MIFTAH
Saturday, 6 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

At the end of the month, inshallah, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and the head of Hamas' political desk, Khaled Meshal, will launch a temporary Palestinian unity government. Until that time, Egypt will continue to assist the two in creating a list of ministers unsullied by any connections with Hamas, to serve in that temporary government. Meshal will announce that Hamas has agreed to allow Abbas to serve as acting head of government until the temporary government expires, and new elections are held for the presidency and parliament.

Meshal won't utter a single word about the most important part of the accord: Hamas has silently acquiesced to the fact that the new government will continue cooperating with Israel on security. In this way, it has cleared the path for recognition of the PA's authority over the occupied territory by the United States and other countries that contribute financially to the new government.

The return of Gaza to the jurisdiction of the Palestinian Authority paves the way to an officially recognized Palestinian state. (In the wake of the Palestinians' request for admittance to the UN last September, the Security Council decided that the authority did not meet the condition of having control of all its territory. ) International recognition of a unity government and that government's active control of cooperative security arrangements in Gaza will force Israel to change the policies it put in force in June 2010, which rested on the argument that "Hamas controls the Gaza Strip, and has turned it into hostile territory used for the planning and execution of attacks against the State of Israel and its citizens."

Hamas rule in Gaza, and its repudiation of the security arrangements with Israel, released the Israeli government from its commitment to an important clause in the Oslo Accords. The clause stated explicitly that the West Bank and Gaza are one entity that may not be broken down into smaller units. The period of rocket fire on southern Israel offered an excuse to separate Gaza, not only from Israel and the rest of the world, but also from the West Bank.

This week marks five years since the Israeli cabinet decided to institute a sweeping ban of products from Gaza in the West Bank. According to a recent report by the Israeli NGO Gisha (access in Hebrew ), which focuses on freedom of movement, since that time, only one shipment, consisting of snack bars, has made its way from Gaza into the West Bank. This policy, according to Gisha executive director Sari Bashi, delivers a fatal blow to the unity of Palestinian territory - a vital element in an agreement between the two countries, and to Gaza's financial condition.

The difficulty of movement between Gaza and the West Bank is also responsible for cutting off families, as well as academic and cultural relations that connect the two Palestinian areas. The number of Palestinians entering the West Bank and Israel is less than one percent of what it was before September 2000, when the second intifada began. Such movement is officially limited to "exceptional humanitarian cases." Gazans may go to the West Bank only to visit immediate relatives suffering from severe illnesses. They may not care for a grandchild or a dying grandmother. Christians may enter Israel or the West Bank for religious rituals during holidays. Muslims - no. Soccer players - yes. Students - no.

Closure impact still felt

Today, the amount of goods entering Gaza through checkpoints under Israeli control stands at 40 percent of the amount of goods that went in before the Gaza blockade went into effect. Although the Israeli cabinet decided to lift the civilian closure in 2010, 83 percent of Gaza factories are either shut down, or work at half their capacity. (The level of unemployment is 30 percent, in contrast to 15.5 percent before the start of the second intifada in September 2000. ) Public employees account for 39 percent of all those employed, compared to 16.7 percent of the workforce in the West Bank. More than 70 percent of the population in Gaza receives humanitarian aid.

Although Benjamin Netanyahu opposed the disengagement plan (of Jews from Gaza ) when he was a member of Ariel Sharon's government, as prime minister he has decided on the disengagement of Palestinian Gaza from Israel and the West Bank. The split between Fatah and Hamas helped him keep the issue of the siege off the international agenda. To him, the unity agreement being worked out in Cairo will constitute more proof that you can't trust the Arabs.

Two states for two parties

While the two-state solution has receded from the Israeli political agenda, it has penetrated the current round of American congressional elections. The Jewish peace organization J Street has announced that it intends to contribute $1.5 million to 60 Democratic candidates who support the two-state formula adopted by Prime Minister Netanyahu three years ago. It is a modest sum in comparison with the tens of millions that AIPAC is pouring into the coffers of candidates who do not dare utter a bad word about the settlements. But J Street has not given up on its efforts to challenge the notion that only candidates with hawkish views on Israeli policy and security are worthy of the title "pro-Israel." And so for example, J Street is supporting Democrat Tammy Duckworth in the Illinois eighth congressional district. She is running against Republican Joe Walsh, who recently proposed in the Washington Times that Palestinians who aspire to establish an independent country move to Jordan.

Jewish Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, the head of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, received $100,00 from J Street. In the middle of the 1990s, Feinstein was among the only members of Congress to reject pressure by AIPAC, spurred on by the Likud Party, to vote for a law that would require the American embassy in Israel to move from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. She refused to cooperate with the populist initiative that arose during a sensitive time in the peace process. The name of her political aide at the time? Dan Shapiro, today the U.S. ambassador in Tel Aviv.

 
 
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