08 August 2008
Gershon Baskin, co-leader
of IPCRI, a well-regarded Israeli-Palestinian organization working for
peace, here shares un-reported
information about the unwise steps the Israeli government is now taking that
may lead to
a complete Hamas West Bank
takeover.
IPCRI (Israel-Palestine
Center for Research and Information) is a "think-tank/do-tank" doing
significant peace work behind the scenes.The IPCRI web site has full
information about Baskin and his Palestinian co-leader, Hanna Signora. See www.ipcri.org
for that and for insightful analyses and project reports.
Is it all lost?
By: Gershon Baskin
A Palestinian friend who is
a senior official in the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah spoke with me this
morning. Usually optimistic and positive, this morning she said to me “We lost
it all; it is just a matter of time before the West Bank turns into Gaza”. That
is the overall mood and sense of reality held by most Palestinians today. Over
the past month I have participated in international conferences with senior
Palestinian leaders at the European Parliament, in a regional meeting in
Athens, in several Israeli-Palestinian Track II meetings held in Israel all of
the Palestinian participants, officials and non-officials voiced expressions of
pessimism and despair. The same message can be heard on the grass-roots as well
throughout the West Bank and even East Jerusalem.
There is no known progress
in the peace process. Despite ongoing negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinian Authority, since President Bush’s Annapolis summit in November
2007, no noticeable change can be felt or seen in Palestine. In fact, there is
a growing sense that the Israeli occupation is becoming harsher and that the
hopes and promises of President Bush and Tony Blair for stability, prosperity
and peace have once again blown away with the shifting sands of the Middle
East.
Israel’s settlements
continues to expand instead of removing unauthorized outposts and freezing all
settlement growth, as Prime Minister Olmert promised to President Bush. The
Government of Israel continues to issue new tenders for building. There is a
total disconnect between the infrastructure of 250,000 settlers in the West
Bank (not including East Jerusalem) and the 2.5 million Palestinians who live
there. Expanding Jewish settlements occupy the hilltops of the West Bank with
modern “Jewish only” roads leading to them, while Palestinians are limited to
controlling only 40% of the area with no ability to expand and develop without
prior Israeli approval which is almost always denied.
After the fall of Gaza to
Hamas in June 2007 there was great hope under the moderate leadership of
President Mahmoud Abbas that a new reality would emerge in the West Bank that
would demonstrate to the Palestinian people that diplomacy and moderation would
succeed where violence failed. Gaza was placed under economic siege while the
new Palestinian West Bank government under Prime Minister Fayyad, the darling
of the West, began decisively taking control of the streets and returning law
and order in place of the chaos left after years of intifada. The Abbas-Fayyad
government has systematically implemented all of the Palestinian obligations
under the US-led Road Map, while the Government of Israel has not implemented
even the smallest of its obligations. Despite continued World Bank warnings,
the West Bank continues to suffer from closure and economic strangulation. The
ongoing negotiations with Israel seem to be producing no positive outcome.
The chaos of the
dysfunctional Israeli political system strengthens the sense in Palestine that
no Israeli government has the ability to make concessions in negotiations
necessary to reach agreement with the Palestinians. Even in East Jerusalem,
which is under complete Israeli rule and control, there is a political vacuum
being filled by Hamas in the absence of any other Palestinian governing
address. Israel was supposed to reopen Palestinian institutions in Jerusalem
closed during the rule of Ariel Sharon. Even the non-political East Jerusalem
Chamber of Commerce has not been allowed by Israel to re-open. In the days of
the Oslo Peace Process until the outbreak of the second intifada in the end of
2000, the Orient House functioned as a Palestinian governing institution
providing Palestinians in East Jerusalem with an address. The Orient House
managed the work of the unofficial presence of the Palestinian Authority
Preventive Security forces which dealt effectively with internal disputes, as
well as Palestinian security threats against Israel. In the past two years
Hamas activists have filled the void, functioning with an almost free hand in
distributing social, health and educational services to a population which is
virtually ignored by the Israeli government and Israel’s Jerusalem Municipality.
Hamas, using the Mosques throughout the city, has consolidated control and
right under Israel’s un-watching eyes is now emerging as the real center of
authority in East Jerusalem.
While Israel and the
Palestinian Authority have taken dramatic steps to arrest and confine the power
of Hamas throughout the West Bank, the sense on the streets is that it is only
a matter of time before Hamas will succeed to take full control. The Government
of Abbas-Fayyad has almost nothing substantial to present to their public. No
progress in negotiations, no release of prisoners, no real economic growth, and
no easing of movement and access. Instead of gaining strength because of the
deployment of US-trained Palestinian security forces in West Bank cities,
Palestinian forces are delegitimized by the “Cinderella” rule imposed by Israel
whereby Palestinian forces must disappear from the streets from midnight until
6:00 a.m. while Israeli forces have a free hand to enter and arrest anyone they
want. There are Israeli experts, and some Palestinians concur with them, that
the main thing preventing a Hamas takeover of the West Bank today is the
continued Israeli army presence there. At the same time, this is one of the
main reasons why the Hamas continues to gain in strength.
It may not be too late to
change the course of events, but radical changes in policies by Israel are
required. Is there a leader in Israel that is capable of taking the risks now
to make those changes? Probably not, but if there is, what needs to be done is
quite clear: freeze all settlement building, including in Jerusalem, remove
checkpoints and road blocks, free prisoners to President Abbas, strengthen the
security coordination and cooperation without Israeli incursions, invite the US
to mediate and present bridging proposals in the stalled negotiations and begin
to transfer additional land and authority to the Palestinian government. If
not, it is only a matter of time before the West Bank will turn into another
Gaza.
* Gershon Baskin is the
Co-CEO of IPCRI, the Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information
(www.ipcri.org) Gershon@ipcri.org