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Written by MJ Rosenberg MJ Rosenberg
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Category: News News
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Published: 20 June 2008 20 June 2008
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Last Updated: 20 June 2008 20 June 2008
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Created: 20 June 2008 20 June 2008
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Now I know some readers are already thinking: “Better to fight them now. They will use the cease-fire to get ready for war.”
No doubt that is true. Both sides will use the intermission to enhance
their combat capacity. There probably has never been a cease-fire in
history during which the combatants did not work to enhance their
ability to fight. Of course, that is what Hamas and the Israelis are
doing anyway. Cease-fire or no cease-fire, neither side is turning its
swords into plowshares.
Nonetheless, this cease-fire is a very good thing. A lot of
peoples’ kids are being spared. A celebration, albeit a limited one, is
in order and, in fact, media reports from the region today tell of
children again playing freely in Sderot’s playgrounds and Gazans
relaxing on the beach. Let’s focus on that rather than bemoaning the
lost opportunity to “take them out, once and for all.”
There is no “once and for all.”
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not going to be resolved by way of
some decisive military action. Palestinian extremists are not going to
achieve their goal of dismantling Israel (without committing national
suicide in the process) and Israeli extremists are not going to achieve
their goal of Greater Israel (again, not without national suicide). The
invasion and re-occupation of Gaza, for which some people are so
eager, would not solve anything. If re-occupying Gaza could provide
security for southern Israel, the original occupation would still be in
effect.
The Israeli novelist, AB Yehoshua, wrote in Yedioth Achronoth Thursday
that the whole idea of “victory,” one side beating the other, does not
apply in this case. “It is important to remember one principle in the
100-year war with the Palestinians. The Israelis and the Palestinians
are neighbors -- people who will live in proximity to each other
forever. Therefore, the military considerations in this war are not
similar to those in force between distant countries that are fighting
each other. The residue of blood, both our and theirs, remains in the
region, trickling into the memory and infrastructure of the two
peoples. Therefore, an immediate cessation of the bloodshed is more
vital than the fantasy of complete ‘victory’ in the long term.”
Fortunately, the vast majority of Israelis and Palestinians understand
that neither side is going to be beaten into submission. (This
morning’s polls show that the Israeli public support the cease-fire).
They may even understand that Israeli retaliation for Hamas attacks on
southern Israel will terminate when the Hamas attacks do. And that
Palestinian resistance to occupation will end when the occupation does.
A cease-fire is a start.
Israel should do everything it can to make it last. That means living
up to the promises it has made to the United States and to President
Abbas about improving conditions for the Palestinians. That means
finally adhering to a settlements freeze in the West Bank and in East
Jerusalem. Every new or “thickened” settlement is a gift to Palestinian
extremists who point to them as evidence that Israel will never permit
establishment of a Palestinian state.
It means removing redundant and unnecessary checkpoints within the
West Bank. Most checkpoints are not on the border but deep inside the
West Bank. They serve no purpose except to make it difficult, or
impossible, for Palestinians to move between their homes and jobs,
homes and hospitals, homes and school.
It means demolishing those ubiquitous unmanned earthen mounds,
which are nothing but traffic bumps to prevent the movement of innocent
civilian traffic.
It means allowing the Palestinian Authority to have the equipment it
needs to defend itself against extremists. Neither Israeli nor
Palestinian interests are served by a weak Mahmoud Abbas. (It is
getting tiresome to hear Israelis complain that Abbas is weak when they
are denying him the wherewithal to be strong).
In Gaza, it means easing the humanitarian crisis, allowing ailing
Palestinians access to medical care and those separated from family
members in the West Bank freedom to travel.
As for Hamas, it means maintaining the cease-fire, preventing others
from breaking it, and releasing Corporal Gilad Shalit. In short, ending
the violence.
That is no small thing. As Yehoshua writes, the one demand that
supersedes all others is an end to bloodshed. Nothing else comes close.
He dismisses the idea that Hamas’ failure to recognize Israel is
paramount, “as if all the cease-fires we have made in the past 60
years, both with Arab countries and with the PLO in Lebanon, were made
on the basis of ‘recognition of Israel’ and not on the basis of…a
mutual and unconditional halt to bloodshed….” For Yehoshua, the
cease-fire is a very big deal.
It won’t take any more than the above steps to secure it and to
transform it into something more. Not one of the steps I’ve outlined
costs either side anything -- except the satisfaction of making the
other side miserable. Although the Israelis have to implement more
steps than the Palestinians, they also have infinitely more power. It
is the Israelis, not the Palestinians, who hold almost to all the
cards. It is time to play them.
“Concessions” should not be made only in response to terror. Doing so
only confirms the view held by Palestinian radicals that “the only
language Israelis understand is violence.” This whole Gaza debacle
(including the election of Hamas and its seizure of Gaza) would have
been prevented if Israel had negotiated its withdrawal from that
territory with the Palestinians, rather than refusing to talk and
simply leaving. Ever since Oslo in 1993 the Israelis have refused to
implement a settlements freeze and have allowed settlers to terrorize
the local population, especially in Hebron. It has to stop.
One thing is certain. The cease-fire will not last if both sides simply
sit back and wait, taking no pro-active actions to preserve and deepen
it.
At this point, there is no way of knowing what will happen next. In
this arena, it is always safe to be pessimistic -- safe but
unproductive. There is an opening here. Seizing it with both hands is
infinitely less risky than letting the moment pass.
MJ Rosenberg is the Director of Israel Policy Forum's Washington Policy Center