By Yossi Alpher
Egypt
escalated its involvement in the Israel-Gaza conflict following the Aug. 18
attack from Sinai against Israelis near Eilat, which caused Israeli, Egyptian
and Palestinian casualties. Cairo demanded (and got) an Israel-Hamas
cease-fire, clamped down militarily in Sinai and may have begun taking serious
steps to seal the Sinai-Gaza border.
The
trigger was a single incident, however complex. But the new Egyptian role was
long in coming, and may yet develop further. For example, the possible rise to
power of Islamist parties in Egypt following elections could signal a radical
upgrading of Egypt’s relations with Hamas in Gaza and a serious deterioration
in relations with Israel.
Meanwhile,
in terms of Israel’s regional strategic situation, the threat posed to Israeli-Egyptian
relations by the actions of militants from Gaza dovetails with last week’s
sharp downgrading of relations with Israel by Turkey’s Islamist government –
also, ostensibly, because of Gaza. That the Netanyahu government reacted
differently toward Cairo and Ankara – acquiescing in the wishes of the one
while refusing to yield to the other – underlines the perception that relations
with Egypt take precedence over relations with Turkey or even over the desire
to revenge Israeli losses and deter further attacks from Gaza.
Then,
too, Egypt’s position regarding the Palestinian issue is still far more
reasonable than Turkey’s. Egypt wants to prevent violence in Gaza from spilling
into Sinai and endangering its relations with Israel. In contrast, Turkey’s Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is apparently contemplating sending ships to Gaza
under Turkish escort and himself visiting the strip to trumpet his support for
its leaders.
Leaving
aside Israel’s problems with Turkey, how can the Netanyahu government deal more
effectively with Gaza in the newly expanded Egyptian context? The first measure
is to recognize that Israel has not had a rational strategy for Gaza since the
2005 unilateral withdrawal failed to leave the strip in a peaceful
state-building mode and Hamas took over. This has already cost Israel dearly in
terms of its relations with Egypt and Turkey. The attempt to seal off Gaza by
land and sea failed to bring down the Hamas regime, silence its rockets or
bring back Gilad Shalit, while giving Israel a bad name internationally and
contributing to the crisis with Turkey. Indeed, Israel’s readiness for several
years to mortgage its interests regarding Gaza to the fate of a single soldier
reflected a dangerous lacuna in strategic thinking.
Israel
has not tried a strategy of dialogue with Hamas, and no one is sure how Hamas
would respond to such outreach anyway. Until recently, Egyptian and PLO
objections were a factor in deterring Israel from moving in this direction;
now, conceivably, Egypt’s position may change. Nor is reoccupation of the strip
a likely option. Beyond the heavy military and civilian losses Israel would
suffer, there is no obvious exit strategy: The PLO would hardly agree to
“inherit” the strip from Israel and the international community is not likely
to volunteer to hunt down terrorists there. Moreover, under current
circumstances Egypt would almost certainly see reoccupation as a hostile act.
Were
the Israel-PLO peace process to be renewed, Hamas would hold something akin to
veto power by threatening renewed rocket attacks that could paralyze life in
southern Israel for weeks or even months, with Israel’s hands tied by the
delicate state of relations with Egypt.
This
brings us to the realities of the present. The peace process is not about to be
renewed. Accordingly, a United Nations General Assembly vote to recognize a
Palestinian state within the 1967 lines, which Egypt will support, will
complicate the Israel-Egypt-Gaza triangle even further. The next time Hamas or
its more radical Islamist allies attack Israel – which they will do sooner
rather than later – Israeli retaliation could be deemed aggression against
(part of) a sovereign state. Given Egypt’s current conditions of revolution and
transition, it is doubtful whether serious and comprehensive Egyptian-Israeli
discussions of strategic understandings over such matters are feasible.
The
best way for Israel to address this problem is to engage the General Assembly
resolution and turn it into a win-win proposition serving the strategic needs
of Israel and the PLO and creating a post-Oslo peace paradigm. For the PLO,
sovereignty, the 1967 lines and a capital in Jerusalem. For Israel, recognition
by the U.N. of Israel as a Jewish state, land swaps, two capitals in Jerusalem,
provisions regarding security, a commitment that a Palestinian state will
negotiate all outstanding differences and a determination by the U.N. that
until and unless Hamas accepts the Quartet conditions regarding Israel and
negotiations, Gaza cannot be considered part of a U.N.-recognized Palestinian
state.
That
would constitute the beginnings of a strategy for Gaza.
-This commentary was published in The Daily Star on 13/09/2011
-Yossi Alpher is a former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University. This commentary first appeared at bitterlemons.org, an online newsletter
-Yossi Alpher is a former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University. This commentary first appeared at bitterlemons.org, an online newsletter
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