MIFTAH
Wednesday, 24 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Jerusalem - In the not so distant past, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon affirmed the importance of the Jewish settlements as "obstacles to war," and rejected a unilateral Israeli withdrawal from Gaza on the grounds that it would "only encourage terrorism and increase the pressure upon us." But like previous withdrawals from Sinai and South Lebanon, Sharon's evacuation of settlers and soldiers after five years of the current intifada, demonstrates that, unfortunately, Israel cedes only under fire.

The Israeli government claims that its retreat is a sign of strength not weakness. And Sharon, the architect of the settlements, justifies their demolition primarily on demographic grounds: separating from a million and a half Gazans, who make up 20 percent of all Palestinians on 2 percent of historical Palestine. However, unless Israel was planning to annex Gaza, the numbers of its inhabitants is by and large irrelevant to Israel's "Jewish democracy."

In reality, the settlements have become too costly in terms of surging security needs, growing instability and eroding army morale. In the words of one leading Israeli analyst, the Palestinians have "won by points." That's why Gazans are celebrating the "disengagement" as a humiliating defeat for the occupation and victory for many years of resistance and steadfastness. As new popular Palestinian slogan goes: "Today Gaza, tomorrow Jerusalem and the West Bank."

Israel is under legal and international pressure to continue its withdrawals beyond the four isolated settlements it has been evacuating in the West Bank. But Sharon is expected to exploit the Palestinians' preoccupation in the impoverished Gaza to freeze the peace process and to expand Israel's control over the tenfold larger West Bank. If the Bush administration goes along with Sharon under the cover of a "State in Gaza first," the breakout of a third intifada is all but imminent.

The Palestinian armed factions are tending to transfer their operation into the West Bank in order to transform Israel's Gaza nightmare into daily West Bank reality. According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, a third intifada "could speed up" Israel's evacuation from 90 percent of the West Bank.

Sharon has warned of unprecedented retaliation if the Palestinians resort to violence. But Israel's 38 years' use of force has simply failed to deter the Palestinians, and more force will only aggravate the cycle of violence. Furthermore, Sharon has been warned by his attorney general, Menachem Mazuz, that if the military retaliates against Palestinian population centers (there isn't much else), Israel would be guilty of "war crimes."

Israel's dilemma is complicated by the close proximity between Israelis and Palestinians, which renders its advanced conventional and nuclear capability practically obsolete. Instead, the balance of power in the minuscule territories is determined by mounting numbers of Palestinians ready to die for their homeland and a declining number of Israelis ready to defend the occupation project. Gaza is a living example of that reality.

Colonial powers stronger and more determined than Israel have all lost to weaker but highly motivated resistance movements, costing millions of lives. Like the defeat of French, British and American occupations, the trouncing of the Israeli occupation is only a matter of time.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, Palestinian resistance - meaning the basic right to fight back against injustice - is motivated not be despair, but by the hope for freedom. Like other oppressed people, they see extremism in the pursuit of liberty as no vice and moderation in the defense of justice as no virtue, to paraphrase the late U.S. senator Barry Goldwater.

That, however, doesn't justify the targeting of Jewish civilians. Suicide bombings might have been effective in the short term, but they are morally wrong and counterproductive in the long term. Having said that, the moral burden remains heavily placed on the shoulders of those who practice state terrorism in the form of military occupation.

A couple of years ago, four former Israeli security service heads warned that Israel was "on the verge of catastrophe" as a result of the intifada. Their assessment was not a military one per se, rather a general one that encompassed the economic, moral and security spheres.

You can be sure that another uprising in the West Bank will do greater harm to Israel and the Palestinians than the previous two. Those who cannot stand the heat will leave first. My guess is, it will be Israel. But with one important condition: Any Palestinian resistance must be limited to the West Bank - both in terms of scope and endgame - and balanced with an open hand for peaceful coexistence.

Unlike Gaza, South Lebanon and Sinai, the West Bank is Israel's last and narrowest defense line. Its withdrawal from there could only be the culmination of international intervention and a torturous internal power struggle.

Palestinian resistance and international pressures are widening the rift in Israeli society between the secular, business-driven costal communities that flourish on stability, peace and open frontiers and the religious and extremist segments that thrive on conflict, tensions and the idea of a Greater Israel.

Israelis who seek normality and prosperity for their country have already won the battle of Gaza. Now, they must act quickly to ensure that its evacuation is only a prelude to West Bank withdrawal in order to prevent the outbreak of another more deadly intifada.

Marwan Bishara is a visiting lecturer at the American University of Paris.

 
 
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