Israel and Hamas grapple with Egyptian Gaza roadmap
By James M. Dorsey
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Ziyad al-Nakhalah, the leader of
Palestine Islamic Jihad, the second most significant militant Gazan group,
arrived in Cairo this week for carefully timed talks with Egyptian intelligence chief General
Abbas Kamel.
The secretary-general of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad
Movement, Ziyad al-Nakhalah, Photo: Iranian Presidency Office
A Palestinian source said Mr.
Al-Nakhalah was discussing an end to the Gaza war that would involve an
exchange of prisoners, the withdrawal of Israeli forces, and reconstruction of
the devastated territory.
On the table was a three-stage Egyptian proposal that falls short of mutually
exclusive Israeli and Palestinian demands.
Hamas used the plan to increase pressure on Israeli Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu
to prioritise the release of the remaining 107 living hostages kidnapped by the
group during its October 7 attack on Israel and 22 bodies of killed captives rather
than prosecution of the war.
Even so, finding common ground
between Israel, bent on destroying Hamas at any cost and refusing to
contemplate an end to the Gaza war, and Hamas’ refusal to negotiate further
prisoner exchanges without Israel agreeing to a permanent ceasefire and
withdrawal from Gaza amounts to a Herculean, if not impossible task.
More than 20,000 people, mostly
innocent civilians, have been killed in Israel’s ten-week-old air and ground
assault on Gaza.
The Egyptian proposal seeks to maneuver the minefields by
proposing the exchange of all remaining Hamas hostages for all Palestinians
held in Israeli prisons, estimated at more than 7,000, in three phases over a
period of up to two months during which both parties would hold their fire.
The proposal would allow Hamas to drop
its demand for a permanent ceasefire as a pre-condition for prisoner exchanges.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Beirut-based Hamas
political bureau member Osama Hamdan said the Egyptian plan was “still ideas”
rather than a formal proposal.
“We are not yet talking about a solid
proposal,” Mr. Hamdan said.
Israeli war cabinet member Benny
Gantz told hostage families that "there are Egyptian proposals and
there are other proposals flying around from all kinds of directions. I don't even know which of
them are even relevant."
The Egyptian proposal envisions
Israeli withdrawals from Gaza during the period of exchanges that would force
Israel, should hostilities revive, to adopt less devasting, more limited and
targeted military operations in line with American demands.
On the assumption that Israel’s goal
of destroying Hamas is unrealistic, the plan further envisions Egyptian and
Qatar-mediated reconciliation talks between Hamas and its archival, Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas’s West Bank-based Al-Fatah movement.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Photo: AP Photo/Amr
Nabil, File
An inter-Palestinian agreement would
open the door for Hamas to be part of the Palestinian administration of Gaza
and the West Bank and join the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), a
Palestinian umbrella group.
Seemingly responding to efforts to
reconcile Hamas and Al-Fatah, Mr. Netanyahu, writing in The Wall Street Journal
added deradicalization of Palestinian
society to his war aims.
"Hamas must be destroyed, Gaza
must be demilitarized, and Palestinian society must be deradicalized. These are
the three prerequisites for peace between Israel and its Palestinian neighbors
in Gaza… Palestinian civil society needs to be transformed so that its people
support fighting terrorism rather than funding it,” Mr. Netanyahu said.
The Egyptian plan envisions the
creation of a technocratic Palestinian government that would take office in
stage three. The government would prepare the ground for long-overdue presidential
and parliamentary elections in which Hamas would compete.
“Who will decide the temporary
leadership? Who will nominate these people? We have always said the Palestinian
people must elect their own leadership,” said Mr. Hamdan, the Beirut Hamas
spokesman.
That’s where the importance kicks in
of the Cairo visit of Mr. Al-Nakhalah, whose Islamic Jihad group focuses on
armed struggle against Israel, and not on the day after the war or contours of
a future Palestinian polity or Palestinian state.
The visit buys time for exiled Hamas
officials to try to bridge differences with the group’s
Gaza leadership.
Some of the exiled officials favour a
reconciliation with Al-Fatah that would entail some form of implicit or
explicit recognition of Israel while the Gaza leadership rejects concessions.
“What needs to happen is to expand the PLO in order to include in
its ranks all Palestinian factions…especially Hamas (and) Islamic Jihad,… The Palestinian position is best
presented to the world by a united Palestinian polity…. There is no other
solution to the current impasse,” said former Palestinian prime minister Salam
Fayyad.
Former Prime Minister Salam Fayyad of the Palestinian
Authority in the West Bank city of Ramallah in January. Photo: Majdi
Mohammed/Associated Press
If the exile officials prove
successful, and that is if with a capital I, they could spark a paradigm shift
in the dynamics of the Gaza war and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict much like
the PLO’s recognition of Israel and disavowal of violence did in the 1980s.
Hamas has so far rejected the PLO
template. It argues that the template failed to produce an independent
Palestinian state and contributed to a weakening of the Palestinians since the 1993
signing of the Oslo accords.
The shift in Hamas’ position
advocated by the exiles would complicate life for Israeli Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu for whom acceptance of a role for Hamas in post-war
Palestine would likely put the last nail in his political coffin.
It would also put on the spot the
Biden administration that supports Mr. Netanyahu’s goal of destroying Hamas at
any cost.
In contrast to Israel, the United
States wants to see a capable and effective Palestine Authority govern both the
West Bank and Gaza.
As a result, Palestinian
reconciliation could force the United States to exert the kind of pressure on
Israel it has so far refrained from applying.
So far, US coaxing has not only
failed to persuade Israel to change its military tactics to reduce innocent
Palestinian casualties.
Israel has also stymied the Biden
administration’s efforts to make the discredited and cash-starved Palestine
Authority viable and more fit for purpose by refusing to release US$140 million in Palestinian
tax money frozen
since October 7 so that the Authority can pay salaries.
A second proposal to end the Gaza
war, reportedly drafted by Abdelaziz al-Sagher, head of the Saudi-backed Gulf
Research Council, and Anne Grillo, head of the French foreign ministry’s North
Africa and Middle East Department, called for the creation of a “joint transition council” to govern the territory for four
years.
The council, operating under the
auspices of a United Nations-mandated Arab peacekeeping force, would include
Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Paradoxally, the plan, which was
likely to be even less palatable to Israel, threw Mr. Netanyahu a bone by
suggesting that Hamas political and military leaders, whether in exile or Gaza,
be shipped off to Algeria.
The Egyptian plan calls for a first
phase during which Hamas and Israel, much like in November, would exchange 40
hostages – women, children, and the elderly -- for 120 Palestinians during a
seven-to-10-day truce that would also allow for the less fettered entry of
humanitarian aid into Gaza.
Last month, Israel released 240 Palestinians for
more than 100 hostages, mainly women and children, during a one-week truce.
Families and friends of about 240 hostages held by Hamas in
Gaza call for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to bring them home
during a demonstration in Tel Aviv, Israel, Nov. 21, 2023. Photo: Ariel
Schalit/AP
In the second seven-day phase Hamas would release captive Israeli women soldiers and the bodies of Israelis killed since October 7.
That’s where the problems start given
that the established ratio for the exchange of Israeli military personnel is
far higher than the 1 Israeli for 3 Palestinians applied to civilian women and
children.
In 2011, Hamas freed
Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in exchange for 1,027 Palestinians. In 1984 Israel exchanged 4,500
Palestinians for six Israelis held in Lebanon by the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO) and two years later 1,150 for three Israelis captured by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command.
The third month-long phase of Egypt’s
plan would see the release of the remaining hostages, primarily Israeli
military personnel, in exchange for all Palestinians still in Israeli prisons,
including those convicted to long prison or life sentences for killing
Israelis.
Their release could spark the breakup
of Mr. Netanyahu’s coalition government whose ultra-nationalist,
ultra-conservative elements reject major concessions.
Blamed by a majority of Israelis for
Israeli intelligence and operational failures that enabled Hamas’ October 7
attack in which more than 1,000 in majority civilians were killed, Mr.
Netanyahu can ill-afford a political crisis.
“Potentially, Egypt’s proposal, if
adopted, would constitute a victory for Hamas. If Hamas plays its card well, it
could corner Netanyahu,” said an Arab diplomat.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Adjunct Senior
Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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