Strife in Jerusalem: Fears of popular revolts bring Israel and Arabs together
Source: Maan News
By James M. Dorsey
A web of formal and informal Israeli-Arab relations and
common fears of renewed popular uprisings that could threaten regimes and benefit
Islamist groups like the Muslim Brotherhood facilitated Israel’s backing down in
the crisis over Jerusalem’s Temple Mount or Haram al Sharif, home to Islam’s
third most holy shrine, the Al Aqsa mosque.
Protests in recent weeks that forced Israel to lift
restrictions on access and dismantle security arrangements installed on a site
that evokes deep-seated emotions among Muslims and Jews alike had all the
makings of a popular revolt and could yet prove to be a catalyst in approaches
to Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation of lands captured half a
century ago during the 1967 Middle East war. The security equipment was initially
installed after two
Palestinians with Israeli nationality shot dead two Israeli policemen in
the compound.
The spontaneous protests that erupted independent of
established political forces such as the Palestinian Authority (PA) headed by
President Mahmoud Abbas; Hamas, the Islamist faction that controls the Gaza
Strip, and other Palestinian political factions, empowered Palestinian Jerusalemites
who live in a part of the city that has been annexed by Israel but feel that
they are routinely discriminated against. The dismantling of the security
equipment and lifting of restrictions on access constituted a rare instance in
which Israel bowed to Palestinian pressure.
"We Palestinians have proved, not only to Israel, but
to the whole world, that we Palestinians have promising potential that can
never be broken," said Palestinian
activist Ali Jiddah.
“We are on the threshold of a big shift. What is going on
today is not random or transient. It could be the beginning of a third intifada
that is different from the others. What is unique about this is that it’s not
individual actions, but a popular movement capable of attracting huge numbers
of people. This popular momentum could recharge the Palestinian people. It may
take time but we are on the way. It will override the PA. They don't even know
it exists. This will bring about a change in leadership,” added former
Palestinian information minister-turned activist Mustafa Barghouti.
The sense of empowerment was evident two days after the
Israeli backdown when protests
erupted in the Jaffa section of Tel Aviv after police shot dead a
Palestinian during a shootout with suspected criminals. 'The policemen have no
right to shoot at people. This time we will not keep quiet,' said a Jaffa resident.
The notion of an empowered and angry public raised not only
the spectre of a possible Palestinian uprising, the third in three decades, but
a potential return of street protests elsewhere in the Middle East like those
that in 2011 toppled the leaders of Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Yemen.
The Jerusalem protests erupted at a moment that Saudi Arabia
and the UAE have gone to extremes to roll back the 2011 achievements and ensure
that the Middle East and North Africa does not witness a repeat. Saudi
King Salman, the custodian of Islam’s two most holy cities, Mecca and
Medina, in a statement by his royal court, claimed credit for resolving the Al
Aqsa crisis through his contacts with world leaders.
The Jerusalem protests came on the back of
widespread anti-government demonstrations in northern Morocco that have
mushroomed since May and more recently expressed an anti-monarchy sentiment.
The Moroccan protests, much like the 2011 revolt in Tunisia that forced
President out of office, were sparked by the death of a fish vendor in the
Riffian city of al Hoceima, who was killed by
a trash compactor as he attempted to recover fish confiscated by authorities.
King Mohammed VI of Morocco, in a bid to end the unrest, this
weekend pardoned
more than a thousand people who were under arrest for taking part in the protests.
Two incidents, the sentencing of a scion of a key Jordanian
tribe to life in prison for killing three Americans at a Jordanian air base and
the extradition to Israel of an Israeli security officer who killed two
Jordanians to fend off an attack, threaten to take Jordan to the brink. Outrage
over the government’s handling of the incidents have called into question a
social contract in which Jordanians in the wake of protests in 2011 dropped
demands for political reform and accepted austerity in exchange for stability.
“This has become an issue of dignity. There is a complete
lack of trust and resentment toward this government by the people. We are
afraid of where we go from this point,” said Jordanian member
of parliament Saddah Habashneh.
Much more than the Moroccan protests and Jordanian anger,
resistance to Israeli actions surrounding the Al Aqsa Mosque had the potential
of forcing the hand of Arab autocrats in a post-2011 era in which Arabic public
opinion has begun to count. Deep-seated divisions in the Arab world coupled
with draconian anti-protest laws may explain the absence of demonstrations in
the Middle East and North Africa in support of the Palestinians.
Nonetheless, if Palestinians were to capitalize on their Al
Aqsa success to confront Israeli occupation and discrimination, it could spark
public dissent elsewhere in the region as well as the wider Muslim world that
could turn against local leaders. Continued Palestinian protests, moreover, could
complicate cooperation between Israel and conservative Arab states in countering
Iranian influence in the Middle East as well as an attempt to return
to Palestine a UAE-backed Palestinian leader, who has good relations with
key figures in the United States and Israel.
Arab rulers have so far been helped not only by the absence
of solidarity protests in Arab capitals, but also by indications that Arab
public opinion may be divided because of the Gulf crisis over attitudes towards
the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas, both of which have close ties to Qatar. In
one instance, a caller
told the London-based Arabic-language Al-Hiwar television network: “I’m
opposed to an Al-Aqsa victory, because an Al-Aqsa victory is a victory for
Hamas and Qatar!”
Ahmed
Samah al-Idarusi, a spokesman for the Popular Committee for the Defense of
Sinai, a group formed by the Egyptian region’s tribal leaders, complained that “we
now encounter Egyptian diplomatic and cultural silence such that even the
elites are not capable of releasing a single joint statement of condemnation” of
Israeli actions in the Al Aqsa compound.
Prominent
Israeli commentator Zvi Bar’el noted that so far, the Al Aqsa protests have
not sparked a third Palestinian intifada even though they had all the makings
of an uprising. Mr. Bar’el argued that Palestinians were still traumatized by
the political and human cost of the second intifada in the first years of the
21st century that ironically was dubbed the Al Aqsa intifada.
“The tragic results of the second intifada – from both the
humanitarian and strategic perspectives – have been deeply engraved in the
collective Palestinian memory. It’s hard to imagine what the expiry date of
such trauma is… Perhaps…the trauma is still effective – but it’s best not to
put it to the test,” Mr. Bar’el said.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam
School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s
Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with
the same title, Comparative Political Transitions between
Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and three forthcoming books, Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa as
well as Creating Frankenstein: The Saudi Export of Ultra-conservatism and China
and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom.
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