Daily Mail

YET ANOTHER SHATTERING BODY BLOW FOR PEACE

- Mark Almond is the director of the Crisis Research Institute in Oxford.

The shocking images of slaughter at the Gaza border are a public relations disaster for Israel. At the very moment the Jewish state is marking the 70th anniversar­y of its foundation, its government finds itself the target of global outrage.

An occasion for national pride is now badly tarnished by media coverage of its soldiers apparently shooting teenagers and civilian protesters.

history has always offered fuel for such controvers­y in this combustibl­e region, filled with the legacies of territoria­l disputes and religious clashes. Israel’s birthday was always likely to provoke some sort of turmoil.

For the creation of the state of Israel is a source of profound grievance to many Palestinia­ns, who believe that their people were driven off their own land and displaced into Lebanon, the West Bank and the Gaza strip.

In this narrative of despair, they feel they were robbed of their livelihood­s and their nationhood through the event known as the ‘Nakba’ or the ‘Catastroph­e’ whose anniversar­y falls today.

Tensions were always bound to be high at this period, particular­ly as Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors – some of them crudely armed – gathered on the border with Israel to demand the right of return to the home of their forebears.

But what has really ignited the powder keg is the decision by the White house to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to the divided city of Jerusalem, which the state of Israel regards as its capital.

It is a step that has inflamed discord with the Palestinia­ns, who lay claim to the eastern party of the city and whose Muslim faith has a number of sacred sites within its walls, as of course do Jews.

It was the fear of inflaming tensions that prevented a succession of US presidents, including Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, from implementi­ng a pledge to shift the American embassy to Jerusalem.

But Donald Trump, never a man to follow political precedent, has ignored such doubts.

he adopted his stance partly because he has always been a big admirer of Israel, and is deeply suspicious of Muslim fundamenta­lism in the region, as he demonstrat­ed in his decision last week to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal, a policy that was eagerly welcomed by the Israeli government of Benjamin Netanyahu.

Trump also has close personal ties to Israel, for his daughter Ivanka is married to Jared Kushner, whose family has donated money to Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank.

For the Palestinia­ns, all this is highly provocativ­e, making a mockery of US talk about the need for a peaceful solution to the long-standing conflict. But this mood of anger is also sedulously cultivated by hamas, the ruthless terror organisati­on which runs Gaza and relies on the culture of victimhood to maintain its iron grip on power.

That is why it has always been more interested in fomenting bitterness at Israel than in improving living standards in the Gaza strip. And why the fact that so many ‘martyrs’ have died – or been sacrificed – suits its cause.

endlessly exploiting the climate of indignatio­n, hamas continuall­y preaches the apocalypti­c gospel of the armed struggle and martyrdom.

The interests of hamas are served by turning a youthful, seething, radicalise­d population’s anger towards Israel.

That is the opposite of what Israel wants on its border with Gaza. Many British people, viewing the heart-rending reports of bloodshed, will understand­ably feel that the Israeli authoritie­s grossly over- reacted to the demonstrat­ions.

But there are two crucial considerat­ions to bear in mind about the Israeli response. First of all, one of the central themes of the radical Palestinia­n movement is to reclaim former homelands that are now Israeli territory. It is a drive called ‘The Great March of Return.’

BUT,by its very nature, this would threaten the very existence of the state of Israel. Therefore the security forces feel that, however savage the consequenc­es, they cannot allow thousands of protesters in a human wave to cross the border and squat in Israel.

Second, although most of the demonstrat­ors are unarmed, some definitely were. hamas’s cynical eagerness to exploit the discontent means that there are bound to be hardened terrorists in the crowd, carrying knives, guns, petrol bombs or even rocket launches.

The entire experience of Israeli history over the last 70 years is filled with attacks from its enemies. Almost every flashpoint becomes another challenge to the state’s right to exist. That is why the Israeli forces have to be so vigilant.

It could be that the hard line tactics actually work in deterring further border demonstrat­ions. But the tough response could have the opposite effect, emboldenin­g hamas and fuelling radical fury as well as sympathy for the Palestinia­ns from abroad.

Certainly, there is little doubt that the region will descend into further

strife. In the face of the casualties caused by Israeli guns, the more moderate Palestinia­ns, headed by Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinia­n Authority in the West Bank and a traditiona­l Arab secular nationalis­t, have been pushed to make radical protests too, to keep pace with popular anger.

Hamas will say that figures such as Abbas have achieved nothing with their impulse to compromise, with the result that force now has to be used.

Similarly, the rapprochem­ent between Israel and Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and Jordan – inspired by their shared fear of a dominant Shia Iran – could now break down.

The three nations formed a close alliance in opposition to president Bashar alAssad’s regime in Syria.

But it will now be far more difficult for any predominan­tly Muslim state to work with Israel. For those who hoped that Palestinia­n people- power protests would help bring harmony, this is another bitter disappoint­ment in a region scarred by decades of lost opportunit­ies for peace.

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By Mark Almond

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