Ceasefire talks are about more than a Gaza truce and prisoner exchange.
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A
proposed temporary Gaza ceasefire and prisoner exchange appears designed to buy
war-battered Gazans relief while enabling Israel and Hamas to claim a success.
However,
whether Israel or Hamas emerges as the ultimate victor will be determined by
whether the truce becomes permanent and the war ends.
Negotiated
by Qatar, Egypt, the United States, Israel, and Hamas, the deal would be
whittled down to the first stage of an earlier three-phase proposal that envisioned
three 45-day periods during which a permanent ceasefire would be negotiated.
The
whittled-down plan suggests that the parties, except for Israel, who is
determined to continue the war, hope the truce will create space for a
negotiated permanent ceasefire.
Hamas
has yet to formally respond to the latest proposal but a senior official, told
Al Jazeera, “The atmosphere of optimism does not reflect reality."
For
his part, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu asserted that “if Hamas
goes down from its delusional claims and brings them down to Earth, we’ll have
the progress that we all want.”
Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu gives a press conference on January 18, 2024. Photo: Kobi
Gideon/GPO
This
weekend, Israel’s war cabinet decided to send a delegation to Qatar for further talks.
In a nod to Hamas demands, Israel would under the plan
redeploy but not withdraw its troops from Gaza and allow the return to the
northern part of the Strip of internally displaced Palestinian women and
children.
Hamas
has insisted on a full Israeli withdrawal and the unrestricted return of
Palestinians to their often-destroyed homes.
The
plan constitutes an attempt to lower the temperature during Ramadan, Islam’s upcoming
holy month of fasting that is likely to shine a spotlight on Jerusalem’s Al
Aqsa Mosque, the faith’s third holiest site, as a renewed flashpoint fuelling
emotions across the Muslim world. Ramadan begins on March 10.
Some analysts suggest Hamas’ possible willingness to discuss a temporary rather than a permanent ceasefire constitutes a victory for the group’s Gaza-based leader, Yahya Sinwar.
Hamas Gaza-based leader,
Yahya Sinwar. Photo: EPA
Mr.
Sinwar, who tops Israel’s most wanted list, symbolises Israel’s failure to
achieve its goals five months into its devastating military campaign. Israel
has yet to capture or kill any of Hamas’ Gaza-based most senior leaders.
Israel’s
recent controversial military focus on Rafah, the densely overpopulated most
southern part of Gaza, is driven in part by the belief that Mr. Sinwar and
other senior figures shelter in underground tunnels in Rafah surrounded by
Hamas-held hostages as human shields.
“Once
we begin the Rafah operation, the intense phase of the fighting is weeks away
from completion. Not months… If we have a (hostage) deal, it will be delayed
somewhat, but it will happen. It has to be done because total victory is our
goal and total victory is within reach,” Mr. Netanyahu said.
Convinced
that Israel will not end the war soon on terms that would allow for a credible
process to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with the creation of an
independent Palestinian state, Mr. Sinwar, widely viewed as a hardliner within
Hamas, reportedly sees a temporary truce as an opportunity to regroup the
group’s military wing.
Moreover,
the truce would give Mr. Sinwar a tactical success with an exchange of 40 of
the 136 Hamas-held hostages and bodies of captives killed during the war for an
unspecified number of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons, particularly if
they include inmates sentenced by
Israeli courts to life imprisonment for killing Israelis.
Hamas
and Islamic Jihad terrorists stand guard as a Red Cross vehicle transports
released hostages in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on November 28, 2023.
(Flash90)
Hamas
took some 250 people hostage during its October 7 attack on Israel, more than
100 of whom were released for Palestinians incarcerated in Israel during a
one-week, Qatar-mediated truce in November.
The
exchange ensured that more Israeli hostages have been killed than have so far
been freed by Israeli troops.
Mr.
Sinwar may also believe that widespread anti-government
protests in Israel and
demands that the government prioritise the release of the hostages rather than
the war strengthen Hamas’ position.
In
addition, he may be counting on his demand for the release of Palestinians
sentenced to life in prison sparking the fall of Mr. Netanyahu’s government.
Mr. Netanyahu’s far-right coalition partners have threatened to
leave the government if the prime minister caves into Hamas’ demands.
The
far-right initially opposed the November exchange but ultimately acquiesced.
Sharing
with Mr. Netanyahu a callous disregard for innocent Palestinian lives, Mr.
Sinwar has miscalculated if he expected international pressure to disrupt
Israel’s apparent strategy of targeting Palestinian civil
society to
“create a shock” that would “lead civilians to put pressure on Hamas.”
Israel has ignored widespread international
condemnation and mild public US criticism. Gazans, despite signs of opposition, have failed to rise up against Hamas, whose popularity on
the West Bank and in the Palestinian Diaspora has risen.
Compounding Israel’s failure
to achieve its war goals, the Biden administration has asked Israel to stop targeting Hamas’ police force that provides security for aid trucks entering Gaza and
attempts to restore a semblance of law and order.
The administration warned
Israel that attacking the police could exacerbate an already dire humanitarian
crisis and warned that it could spark a "total breakdown of law and
order."
Shielding the police force is a double-edged sword.
Police have cracked down on
merchants hoarding badly needed goods to drive up prices but have also seized
items in support of Hamas. Similarly, fuel siphoned off from aid trucks
entering Gaza is sold on the black market at exorbitant prices.
It’s a problem that in Gaza’s
dire circumstances would be prevalent regardless of who controls the police.
Complicating Mr. Sinwar’s
calculations, and those of Mr. Netanyahu, is a Saudi-backed three-pronged US attempt to tie a broader Middle East deal.
The deal would involve the
temporary ceasefire becoming permanent and ending the hostilities, the
establishment of Saudi-Israeli diplomatic relations, and agreement on a
credible pathway towards an independent Palestinian state.
The US and Saudi Arabia hope
Mr. Netanyahu, an opportunist who prioritises his personal and political interests,
may be sufficiently seduced by the ability to claim credit for formalising
relations with the Middle East’s crown jewel Arab state to risk the break-up of
his government and reverse his rejection of a Palestinian state.
It
remains unclear whether differences between Mr. Sinwar and some of Hamas’ exile
leaders involved in the negotiations to achieve a ceasefire are tactical or
strategic when it comes to the group’s endgame in the war, its potential
willingness to embrace a historic compromise, and its post-war posture.
Hamas
negotiators have insisted that the group would only agree to a permanent
ceasefire that would end the war. Even so, Mr. Sinwar, based in Gaza rather
than cushy Doha, the Qatari capital, is the group’s ultimate decision maker.
The
difference in what drives Messrs. Sinwar and Netanyahu and explains their
callousness lies in an anecdote recently recalled by Aluf
Benn, the editor-in-chief of Israel’s widely respected Haaretz newspaper.
Mr.
Benn remembered former Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan’s words at the 1956
funeral of an Israeli farmer, brutally murdered by Palestinian militants.
Then-defense
minister Moshe Dayan makes a speech during the 1973 Yom Kippur War in an
undated photograph. Photo: IDF Spokesperson's Unit/Defense Ministry Archive
“Let
us not cast blame on the murderers. For eight years, they have been sitting in
the refugee camps in Gaza, and before their eyes we have been transforming the
lands and the villages where they and their fathers dwelt into our estate,” Mr.
Dayan said.
Mr.
Dayan did not criticise Israeli policy or propose accommodation of the
Palestinians. Instead, he acknowledged reality and expressed a willingness to
accept the consequences of the Jewish state’s policy.
“Let
us not be deterred from seeing the loathing that is inflaming and filling the
lives of hundreds of thousands of Arabs living around us. This is our life’s
choice—to be prepared and armed, strong, and determined, lest the sword be
stricken from our fist and our lives cut down, Mr. Dayan said.
Mr. Benn concluded from that anecdote that “on October 7,
2023, Dayan’s age-old warning materialised in the bloodiest way possible…
Israelis cannot expect stability if they continue to ignore the Palestinians
and reject their aspirations, their story, and even their presence. This is the
lesson the country should have learned from Dayan’s age-old warning.”
It’s a lesson Mr. Sinwar brutally embraced and Mr.
Netanyahu and many Israelis, perhaps even a majority, have yet to grasp.
Optimists will argue that a temporary ceasefire will pause,
if not halt the human carnage in Gaza and potentially open the door to an end
to the war and a credible peace process.
Mr. Dayan’s cynical realism is probably more realistic.
Little suggests that a post-Netanyahu Israel would fundamentally be more
willing to accommodate Palestinian aspirations.
Worse still, the much-touted two-state solution may prove
to be the best of bad options, particularly in the wake of a war that has
traumatised Israelis and Palestinians in unprecedented ways.
Much like the 19th century experience of
Russian Jews, the 1923 Turkish Greek ‘population exchange,’ this century’s
plight of the Rohingya, and the potential depopulation of Gaza, a two-state
solution could produce two hostile states rather than two countries seeking to
cooperate.
Rohingya refugees who fled Myanmar wait to be
let through by Bangladeshi border guards after crossing the border in Palang
Khali, Bangladesh, Oct. 9, 2017. Photo: REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
Referring to the Indian subcontinent’s post- 1947
partition, political scientist Manilo Graziano noted that “for the
three-quarters of a century since then, India and Pakistan have cultivated a hostility
punctuated by periodic clashes, terror attacks, and at least four official wars,
exploited and exacerbated by the great powers for their own games on the
international chessboard.”
In the Middle East, Mr. Graziano argued that it “would be
naive, to say the least,” to assume that Israeli Palestinians, who account for
about 20 percent of the Israeli population, or the 20 percent of Israeli
settlers on the West Bank who would fall under Palestinian rule if they chose
to stay in a Palestinian state would be allowed to remain in place over time.
“The tragedy in which Israelis and Palestinians are
imprisoned today is exacerbated by the fact that the only solution that
external actors have proposed would simply make their situation worse, plunging
them into what philosopher Thomas Hobbes called the ‘state of nature’—that is,
a permanent ‘war of every man against every man,’” Mr. Gaziano said.
The
spectre of civil strife raised its head during the 2021 Gaza
war with scenes of Israeli Jews and Israeli Palestinians clashing violently and
assaulting each other in Israeli cities considered models of coexistence.
Far-right members of Mr. Netanyahu’s cabinet have used
the spectre of continued strife to justify their rejection of a Palestinian
state.
Ultra-nationalist Israeli Heritage Minister Amichai
Eliyahu, scion of a prominent Sephardic rabbi family, warned in recent days
that such a state would demonstrate “terror pays and will get you what you
want.”
Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu at the Prime Minister's Office in
Jerusalem on January 8, 2023. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)
Further clouding prospects for genuine
Israeli-Palestinian peace is the fact that the risk of post-settlement
hostility is pervasive regardless of whether the resolution involves a
two-state solution, a confederation, or a one-state solution.
All of which suggests that even a temporary ceasefire
that offers Gazans some respite, the warring parties an opportunity to breathe,
and potentially enables winds of change to blow is better than the
uninterrupted Gaza carnage for which innocent Palestinians pay the price.
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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