Forever war? Israel risks a long, bloody insurgency in Gaza
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[November 17, 2023]
By Samia Nakhoul, Humeyra Pamuk and Matt Spetalnick
(Reuters) - Israel risks facing a long and bloody insurgency if it
defeats Hamas and occupies Gaza without a credible post-war plan to
withdraw its troops and move toward the creation of a Palestinian state,
U.S. and Arab officials, diplomats and analysts said.
None of the ideas floated so far by Israel, the United States and Arab
nations for the post-war administration of Gaza have managed to gain
traction, according to two U.S. and four regional officials as well as
four diplomats familiar with the discussions, raising fears the Israeli
military may become mired in a prolonged security operation.
As Israel tightens its control over northern Gaza, some officials in
Washington and Arab capitals fear it is ignoring lessons from the U.S.
invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan when swift military victories were
followed by years of violent militancy.
If Gaza's Hamas-run government is toppled, its infrastructure destroyed
and its economy ruined, the radicalization of an enraged population
could fuel an uprising targeting Israeli troops in the enclave's narrow
streets, diplomats and officials say.
Israel, the U.S. and many Arab states agree that Hamas should be ousted
after it launched a cross-border raid on Oct. 7 that killed some 1,200
people and took around 240 hostages. But there is no consensus on what
should replace it.
Arab countries and Western allies have said a revitalized Palestinian
Authority (PA) – which partially governs the West Bank – is a natural
candidate to play a greater role in Gaza, home to some 2.3 million
people.
But the credibility of the Authority – run by 87-year-old President
Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah party - has been undermined by its loss of control
over Gaza to Hamas in a 2007 conflict, its failure to halt the spread of
Israeli settlements in the West Bank, and accusations of widespread
corruption and incompetence.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at the weekend that the
PA in its current form should not take charge of Gaza. He said the
Israeli military was the only force capable of eliminating Hamas and
ensuring that terrorism did not reappear. In the wake of Netanyahu's
comments, Israeli officials have insisted that Israel does not intend to
occupy the Gaza Strip.
Mohammed Dahlan, who was the PA's security chief for Gaza until it lost
control of the strip to Hamas and has been suggested as a future leader
of a post-war government there, said that Israel was mistaken if it
believed that tightening its control of Gaza would end the conflict.
"Israel is an occupying force and the Palestinian people will deal with
it as an occupying force," Dahlan said in his office in Abu Dhabi, where
he now lives. "None of the Hamas leadership or fighters will surrender.
They will blow themselves up but won't surrender."
Dahlan has the backing of the influential United Arab Emirates to lead a
post-war administration in Gaza, according to diplomats and Arab
officials. But he said no-one, certainly not him, would want to come in
to govern a broken and demolished territory without a clear political
path in sight.
"I have not seen any vision from Israel, America or the international
community," Dahlan said, calling for Israel to stop the war and to start
serious talks on a two-state solution.
U.S. President Joe Biden warned Netanyahu on Wednesday that occupying
Gaza would be 'a big mistake'. So far, the U.S. and its allies have not
seen any clear roadmap from Israel for its exit strategy from Gaza
beyond the declared aim of eradicating Hamas, diplomats say. U.S.
officials are pressing Israel for realistic objectives and a plan for
how to achieve them.
The Israeli government did not respond to requests for comment on its
post-war plan in Gaza. Israel's operation in Gaza – launched in
retaliation for the Oct. 7 attack – has so far killed more than 11,000
people and left more than 1 million people homeless, according to the
U.N. and Red Crescent.
While insisting on Israel's right to defend itself, some U.S. officials
are concerned that high civilian casualties could radicalize more
Palestinians, driving new fighters into the arms of Hamas or future
militant groups that might spring up to replace it, according to a
source familiar with U.S. policymaking.
More than a dozen Gazans interviewed by Reuters said the Israeli
invasion was spawning a new generation of militants. Abu Mohammad, 37, a
public servant from Jabalia refugee camp, said he would rather die than
face Israeli occupation.
"I am not Hamas but in days of war, we are all one people, and if they
finish off the fighters, we will take up the rifles and fight," he told
Reuters, declining to give his full name for fear of reprisals. "The
Israelis may occupy Gaza, but they will never feel secure, not for a
day."
U.S.-LED TALKS
Washington's discussions of a post-war plan for Gaza are still in the
very initial stages with the PA, other Palestinian stakeholders, and
allies including Egypt, Jordan, UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, according
to two U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity.
"We're certainly not there yet in terms of any effort to sell that
vision to our regional partners who ultimately will have to live with
it, and or implement it," one senior U.S. official said.
While Biden has insisted the war must end with a "vision" for a
two-state solution – which would unify the Gaza Strip and the West Bank
into a Palestinian state - he and his senior aides have neither offered
specifics on how they expect to achieve this nor proposed a restart of
talks.
Some experts see any effort to revive the negotiations as a long shot,
not least because of the embittered mood of Israelis over Hamas' Oct. 7
atrocities and of Palestinians due to Israel's retaliation in Gaza.
"Among the many tragedies of Hamas's terrorist attack is that it
fundamentally undermined and set back the Palestinian cause for a
sovereign, independent state," said Jonathan Panikoff, the U.S.
government's former deputy national intelligence officer on the Middle
East who is now at the Atlantic Council think tank.
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Israeli soldiers fire during an operation against Palestinian
Islamist group Hamas, in a location given as Gaza in this handout
image released on November 16, 2023. Israel Defense Forces/Handout
via REUTERS/File photo
According to a person familiar with the matter, Biden may decide on
a more modest initiative that could include outlining a path towards
an eventual resumption of negotiations. Biden's aides recognize that
Netanyahu and his far-right coalition, which has rejected the notion
of Palestinian statehood, has little appetite for renewed talks.
As Biden seeks re-election next year, he may be reluctant to
alienate pro-Israel voters by being seen to pressure Netanyahu for
concessions to the Palestinians.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in a speech last week in
Tokyo, explained Washington's red lines in Gaza, saying the
administration was opposed to the forced displacement of
Palestinians from the territory, any reduction in its size, its
occupation or blockade by Israel. He also said it could not become a
platform for terrorism.
Blinken has repeatedly said Washington would like to see a
"revitalized" PA ultimately running the Gaza Strip and its
governance unified with the West Bank.
Under Abbas – who has run the Authority since 2005 – its credibility
has dwindled as the promise of a path to a two-state solution
outlined in the 1993 Oslo peace accords has ebbed.
That dynamic needs to shift, U.S. officials say. A change of
leadership within the PA might be possible, with Abbas remaining
perhaps in an honorary role, some diplomats said. Another step under
discussion is handing the PA a key role in distributing post-war aid
in Gaza to revive its legitimacy, a senior European diplomat said.
Asked about the discussions, a senior PA official said the return of
the Authority to Gaza was the only acceptable scenario and that was
being discussed with the U.S. and other Western powers. He declined
to comment on the proposal that Dahlan or others could lead a
Palestinian government.
Some senior Palestinian officials, including Prime Minister Mohammad
Shtayyeh, have said that the Palestinian Authority will not return
to power in Gaza on the back of Israeli tanks.
A proposal for a two-year transitional administration of technocrats
in Gaza backed by U.N. and Arab forces has been floated by Western
partners and some Middle Eastern states, diplomats said.
But there has been resistance from key Arab governments – including
Egypt - to being drawn into what they regard as the Gaza quagmire,
the diplomats said.
Regional powers fear that any Arab forces deployed in Gaza might
have to use force against Palestinians and no Arab nation wants its
military put in that position.
NO AGREEMENT ON LEADERSHIP
While the ageing Abbas is unpopular among many Palestinians, there
is no agreement about who might replace him as a future leader.
Dahlan would likely be acceptable to Egypt and Israel but - though
he worked closely with the U.S. during his time as Gaza security
chief - a U.S. source said that Washington would have some
misgivings about him returning to power. He has a long-running
enmity with Abbas and the PA's inner circle, as well as with Hamas
supporters.
Dahlan led a wave of arrests and crackdowns against senior Hamas
leaders in 1996 after a series of suicide bombings against Israel.
A UAE official said Abu Dhabi would support any post-war
arrangements agreed by all parties in the conflict and supported by
the United Nations to restore stability and achieve a two-state
solution.
Marwan Barghouti, a Fatah leader imprisoned by Israel since 2002 for
murder, is popular among many Palestinians but seen by some in
Washington as impractical as the Israeli government would be loath
to release someone they accuse of having "blood on his hands".
A U.S. official said selecting the leader would be complex as
regional players each have their own favorites and interests at
heart. Ultimately, Washington would cast its lot with any leader who
gains support from the Palestinian people and its regional allies,
as well as Israel.
"Clearly a rejuvenation of Palestinian leadership is desperately
needed, but getting there again is a very tricky thing," said Joost
R. Hiltermann, Middle East and North Africa Program Director of the
International Crisis Group. He said Arab nations could veto any
candidate they disliked and Hamas – which has portrayed itself as
the champion of Palestinian independence – would likely win any
election.
The stakes are high with the possibility of the conflict spilling
over to the Israeli-occupied West Bank, and beyond Israel.
Not since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 has there been such
widespread concern about military action raging across the Middle
East, according to Arab officials and diplomats.
Whatever Biden decides to do diplomatically, his aides say he has no
interest in the U.S. getting dragged into a direct military role in
the conflict, unless America's own security interests are threatened
by Iran or its regional proxies.
"There's no plans or intentions to put U.S. military troops on the
ground in Gaza, now or in the future," White House national security
spokesperson John Kirby told reporters this month.
(Additional reporting by Nidal al- Mughrabi in GAZA; Humeyra Pamuk
and Matt Spetalnick in Washington; Andrew Mills in Doha; James
Mackenzie and Crispian Balmer in Jerusalem; John Irish in Paris;
Aidan Lewis in Cairo; Alexander Cornwell in Dubai; Writing by Samia
Nakhoul; Editing by Daniel Flynn)
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