.
In analyzing why the relevant parties instead chose to pursue a
self-defeating strategy, the motives of the most important party,
Israel, must be investigated. Perhaps the key to understanding what
went wrong is to realize that Israel in fact has no interest in
empowering Mahmoud Abbas or the Palestinian peace camp. Nor has Israel
any interest in encouraging an effort that would reverse the political
and geographical split that now exists between the West Bank and Gaza.
This in mind, the international community and the Palestinian Authority
need to devise a strategy independent of Israel, one that seeks to
encourage, or at least not oppose, a Palestinian-Palestinian dialogue.
Such a dialogue should reduce the negative domestic effects of the
current split and go some way toward improving the internal political
situation. That, in turn, is a prerequisite for any progress in the
peace process.- Published 31/3/2008 © bitterlemons.org
Ghassan Khatib is coeditor of the bitterlemons.org family of internet
publications. He is vice-president of Birzeit University and a former
Palestinian Authority minister of planning. He holds a PhD in Middle
East politics from the University of Durham.
AN ISRAELI VIEW
The alternatives are grim
by Yossi Alpher
Hamas appears to have survived the boycott imposed by the Quartet,
Israel and some Arab states, at least to the extent of generating
widespread interest in a reassessment of the efficacy of the boycott
policy. The US State Department website recently posted a suggestion
that American diplomats reexamine whether engaging Hamas is good or bad
for the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. PLO and Hamas
representatives met in Yemen to discuss the possibility of
reconstituting a Palestinian unity government (the talks proved
abortive). And a growing Israeli lobby composed of figures from the
left and the right is advocating an attempt by Israel to talk to Hamas.
That the boycott has failed is painfully obvious. The economic
depravation of Gaza has not brought Hamas to its knees. Hamas is more
popular than ever, not only in Gaza but in the West Bank as well.
There, the other half of the western/Israeli strategy--bringing
prosperity and stability to the population in order that the contrast
between the two geographic parts of Palestine persuade the population
to support the Abbas/Fayyad leadership and reject Hamas--has also
failed. Palestinians in the West Bank enjoy painfully little prosperity
and stability, and where they do the experience has not turned them
against Hamas or made them enthusiastic supporters of President Mahmoud
Abbas and the peace process he is identified with.
By the by, these developments warrant two insights concerning the
conflict. First, the failure of the strategy of favoring the West Bank
over Gaza to make the peace process attractive is but the latest in a
40-year series of abortive Israeli carrot and stick policies that
mistakenly assumed it was possible to significantly influence
Palestinian political behavior through economic means. You'd think we'd
have learned.
Secondly, Palestinian opinion polls, and particularly the latest
Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research poll with its
striking findings regarding rising support for Hamas and its leaders as
opposed to Fateh and Abbas, have become a potent instrument for
influencing policy. This is not always a good thing: opinion polls,
assuming they are accurate, are a snapshot reflecting the public's
reactions to specific events but not necessarily its inclination to
respond to inspired leadership or breakthrough developments or, for
that matter, the best policy options.
Were Abbas and PM Ehud Olmert to produce a dramatic new framework peace
agreement tomorrow, would this enable Abbas to rally Palestinian public
opinion and win the day over Hamas? Probably not--after all, Hamas is
not likely to voluntarily give up power and might not permit free
elections in Gaza if the objective is to vote it out of power. Yet
precisely such a development is the desired corollary or end-product of
the Quartet/Israeli/Abbas strategy and in this sense the strategy
appears to have been flawed from the outset in its understanding of
Hamas and that movement's aims. But a new peace agreement has not
(yet?) been unveiled, hence we cannot unequivocally deem this approach
a total failure. (In Israel, incidentally, the public would probably
reject an Olmert-Abbas peace "breakthrough" at the polls; but that is
another matter touching largely on Olmert's perceived shortcomings as a
leader.)
Yet even without the test of a peace breakthrough end-product or
payoff, the strategy appears to be coming apart at the seams. Broad
international, Israeli and Palestinian concern over the apparent
failure of the current strategy appears to be growing. Hamas in Gaza
has not been discredited; Abbas' leadership has failed yet again;
Israeli outposts and checkpoints have combined with Fateh corruption,
Fayyad government security lacunae and American mismanagement to give
the peace process a bad name. The latest Israeli security concessions
in the West Bank are not likely to make a difference. Hamas, with
Syrian and Iranian backing, can be counted on to sabotage progress.
It is indeed time to look seriously at alternatives. We need a new
strategy, but the prospects are grim. Are Israel's best options
military or diplomatic? Do they lie in Damascus or Gaza City?
Certainly, we should beware of dramatic Israeli policy changes that
further weaken Abbas, as long as there is any chance at all of a peace
breakthrough. - Published 31/3/2008 © bitterlemons.org
Yossi Alpher is coeditor of the bitterlemons family of internet
publications. He is former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies at Tel Aviv University and a former special adviser to PM Ehud
Barak.
A PALESTINIAN VIEW
A fundamental misconception
by Safwat Kahlout
Ever since Hamas overwhelmingly won parliamentary elections in 2006,
the international community has been trying to reverse a result that
neither it nor Hamas expected.
At first the international community, led by the US, tried to include
Hamas in its designs for the region by offering it three conditions to
enter the regional order. Once those were rejected, Washington instead
opted to isolate Hamas and ignore the elections.
Israel, happy to play along with this strategy, was given a free hand
to escalate at will and tighten its closure on Gaza to undermine the
already fragile economy there in an effort to bring Gazans into the
streets against Hamas.
The strategy had some initial success. Many voted for Hamas in the
first place in order to punish Fateh for the corruption of preceding
years. Once sanctions hit, people were heard to lament, "better to be
led by the corrupt if they put bread on the table". But the fundamental
perception remained the same: Hamas were clean and Fateh corrupt, and
it is this fundamental perception that has lingered.
After Hamas' takeover of the Gaza Strip in June of last year, the
international community adopted a modified version of its original
strategy. With the Palestinian people having divided themselves into
two, the international community decided it would try to strengthen the
West Bank under President Mahmoud Abbas by shoveling money at the
Palestinian Authority there, while continuing to isolate the Hamas-led
Gaza Strip.
But after two years, the attempt to undermine Hamas' popularity has
failed. Opinion polls, on the contrary, show an increase in support for
the movement. There are several factors at play here.
First, while economic sanctions have hit hard, Palestinians have never
had much to lose. Indeed, an argument can easily be made that
Palestinians hold their dignity much dearer than their limited wealth.
Hamas thus has become the symbol of the struggle for Palestinian pride.
Second, the Israeli escalation against Gaza, which was countered by the
Palestinian resistance in general and Hamas' Izzedin al-Qassam brigades
in particular, left the public with the clear perception that it is
Hamas that is willing to fight and die for the Palestinian people. This
perception is only strengthened when the sons of Hamas leaders are
killed on the frontlines.
Third, the choice by Abbas to pursue negotiations as the only option to
regain Palestinian rights, after 15 fruitless years of the PLO doing
exactly that, has only presented Israel with more time to create more
"facts on the ground". By refusing to grant Abbas even the smallest
achievement to show for his efforts, the Israelis have convinced
Palestinians that Abbas is weak and that Hamas is right when it says
that Israel is not serious about peace and negotiations are thus a
waste of time.
Fourth, with international funding to the Palestinian Authority at an
all-time high, people are looking to increased transparency to see
where that money goes. In Gaza, people are asking why none of that
money is coming to them, since the PA is supposed to be for all its
people. Furthermore, the international community does not seem to
understand what should be obvious to any public relations analyst: that
anyone vocally supported by Israel and the US is treated with the
utmost suspicion by Palestinians. The reverse is also true, thus
offering Hamas another source of support.
Finally, the internal split in Fateh is further bolstering Hamas. For
as long as Fateh, or anyone else for that matter, does not present a
clear and viable alternative to Hamas, its perceived fiscal probity and
organizational unity, Hamas will continue to flourish in opinion polls.
Fateh did not seize on its defeat in parliamentary elections to
re-evaluate and restructure itself, while Hamas has only grown more
united in the face of adversity.
The US-inspired strategy to undermine Hamas has thus failed. The
international community would do well to reconsider its underlying
assumption that economic sanctions will do anything to move the
Palestinian people from its fundamentally principled support for
Hamas.-Published 31/3/2008 © bitterlemons.org
Safwat Kahlout is a Gaza-based journalist.
AN ISRAELI VIEW
Israel's tough choice
by Nimrod Novik
For several decades now, Israeli policy toward the Palestinians has
been all too frequently governed by false assumptions. These include
the presumption to "produce" an alternative Palestinian leadership that
is more amenable to Israeli preferences and an equally condescending
claim to "reeducate" Palestinians to alternative thinking.
All such attempts have failed. They began with the promotion of the
village leagues as an alternative to the PLO in the 1970s and efforts
to create an "authentic local leadership" for the same purpose in the
'80s. They continued with the declared intention of "strengthening Abu
Mazen" that mostly left him empty handed when we failed to follow up,
or portrayed him as a collaborator when we did act but sought public
credit for it. From the patronizing "we shall enshrine in their
consciousness" of the early 2000s to the recent equally delusional
attempt to "undo the Hamas electoral victory via Mohammad Dahlan", all
ended in failure.
The common bottom line has been a resounding reiteration that we
Israelis are very poor manipulators of intra-Palestinian politics.
With such a record it is no wonder that our success in cutting Hamas
off from all international sources of political and financial support
enhanced the movement's dependence on Iran. Similarly, our resolve to
send the Hamas djinn back into the bottle by siege and by force served
to strengthen the movement's hold on Gaza and seems to have increased
its popularity in the West Bank. Concurrently, the Israeli-American
strategy of choking Hamas in Gaza while demonstrating that moderation
in the West Bank is rewarded remains at best an empty slogan.
Still, absent a change in attitude, the worst is yet to come. When the
Fateh way did not work, Hamas was elected; but the next step will not
be via the ballot box. If Hamas fails, the alternative may not be "back
to moderation" but more likely further radicalization, from an
Islamic-nationalist movement to a "jihadi-globalist" one. Splinter
groups first, followed by more substantial popular sentiment, will
slide in the direction of al-Qaeda-like aspirations and conduct. To
avoid a split, Hamas may opt to capture that niche and become its own
more extreme alternative. At that point there will indeed be no common
ground between them and us.
Even though this process has already begun, and although our policy of
castrating the more pragmatic forces in Hamas serves to accelerate it,
the trend may yet be reversed.
For that to happen, we need to adopt a less presumptuous approach on
more then one front. First, we need to concede our inability to select
the Palestinian leadership and adjust our policy accordingly. A strong,
peace-oriented leadership makes the pursuit of a permanent status
agreement worthwhile, indeed a must. But in the absence of such
leadership, lesser objectives should be sought.
Second, we need to recognize that while President Mahmoud Abbas is
among the most sincere, consistent, persistent and courageous advocates
of peace, insofar as he represents only half his people he is not a
potent interlocutor. Representing a broad consensus--he could be. Yet
for him to represent a broad consensus, Palestinian national
reconciliation is called for. And for that to happen, Israel and the
United States need to free Abbas of the threat to boycott him and his
government once he reengages Hamas.
Representing a Hamas-Fateh national unity government, Abbas'
negotiating platform may not be the same. The goal of a permanent
status agreement will probably have to be replaced with yet another
interim agreement. This third adjustment involves a decision to shift
the focus away from the Annapolis process. While it is quite obvious
that this process will not produce a permanent status agreement before
the end of the George W. Bush presidency, it may yield a last minute
declaration of principles, produced by next autumn by Abbas and PM Ehud
Olmert or by winter as American bridging ideas. Forgoing these possible
benchmarks is no minor decision, given their potential long-term
relevance to future efforts and short term effect in serving as
Olmert's platform for early elections and in changing Abbas' intention
not to run for another term.
Obviously, the most difficult adjustment of all entails recognition
that "undoing Hamas" is not an option and must give way to engaging it,
however indirectly. Once a new Palestinian national unity government is
formed, Israel can choose to engage it on day-to-day matters while
confining political negotiations to those who qualify: Abbas and the
PLO.
Israel's tough choice seems somewhat less ominous when the range of
alternatives for dealing with Hamas is spelled out. A policy of
contained but continuing violence is not sustainable. Even if the
Israeli political system (and moral code) could live with it, it will
not take long for things to get out of hand and for escalation to
ensue. Indeed, even if all else were to remain equal--which is never
the case--basing a national strategy on our ability to restrict the
range of rockets from Gaza is unrealistic and irresponsible.
Fortunately, the option of a major military operation in Gaza "to undo
Hamas once and for all" or at least "to send a decisive message
regarding the price of misbehavior" is dreaded. This is not only
because of the inevitable heavy casualties on both sides, but also in
view of the absence of an exit strategy that improves the reality on
the ground as well as the justified concern that initial international
restraint or even support among all those hostile to Hamas will give
way to pressure to