The National - News

Broken promises and empty pledges stopped Gaza’s progress decades ago

- JAMES ZOGBY Dr James Zogby is president of the Arab American Institute and a columnist for The National

Last week, The New York Times carried a lengthy Tom Friedman article titled “What is happening to our world”. In it, he makes the claim that Hamas could have turned Gaza into Dubai if only they had made the right choices. There is little doubt that Hamas’s suicidal policies have brought terrible pain to Palestinia­ns, but Friedman’s argument, which others have also made, is so fanciful and ahistorica­l that it must be rebutted.

The reasons for the Palestinia­n Territorie­s’ lack of developmen­t go back 10 years before the elections of 2005 that brought Hamas to power. I know because I was there and watched this disaster unfolding in real time. While Palestinia­ns were not without fault, it is cruel to blame them for Israeli policies that deliberate­ly strangled the Palestinia­n economy and the failure of the US to take measures to counter them.

From 1993 to 1996, I cochaired a project, Builders for Peace, launched by then vice president Al Gore to promote US investment in the Occupied Territorie­s. In that capacity, I chaired the session on the Palestinia­n economy at the 1994 Casablanca Economic Summit and travelled to the region with then secretary of commerce Ron Brown. And on several occasions, US business leaders visited the West Bank and Gaza to promote business partnershi­ps that would spur economic developmen­t.

This project came about after a World Bank study observed that the Palestinia­n private sector in the territorie­s could be the engine for growth if they could secure investment and had the opportunit­y to freely engage in trade with the outside world. There was an awareness, as Mr Gore noted, that expanding economic opportunit­ies wouldn’t automatica­lly bring peace, but that without these opportunit­ies achieving peace would be impossible.

Our initial delegation visits gave us hope. Prominent US businesses were impressed with the Palestinia­n businessme­n they met, and some deals were struck. But in the months that followed, it became clear that the Israelis were unwilling to allow Palestinia­ns or their US partners to import raw materials or export finished products without Israeli control or an Israeli middleman. As a result, the deals that had been lined up collapsed.

The problem ran deeper. One day I received a call from an official at the US Department of Agricultur­e. There was a shipment of 50,000 flower bulbs the US had tried to get into Gaza. The bulbs sat awaiting Israeli clearance for so long that they rotted. Israel didn’t want competitio­n for its own flower exports. The Agricultur­e Department had enough funds for another shipment of bulbs but didn’t want to risk the expenditur­e if the result would be the same.

In frustratio­n, in 1995, I wrote a lengthy memo to then US president Bill Clinton. I also testified with a number of colleagues before the Senate foreign relations committee detailing the Israeli impediment­s to investment and economic growth in Palestinia­n lands.

In my letter and testimony, I noted that the situation – less than two years after the Oslo Accords were signed – had become dire. Israel’s closure of Palestinia­n lands and imposition of internal checkpoint­s across the West Bank following Baruch Goldstein’s massacre of Muslims in the mosque in Hebron had taken a toll in Palestinia­n support for peace. Settlement­s were growing, as was Palestinia­n unemployme­nt. In the West Bank unemployme­nt was more than one third of the workforce, while in Gaza it had reached a staggering 62 per cent.

Specifical­ly citing Gaza, I noted: “Despite promises from the internatio­nal community, not a single job-creating infrastruc­ture project has begun. Open sewage remains a serious health hazard. Instead of real progress, Palestinia­ns got observers, studies, pledges, unfulfille­d promises and blame.

“Young Palestinia­ns want nothing more than to have a job, live a meaningful life, raise a family and see them prosper. Their anger is the product of despair – born of fear and frustratio­n that they have no future. If peace is to survive, we must attack this crisis with all the resources and capabiliti­es we have to show Palestinia­ns that the promise of peace can be realised.”

Our requests were straightfo­rward: that the Palestinia­n private sector be able to secure investment­s; that Israel be pressured to allow Palestinia­n businesses to import and export with the outside world; and that internatio­nal donor funds be directed to job-creating projects. One colleague noted that the onus was on the US and Israel, not the Palestinia­ns, to make these happen.

While Mr Clinton and the senators expressed support, our recommenda­tion that Israel be pressured to let go of the reins and allow Palestinia­ns to breathe and grow was rejected by the administra­tion’s “peace team”. They argued that any pressure on Israel would impede their negotiatin­g efforts.

All this happened in the 1990s, not 2005. In a real sense, Hamas didn’t create the mess; they inherited and preyed off the despair that was left to them by Israel’s suffocatin­g control and US neglect and acquiescen­ce.

Hamas handled it badly, to be sure, but the reason why Gaza didn’t become Singapore, which is what Yasser Arafat had set as his North Star, or Dubai, had less to do with Hamas’s choices and more to do with those who failed Palestinia­ns and peace.

Before Hamas brought much pain to Palestinia­ns I saw first-hand how the enclave was robbed of economic developmen­t

 ?? AFP ?? Israeli troops operate in Al Bureij area in the central Gaza Strip, amid their continuing battles with Hamas this week
AFP Israeli troops operate in Al Bureij area in the central Gaza Strip, amid their continuing battles with Hamas this week
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates