By G. Jefferson Price III
Before this year, the world would be looking at the intensifying armed confrontation
between Israel and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip with a sense of deja vu all over again.
But this is 2012 and the political map of
the Middle East has changed dramatically in ways that make the Israel-Gaza
confrontation far more dangerous for every country in the region, especially
those that border Israel and Palestine.
Great danger also exists for the United States and Europe in the latest
confrontation.
But mostly, life’s more dangerous for
Israel, not because of the existential threat from Palestinian rockets, but
because Israeli leaders have consistently obstructed and resisted arrangements
that would have brought a dignified peace to the region. And while the leadership and much of Israel’s
population accepted and advanced these conditions that make life so intolerable
for Palestinians, Israelis have been basking in a pool of complacency that’s
quite astonishing given the differences that exist today compared to just two
years ago.
Hosni
Mubarak with whom Israel and the United States were so comfortable today no
longer runs Egypt. The new Egyptian ruler following Mubarak’s downfall is Mohamed
Morsi at the head of a regime directly tied to the Muslim Brotherhood, of which
Hamas in Gaza is a Palestinian branch. For more than 30 years since Egypt
signed a peace treaty with Israel, Israel has been able to act with impunity against
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza and the Lebanese to the north. That no
longer holds true. The Egyptians are trying to help negotiate a ceasefire
between Israel and Hamas, but the heart of the new Egyptian regime is with
Hamas.
Lebanon is still under the thumb of
Hezbollah, the Shi’ite Islamic fundamentalists who share Hamas’s stated ambition
to eliminate the Jewish State and which has its own arsenal of rockets pointed
at Israel.
Next to Lebanon along Israel’s northern
border, there is Syria itself, where Bashar Assad, like his equally tyrannical
father, Hafez scrupulously maintained a ceasefire with Israel since the end of
the 1973 war. But the Assad regime will not survive the bloody chaos that’s
already left more than 35,000 dead in Syria. And no one can say for certain who
and what will be running Syria after Assad’s inevitable downfall. It might well be a Sunni-dominated regime
with strong ties to such states as Saudi Arabia and the Arab Gulf countries and
other big bankrollers of jihadist movements?
Then there
is Jordan, the Hashemite kingdom that borders Israel and the Palestinian
territories, the only other Arab country that has a peace treaty with Israel.
King Abdullah II is not a popular monarch.
Demonstrations against the government have been underway for weeks in
that country that’s produced a couple of Al Qaeda’s most vicious leaders and
where the Muslim Brotherhood has a large following.
In past confrontations between Israel and the
Palestinians, or between Israel and the Lebanese, none of these scenarios
existed. But Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s government seems to be
acting as if nothing has changed.
No one would challenge Mr. Netanyahu’s
declaration that Israel has a right and a duty to protect itself and its citizens
from the rocket attacks launched from Gaza that have already killed three
Israelis and wounded many more.
However, there is good reason to question
why the Israeli security branch decided that last Wednesday was a good time to
assassinate Ahmed al Jabari, the Hamas military leader in Gaza. The latest escalation in Gaza launches came
in retaliation for the assassination. But a prominent Israeli actively involved
in back channel negotiations with the Hamas leadership through Egyptian
intermediaries has reported that the very day Jabari he was assassinated he was
looking over an innovative draft proposal for an enduring ceasefire between
Hamas and Israel.
“This draft was agreed upon by me and Hamas’s
deputy foreign minister . . . when we met last week in Egypt,” the “unofficial”
Israeli negotiator Gershon Baskin wrote in an article in the New York Times
last week. “Mr. Jabari was . . . prepared to agree to a long-term cease-fire.”
Israel had plenty of reason to assassinate Jabari,
who was the commander in charge of bringing weapons into Gaza and when to use
them. But the timing of his assassination seems to have been counterproductive,
to say the least.
A
cynical explanation for the timing would be that Israel has an election coming
in January and Mr. Netanyahu needs to burnish his credentials as the
no-nonsense, hardliner who is willing to bomb Gaza, targeting the Hamas
leadership, no matter how many innocent lives are lost in the process.
Election would be a good time for a discussion
in Israel on the impact of Israel’s long-standing policies in the West Bank,
Gaza and Lebanon in the emergence of an increasingly radical and Islamic
fundamentalist enemy. It’s unlikely, though. Discussions like that don’t happen
while bombs and rockets are falling.
But has it occurred to Mr. Netanyahu that
this is exactly what Hamas wants? One could assert that Hamas’s latest round of
rocket attacks against Israel were “suicidal.” To which the most aggressive in
Hamas might reply, “Correct. Suicide is what we do.” And this time Egypt and
other regional states, including U.S. NATO ally Turkey are out there supporting
Hamas in ways that would have been inconceivable less than two years ago.
After Gaza is leveled this time, possibly
re-occupied, the Palestinian population – more than 1.7 million people, trapped
in one of the world’s most densely populated pieces of real estate – will still
be there, more embittered, more enraged, more radicalized, and more universally
supported. It will be difficult for Hamas’s rival in the West Bank, Mahmoud
Abbas’s Palestinian Authority, to keep resisting demands for a return to “armed
struggle,” aroused by the day-to-day humiliation and indignity heaped upon
Palestinians by Israeli policies.
Not
for their sake, but for its own sake, Israel, with the help of it’s allies in
Washington and the capitals of Europe, has to develop an alternative way to
peaceful survival.
The moderate Jewish-American group J
Street said as much in a statement last week: “military
force alone is inadequate as a response to the broader strategic challenge
Israel faces. Only a political resolution to the century-old conflict with the
Palestinians resulting in two states living side by side can end the conflict.
Or, as Gideon Levy, a
prominent Israeli journalist put it in an article in the Israeli mass
circulation daily Ha’aretz: “Israel arrived at the current
round of this endless cycle of bloodshed at yet another peak of denial of the
existence of the Palestinian people. . . . The time has come for diplomacy and
for ending the occupation, the time for bombing is over.”
G. Jefferson
Price III was foreign editor of The (Baltimore) Sun from 1991 to 2001 and
Middle East correspondent for the newspaper in the 1970s and 1980s.
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