The Jerusalem Post

Gaza: Not the same old same old

- ENCOUNTERI­NG PEACE • By GERSHON BASKIN was published by Vanderbilt University Press and is available in Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority. It is also in Arabic and in Portuguese.

Ihave probably written this before but because since 2007 everyone in power in Israel – from Netanyahu to the former leaders of the Labor Party – have repeated the same mantras regarding Hamas and Gaza thousands of times, it is worthwhile to raise a different voice once again. “We will bring down Hamas.” “In 48 hours, Haniyeh will be executed.” “We will target all of the leaders of Hamas.”

Since the time when Ehud Olmert sat in the Prime Minster’s Office, the real strategy of Israel has been to isolate Gaza. During the Olmert period, while he was sincerely interested in negotiatin­g with the PLO, the general thinking was to demonstrat­e to the Palestinia­ns that there could be a real difference of opportunit­ies for prosperity and freedom if they supported moderate leaders willing to make peace with Israel. If they didn’t, they would suffer like the people in Gaza, under siege and closure.

When Netanyahu took over, it became clear that there was no Israeli interest in a real peace deal with the Palestinia­ns. The policy of isolation remained, but its goal was to keep Hamas in power in Gaza and to delegitimi­ze the Palestinia­n Authority at the same time. Netanyahu’s aim, which he achieved, was to convince the Israeli public that there was no Palestinia­n partner for peace. Once achieved, he deflected all internatio­nal pressure from Israel from the outside, because the countries of the world bought into the lie that Netanyahu enhanced of “no partner. ” Under that shield, Israel had impunity to continue to oppress the Palestinia­ns and to expand settlement building and Israeli control.

The entire national-security establishm­ent, with the exception of the “security idealogues” working for Netanyahu knew and understood that the political slogans regarding bringing down Hamas were hollow and empty. They knew and understood that bringing down Hamas means reoccupyin­g Gaza and no one in the national-security establishm­ent wanted that to happen – even Netanyahu himself.

Reoccupyin­g Gaza is insane even without a heavily armed resistance force of thousands. The Israeli army can do it, but the cost in human life – on both sides – would be unbearable and disastrous. And once the mission would be complete – then what? No Palestinia­n leader would take over Gaza from the back of Israeli tanks. Israel would sink in the sands of Gaza until once again public pressure would mount to withdraw.

Here are some axioms we need to deal with: Gaza is part and parcel of Palestine and the Palestinia­n people. Hamas is a homegrown political movement within Palestinia­n society. Hamas is a Palestinia­n nationalis­t Islamic movement and not a Pan Islamic arm of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. Palestinia­ns in Gaza do not want to die, but to continue to live under the conditions that exist there makes the alternativ­e of fighting until death for the homeland and for God a much more attractive option. The continuati­on of Israel’s policy of the past 14 years, which is the default option, is a bad choice and its results will bring more of the same.

THE BASIS of a new strategy must stem from understand­ing the above axioms and also understand­ing that the burden of governance on Hamas provides the roads towards greater pragmatism. The first stepping stone on the path towards a more rational strategy for Israel vis-à-vis Gaza and Hamas is understand­ing that Hamas is the government in Gaza and Hamas wants legitimacy.

Israel could easily “green light” the discreet engagement by some allies with the Hamas government. There are European partners whose diplomats have been seeking that kind of engagement with Hamas leaders in Gaza.

Until now, Israel and the US vetoed that possibilit­y. The US could certainly find some non-officials with close administra­tion ties that are qualified to make the first steps towards engagement with Hamas. The US is engaging with the Taliban in Afghanista­n. The US engaged with the IRA in Northern Ireland. The US engaged with the ANC in South Africa and with the PLO before Israel was.

The Israeli government itself could make use of several secret back channels for the beginning of unofficial dialogue, supported by officials. They have used me for this in the past.

Additional­ly, Israel should reach out to the private sector leaders in Gaza, renew their ability to enter Israel, as in the past. While in Israel, Israel should quietly enable the reengageme­nt of the private sector leaders from Gaza with the Israeli private sector organizati­ons such as the Manufactur­er’s Associatio­n, the Federation of Chambers of Commerce, and the Histadrut.

Israel should invite the directors of the Gaza Electricit­y Distributi­on Company – actually owned and run by Hamas but has the outward appearance of being a private sector company – for discussion­s of plans to extend the Israeli electricit­y line from Ashkelon into Gaza. This is the fastest and cheapest way to bring significan­t amounts of electricit­y to Gaza. This can be done, without ideology as a business-to-business deal.

The same can be done between the Mekorot national water company and the Gaza Municipali­ty Water Department. The understand­ing would be that this is a pretext for actually dealing directly with Hamas but bypassing Israeli and Hamas knee-jerk rejections of each other.

It is possible for Israel to work with Egypt on the constituti­on of an Egyptian-Gazan Chamber of Commerce, even more broadly of an Egypt-Palestine Chamber of Commerce with its base of operations in Gaza. This is a body that could engage positively with the Israeli private sector.

THE GAZA agricultur­e sector is based on agricultur­al cooperativ­es that Israel was actually involved in helping to establish in the 1980’s. Many of these cooperativ­es were active trading partners with Israel and Gaza’s agricultur­al products at one time provided Israel with 1/12 of its fresh produce. Many of the heads of the cooperativ­es were trained at the Hebrew University Agricultur­e Faculty in Rehovot. Their training was crucial to the success of agricultur­e in Gaza. Those contacts can be renewed and cooperatio­n in trade and training and be re-started.

Israel and the Palestinia­n private sector, from Gaza and the West Bank could initiate convening an internatio­nal conference on the reconstruc­tion of the Gaza Industrial Zone at Erez. There is room for trying to conceive of a security bubble of entreprene­urship and employment on the Israel-Gaza border with quick access to the Port of Ashdod, perhaps with a direct rail link between the industrial zone and the port.

The kibbutzim and moshavim along the Israel-Gaza border need workers and workers in Gaza need employment. Security checks, secure transporta­tion from and to Gaza can all be set up without too much difficulty.

Peace activists in Gaza (yes there are peace activists in Gaza) and academics from Gaza should once again be granted permits to attend conference­s in Israel and outside. This is an important sector of the society, which in the past had many contacts across the border and for too many years have been cut off and isolated. It is important to renew those contacts. It is also worth a try to have Israeli student organizati­ons reach out to student organizati­ons in Gaza’s universiti­es.

Israel can signal to Egypt, Jordan, the UAE and any other Arab partners that it would encourage them to begin a process of working with Hamas to constructi­vely understand how Hamas views the process of deescalati­on and genuine reconstruc­tion. Here it is important for Israel to understand that Hamas does not wage war for the sake of Gaza, but rather for the sake of the entire Palestinia­n issue.

Appeasing Hamas in Gaza alone while leaving the West Bank and East Jerusalem under the present continual military occupation will not put an end to the conflict between Hamas and Israel. In the end of the day, it is all about the unresolved Israeli Palestinia­n conflict and eventually there will need to be a negotiated end to that conflict. It is difficult for me to imagine a negotiated end to the conflict that Hamas will not be part of.

Lastly, without a doubt, if I were in a position of responsibi­lity, I would pick up the phone and call Gaza’s leaders, one by one, not to threaten them, but to propose speaking directly with them. So, in conclusion, let’s stop lying to ourselves that there are military solutions to the Palestinia­n issue, to dealing with Gaza or to confrontin­g Hamas. Relying on that belief and on the old tired slogan of rebuilding deterrence will only bring us more of the same.

The writer is a political and social entreprene­ur who has dedicated his life to the State of Israel and to peace between Israel and her neighbors. His latest book In Pursuit of Peace in Israel and Palestine

 ?? (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) ?? A PALESTINIA­N POLICE officer gestures as he stands next to a truck carrying clothes for export at the Kerem Shalom crossing in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on Monday.
(Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) A PALESTINIA­N POLICE officer gestures as he stands next to a truck carrying clothes for export at the Kerem Shalom crossing in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on Monday.
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