The Gaza war’s fog complicates separating the wheat from the chaff.
By James M.
Dorsey
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The
separation frames US Secretary of Defense Lloyd
Austin’s stark warning that “if you drive the civilian population in the arms of the enemy you
replace a tactical victory with a strategic defeat.”
Although
meant to pressure Israel to adopt military tactics that would reduce innocent
Palestinian casualties in Gaza, Mr. Austin’s warning is about more than
immediate fighting.
It is about
leverage and standing in initially negotiating a permanent ceasefire and
ultimately a resolution of the conflict.
Already perceptions of the war and of Israel
and Palestine are shifting from initial empathy with Israelis as victims of a brutal attack to
sympathy with Palestinians perceived as targets of an inhumane Israeli military
campaign that violates much of international law.
Separating
the wheat from the chaff is easier said than done. It involves challenging
assumptions and myths and recognising uncomfortable and painful truths on both
sides of the divide.
The
separation is complicated by deep-seated emotions evoked by Hamas’ brutal
October 7 attack on Israel that killed 1,200 Israelis, more than half of them
civilians, and the carnage in Gaza wreaked by Israel’s determination to change
reality on the ground with no regard for Palestinian lives.
The
assumptions, myths, and truths are products of a combination of reality, emotions,
vested political interests, and perceptions created by an information war in
which truth is the first casualty.
Yet,
separation is needed to evaluate Israel and Hamas’ conduct of the war,
determine whether Hamas has and should have a future, and frame a potential
resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Key
assumptions, myths, and truths involve the question whether Israel has rendered
a two-state solution involving the creation of an independent Palestinian state
alongside Israel impossible with its policy of establishing more than 300 official and unofficial
settlements with a
population of approximately 700,00 on occupied Palestinian territory, including
East Jerusalem.
They also
relate to what Hamas wants and is willing to accept and whether it has put
itself beyond the pale with the October 7 attack and more broadly its seemingly
uncompromising attitude towards Israel, and disregard for Israeli and
Palestinian life.
The Gaza war
has revived calls for a two-state solution, a first phase of which could involve turning over the post-war
administration of Gaza to the West Bank-based Palestine Authority.
A chorus of
analysts and policy wonks charge that international support for a two-state
solution rather than one state in which Israelis and Palestinians have equal
rights amounts to paying lip service to a formula past its shelf life that no
longer is viable.
The analysts
and policy wonks base their conclusion on a look at the geographical spread of
Israeli settlements on the West Bank that indeed would suggest that separation
of the territory from Israel prior to the 1967 war has become impossible.
Israel
conquered the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights during the
war.
A study by
Shaul Arieli, a former Israeli paratrooper, advisor to the governments of prime ministers Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak
on negotiations with the Palestinians, and scholar, suggests that looking
at geography alone is misleading.
Instead, Mr. Shauli argues that the location of major
concentrations of the settler population determines, alongside political will,
the feasibility of a two-state solution.
Mr. Shauli’s study concludes that a “optimal border between
Israel and Palestine based on land swaps on a scale of four percent, while
leaving some 80 percent of the Israelis who live beyond the Green Line under
Israeli sovereignty” remains feasible.
The Green Line delineates the boundary between pre-1967
Israel and the West Bank.
Source:
Shaul Aureli, Deceptive Appearances
Disentangling Jerusalem surrounded by 11 settlements
populated by 225,000 settlers may prove the most difficult
nut to crack. Proponents of a two-state solution envision East Jerusalem as the
capital of a future Palestinian state.
“It is
still possible to delineate a line of territorial contiguity of the Palestinian
population through the Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem. However, the
ongoing trends for the construction of neighborhoods and roads in the Jerusalem
area are liable to impede this contiguity,” Mr. Shauli warned.
Source:
Shaul Aureli, Deceptive Appearances
The
feasibility of a two-state solution adds urgency to the question whether
circumventing Hamas, if it survives the Gaza war, is possible, starting with
the day after the war.
Israel
argues that its military campaign is designed to destroy Hamas and the militant
threat it represents. Yet, the Israeli
campaign demonstrates that brutality and disrespect for the life of the
innocent other are not a Hamas preserve.
In addition,
Israel’s assertion that Hamas uses the Gazan population as human shields by
utizing hospitals, schools, and mosques amounts to the pot calling the kettle
black.
To be sure,
as Hamas built its underground tunnel network in Gaza it was seeking to protect
itself, not the bulk of innocent Palestinians that would pay the price for its
October 7 attack.
“We have
built the tunnels because we have no other way of protecting ourselves from
being targeted and killed. These tunnels are meant to protect us from the
airplanes. We are fighting from inside the tunnels. Seventy-five percent of the
population of Gaza are refugees, and it is the UN’s responsibility to
protect them,” said Hamas
political bureau member Moussa Abu Marzouk.
Nevertheless,
human shields have been used throughout history by warring parties, including
fighters for Israeli independence in the 1940s.
A stroll
through Israeli cities takes one past public buildings adorned by plaques commemorating
their use by Jewish militants to train and store arms.
Source: Tikun Olam
Source: Streetsigns.co.il
Notwithstanding
Mr. Abu Marzouk’s callous comment, Hamas has for years talked out of both sides
of its mouth, allowing others to pick and choose what the group represents.
Hamas’
charter rules out peace with Israel, proposing instead a long-term
ceasefire between an independent Palestinian state and Israel.
Yet, in
early 2021 Hamas agreed with Palestine Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ Al
Fatah party to bury their war hatchet and hold presidential and legislative
elections on the
basis of the 1993 Oslo accords that involve Palestinian recognition
of Israel and renunciation of armed struggle
The
elections would have allowed Hamas to join the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO) and enabled a unified Palestinian polity to negotiate the
establishment of a state. It would have also returned Gaza to the Palestine
Authority as the governing power.
Elections
were never held. Israel refused to allow elections in East Jerusalem because
that would undermine its claims to all the city as the capital of the Jewish
state.
In addition,
Israel was backed by the United States, while Mr. Abbas, even though he sought
US and European support for the agreement, feared that, like in 2006, Hamas
could emerge victorious from the polling.
Three months
after the agreement proved worth less than the paper it was written on, Israel
and Hamas fought a war for 10 days until the United States forced a ceasefire.
Two years
later Israel and Hamas are at it again with unprecedented consequences for
Palestinians and Israelis.
It’s a war
that is the product of a failure to separate the wheat from the chaff and of
questionable assumptions, myths, and Israeli and Palestinian refusal to
unambiguously confront uncomfortable and painful truths.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary
Fellow at Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, 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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