Haaretz: What American Jews Haven’t Been Told about Gaza
July 30, 2014 | 3 Comments | Peter Beinart
If
you’ve been anywhere near the American Jewish community over the past
few weeks, you’ve heard the following morality tale: Israel left the
Gaza Strip in 2005, hoping the newly independent country would become
the Singapore of the Middle East. Instead, Hamas seized power, ransacked
greenhouses, threw its opponents off rooftops and began launching
thousands of rockets at Israel.
American
Jewish leaders use this narrative to justify their skepticism of a
Palestinian state in the West Bank. But in crucial ways, it’s wrong. And
without understanding why it’s wrong, you can’t understand why this war
is wrong too.
Let’s take the claims in turn.
Israel Left Gaza
It’s
true that in 2005, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon withdrew Israel’s more
than 8,000 settlers from Gaza. (At America’s urging, he also dismantled
four small settlements in the West Bank). But at no point did Gaza
become its own country. Had Gaza become its own country, it would have
gained control over its borders. It never did. As the Israeli human
rights group Gisha has detailed, even before the election of Hamas,
Israel controlled whether Gazans could enter or exit the Strip (In
conjunction with Egypt, which controlled the Rafah checkpoint in Gaza’s
south). Israel controlled the population registry through which Gazans
were issued identification cards. Upon evacuating its settlers and
soldiers from Gaza, Israel even created a security perimeter inside the
Strip from which Gazans were barred from entry. (Unfortunately for
Gazans, this perimeter included some of the Strip’s best farmland).
“Pro-Israel”
commentators claim Israel had legitimate security reasons for all this.
But that concedes the point. A necessary occupation is still an
occupation. That’s why it’s silly to analogize Hamas’ rockets—repugnant
as they are—to Mexico or Canada attacking the United States. The United
States is not occupying Mexico or Canada. Israel — according to the
United States government — has been occupying Gaza without interruption
since 1967.
To
grasp the perversity of using Gaza as an explanation for why Israel
can’t risk a Palestinian state, it helps to realize that Sharon withdrew
Gaza’s settlers in large measure because he didn’t want a Palestinian
state. By 2004, when Sharon announced the Gaza withdrawal, the Road Map
for Peace that he had signed with Mahmoud Abbas was going nowhere. Into
the void came two international proposals for a two state solution. The
first was the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, in which every member of the
Arab League offered to recognize Israel if it returned to the 1967 lines
and found a “just” and “agreed upon” solution to the problem of
Palestinian refugees. The second was the 2003 Geneva Initiative, in
which former Israeli and Palestinian negotiators publicly agreed upon
the details of a two state plan. As the political scientists Jonathan
Rynhold and Dov Waxman have detailed, Sharon feared the United States
would get behind one or both plans, and pressure Israel to accept a
Palestinian state near the 1967 lines. “Only an Israeli initiative,”
Sharon argued, “will keep us from being dragged into dangerous
initiatives like the Geneva and Saudi initiatives.”
Sharon
saw several advantages to withdrawing settlers from Gaza. First, it
would save money, since in Gaza Israel was deploying a
disproportionately high number of soldiers to protect a relatively small
number of settlers. Second, by (supposedly) ridding Israel of its
responsibility for millions of Palestinians, the withdrawal would leave
Israel and the West Bank with a larger Jewish majority. Third, the
withdrawal would prevent the administration of George W. Bush from
embracing the Saudi or Geneva plans, and pushing hard—as Bill Clinton
had done—for a Palestinian state. Sharon’s chief of staff, Dov
Weisglass, put it bluntly: “The significance of the disengagement plan
is the freezing of the peace process. And when you freeze that process,
you prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, and you prevent a
discussion on the refugees, the borders and Jerusalem. Effectively, this
whole package called the Palestinian state, with all that it entails,
has been removed indefinitely from our agenda. And all this with
authority and permission. All with a presidential blessing and the
ratification of both houses of Congress.”
It’s
no surprise, therefore, that the Gaza withdrawal did not meet minimal
Palestinian demands. Not even the most moderate Palestinian leader would
have accepted a long-term arrangement in which Israel withdrew its
settlers from Gaza while maintaining control of the Strip’s borders and
deepening Israeli control of the West Bank. (Even in the 2005, the year
Sharon withdrew from Gaza, the overall settler population rose, in part
because some Gazan settlers relocated to the West Bank).
In
fact, Sharon’s advisors did not expect withdrawing Gaza’s settlers to
satisfy the Palestinians. Nor did not they expect it to end Palestinian
terrorism. Ehud Olmert, a key figure in the disengagement plan (and
someone who himself later embraced Palestinian statehood), acknowledged
that “terror will continue” after the removal of Gaza’s settlers. The
key word is “continue.” Contrary to the American Jewish narrative,
militants in Gaza didn’t start launching rockets at Israel after the
settlers left. They began a half-decade earlier, at the start of the
second intifada. The Gaza disengagement did not stop this rocket fire.
But it did not cause it either.
Hamas Seized Power
I
can already hear the objections. Even if withdrawing settlers from Gaza
didn’t give the Palestinians a state, it might have made Israelis more
willing to support one in the future – if only Hamas had not seized
power and turned Gaza into a citadel of terror.
But
Hamas didn’t seize power. It won an election. In January 2006, four
months after the last settlers left, Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank
and East Jerusalem chose representatives to the Palestinian Authority’s
parliament. (The previous year, they had separately elected Abbas to be
the Palestinian Authority’s President). Hamas won a plurality of the
vote – forty-five percent – but because of the PA’s voting system, and
Fatah’s idiotic decision to run more than one candidate in several
districts, Hamas garnered 58 percent of the seats in parliament.
To
the extent American Jewish leaders acknowledge that Hamas won an
election (as opposed to taking power by force), they usually chalk its
victory up to Palestinian enthusiasm for the organization’s 1988
charter, which calls for Israel’s destruction (The president of the New
York board of rabbis said recently that anyone who voted for Hamas
should be considered a combatant, not a civilian). But that’s almost
certainly not the reason Hamas won. For starters, Hamas didn’t make
Israel’s destruction a major theme of its election campaign. In its 2006
campaign manifesto, the group actually fudged the question by saying
only that it wanted an “independent state whose capital is Jerusalem”
plus fulfillment of the right of return.
Don’t
get me wrong. I’m not suggesting that by 2006 Hamas had embraced the
two state solution. Only that Hamas recognized that running against the
two state solution was not the best way to win Palestinian votes. The
polling bears this out. According to exit polls conducted by the
prominent Palestinian pollster Khalil Shikaki, 75 percent of Palestinian
voters—and a remarkable 60 percent of Hamas voters—said they supported a
Palestinian unity government dedicated to achieving a two state
solution.
So
why did Hamas win? Because, according to Shikaki, only fifteen percent
of voters called the peace process their most important issue. A full
two-thirds cited either corruption or law and order. It’s vital to
remember that 2006 was the first Palestinian election in more than ten
years. During the previous decade, Palestinians had grown increasingly
frustrated by Fatah’s unaccountable, lawless and incompetent rule.
According to exit polls, 85 percent of voters called Fatah corrupt.
Hamas, by contrast, because it had never wielded power and because its
charitable arm effectively delivered social services, enjoyed a
reputation for competence and honesty.
Hamas
won, in other words, for the same reason voters all across the world
boot out parties that have grown unresponsive and self-interested after
years in power. That’s not just Shikaki’s judgment. It’s also Bill
Clinton’s. As Clinton explained in 2009, “a lot of Palestinians were
upset that they [Fatah] were not delivering the services. They didn’t
think it [Fatah] was an entirely honest operation and a lot of people
were going to vote for Hamas not because they wanted terrorist
tactics…but because they thought they might get better service, better
government…They [also] won because Fatah carelessly and foolishly ran
both its slates in too many parliamentary seats.”
This
doesn’t change the fact that Hamas’ election confronted Israel and the
United States with a serious problem. After its victory, Hamas called
for a national unity government with Fatah “for the purpose of ending
the occupation and settlements and achieving a complete withdrawal from
the lands occupied [by Israel] in 1967, including Jerusalem, so that the
region enjoys calm and stability during this phase.” But those final
words—“this phase”—made Israelis understandably skeptical that Hamas had
changed its long-term goals. The organization still refused to
recognize Israel, and given that Israel had refused to talk to the PLO
until it formally accepted Israel’s right to exist in 1993, it’s not
surprising that Israel demanded Hamas meet the same standard.
Still,
Israel and the U.S. would have been wiser to follow the counsel of
former Mossad chief Efraim Halevy, who called for Sharon to try to forge
a long-term truce with Hamas. Israel could also have pushed Hamas to
pledge that if Abbas—who remained PA president—negotiated a deal with
Israel, Hamas would accept the will of the Palestinian people as
expressed in a referendum, something the group’s leaders have
subsequently promised to do.
Instead,
the Bush administration—suddenly less enamored of Middle Eastern
democracy–pressured Abbas to dissolve the Palestinian parliament and
rule by emergency decree. Israel, which also wanted Abbas to defy the
election results, withheld the tax and customs revenue it had collected
on the Palestinian Authority’s behalf. Knowing Hamas would resist Abbas’
efforts to annul the election, especially in Gaza, where it was strong
on the ground, the Bushies also began urging Abbas’ former national
security advisor, a Gazan named Mohammed Dahlan, to seize power in the
Strip by force. As David Rose later detailed in an extraordinary article
in Vanity Fair, Condoleezza Rice pushed Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and
the United Arab Emirates to buy weapons for Dahlan, and for Israel to
allow them to enter Gaza. As General Mark Dayton, US security
coordinator for the Palestinians, told Dahlan in November 2006, “We also
need you to build up your forces in order to take on Hamas.”
Unfortunately
for the Bush administration, Dahlan’s forces were weaker than they
looked. And when the battle for Gaza began, Hamas won it easily, and
brutally. In response, Abbas declared emergency rule in the West Bank.
So
yes, members of Hamas did throw their Fatah opponents off rooftops.
Some of that may have been payback because Dahlan was widely believed to
have overseen the torture of Hamas members in the 1990s. Regardless, in
winning the battle for Gaza, Hamas—which had already shed much Israeli
blood – shed Palestinian blood too.
But
to suggest that Hamas “seized power” – as American Jewish leaders often
do – ignores the fact that Hamas’ brutal takeover occurred in response
to an attempted Fatah coup backed by the United States and Israel. In
the words of David Wurmser, who resigned as Dick Cheney’s Middle East
advisor a month after Hamas’ takeover, “what happened wasn’t so much a
coup by Hamas but an attempted coup by Fatah that was pre-empted before
it could happen.”
The Greenhouses
Israel
responded to Hamas’ election victory by further restricting access in
and out of Gaza. As it happens, these restrictions played a key role in
explaining why Gaza’s greenhouses did not help it become Singapore.
American Jewish leaders usually tell the story this way: When the
settlers left, Israel handed over their greenhouses to the Palestinians,
hoping they would use them to create jobs. Instead, Palestinians tore
them down in an anti-Jewish rage.
But
one person who does not endorse that narrative is the prime mover
behind the greenhouse deal, Australian-Jewish businessman James
Wolfensohn, who served as the Quartet’s Special Envoy for Gaza
Disengagement. In his memoir, Wolfensohn notes that “some damage was
done to the greenhouses [as the result of post-disengagement looting]
but they came through essentially intact” and were subsequently guarded
by Palestinian Authority police. What really doomed the greenhouse
initiative, Wolfensohn argues, were Israeli restrictions on Gazan
exports. “In early December [2005], he writes, “the much-awaited first
harvest of quality cash crops—strawberries, cherry tomatoes, cucumbers,
sweet peppers and flowers—began. These crops were intended for export
via Israel for Europe. But their success relied upon the Karni crossing
[between Gaza and Israel], which, beginning in mid-January 2006, was
closed more than not. The Palestine Economic Development Corporation,
which was managing the greenhouses taken over from the settlers, said
that it was experiencing losses in excess of $120,000 per day…It was
excruciating. This lost harvest was the most recognizable sign of Gaza’s
declining fortunes and the biggest personal disappointment during my
mandate.”
The
point of dredging up this history is not to suggest that Israel
deserves all the blame for its long and bitter conflict with Hamas. It
does not. Hamas bears the blame for every rocket it fires, and those
rockets have not only left Israelis scarred and disillusioned. They have
also badly undermined the Palestinian cause.
The
point is to show—contrary to the establishment American Jewish
narrative—that Israel has repeatedly played into Hamas’ hands by not
strengthening those Palestinians willing to pursue statehood through
nonviolence and mutual recognition. Israel played into Hamas’ hands when
Sharon refused to seriously entertain the Arab and Geneva peace plans.
Israel played into Hamas’ hands when it refused to support a Palestinian
unity government that could have given Abbas the democratic legitimacy
that would have strengthened his ability to cut a two state deal. And
Israel played into Hamas’ hands when it responded to the group’s
takeover of Gaza with a blockade that—although it has some legitimate
security features—has destroyed Gaza’s economy, breeding the hatred and
despair on which Hamas thrives.
In
the ten years since Jewish settlers left, Israeli policy toward Gaza
has been as militarily resourceful as it has been politically blind.
Tragically, that remains the case during this war. Yet tragically, the
American Jewish establishment keeps cheering Israel on.

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