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لا تتوقعوا سلاماً فلسطينياً إسرائيليا في
أي وقت قريب بقلم:
يوسي الفر دايلي
ستار - 27/6/2007 لقد غيرت سيطرة حماس على غزة
العديد من التصورات و
الديناميكيات في المنطقة. Don't expect
Palestinian-Israeli peace anytime soon By
Yossi Alpher Commentary
by
Wednesday,
June 27, 2007
The
Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip changed many
perceptions and dynamics in the region. But it is also
the constants that must be borne in mind by the Olmert
government in Israel as it enters into closer
cooperation with Mahmoud Abbas and the Fatah-led West
Bank. First and foremost, Hamas is a dedicated Islamist
organization with close ties to Iran. It represents
Islamist objectives that are totally antithetical to
Israel's values as well as those of moderate secular
Arabs in Palestine, Egypt and Jordan. If Israel
boycotted Hamas prior to the Gaza takeover, it has all
the more reason to do so today, with the sole exceptions
of humanitarian aid, prisoner exchange and a cease-fire. On
the other hand, both Fatah in the West Bank and Hamas in
Gaza continue to believe firmly in the unity of the two
territories. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will
never be able to negotiate a permanent-status agreement
with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas about the West
Bank alone. Nor is the Hamas-Fatah political
estrangement necessarily a permanent feature of the new
landscape. There is sentiment in Riyadh and some
inclination in Cairo to yield to Hamas' entreaties and
try and put a Palestinian unity government back together. Yet
the Hamas takeover in Gaza and the Fatah reaction also
reflect strong and clearly incompatible core elements,
Islamist and secular, in both camps. Moreover, Hamas'
new political and military concentration solely in Gaza
in some ways makes it an easier target for a regional
secular coalition seeking to isolate and weaken it.
Ongoing
Palestinian devotion to West Bank-Gaza unity is not the
only reason that Olmert-Abbas talks, like those that
took place on Monday in Sharm el-Sheikh, cannot in the
short term produce an Israeli-Palestinian peace. Both
leaders are weak; Abbas' leadership problem was
particularly evident in the Fatah collapse in Gaza.
Since then he has displayed a tougher side toward both
Hamas and Fatah's own armed gangs in the West Bank.
Certainly he is Olmert's only conceivable ticket to a
Palestinian and regional "agenda" with which
to prove the Israeli government's viability. Hence,
the Abbas-Fatah-West Bank-centered track may, by
default, provide a useful avenue for regional diplomatic
activity. However, this is only true if Abbas, Olmert,
President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah of
Jordan are willing and able to take certain vital
preliminary steps. In order to have any chance at all of
success, Abbas must consolidate security control in the
West Bank by a single Fatah-Palestinian Authority force
in much the same way that Hamas has cleared the streets
of Gaza of armed militias. He must reform his own
movement's leadership institutions by replacing the
"dinosaurs" from Tunis with new blood. And, at
least for now in view of his weakness, he must resist
the temptation of a renewed unity government. Ehud
Olmert can help him by permitting the training and
arming of forces loyal to Abbas and by releasing funds
and prisoners, and on Monday Israel said it would
release some 250 Palestinians. This could also be the
right time for the Israelis to release Marwan Barghouti
in order to support the younger generation of Fatah
leaders.
Mubarak
has to seal off Egypt's border with Gaza much more
effectively than Cairo has done so far. Hamas in Gaza
must be genuinely quarantined if its military buildup is
to cease and the threat it poses to Israel and Fatah -
as well as to Egypt itself - is to be brought under
control. And King Abdullah of Jordan has to offer closer
economic, political and security support for Abbas'
consolidated regime in the West Bank. The
objectives of this coordinated effort should be modestly
and realistically defined, and unrealistic illusions and
delusions dispelled. Both Abbas and Olmert know that it
was not the absence of a peace process that brought
about Hamas' rise to power, but Fatah corruption and
disarray. Thus there will be no new and dynamic peace
process, no Jordanian-Palestinian union, no strategic
wedge driven between West Bank and Gaza Palestinians,
and no international force sealing or quarantining the
Gaza Strip. Rather,
we can aspire to Israeli-Palestinian success in creating
new tools for confidence-building and conflict
management. Perhaps, under the best of circumstances, a
new phase of Israeli withdrawal from additional West
Bank territory can be contemplated sometime in the next
two or three years. If all parties concerned, with
Washington's and Brussels' backing, can stay focused on
such limited objectives, they may have a chance to
succeed despite the risks involved. And
risks abound. For Israel, the danger of releasing funds
and prisoners and facilitating Palestinian security
activity in the West Bank is considerable but
nevertheless manageable. Abbas and Fatah risk being
branded by Hamas as collaborators.
Both
sides have dealt with similar risks in the past - and
ultimately failed. Today, hopefully, they are both wiser
and more desperate, if only because they are running out
of alternatives. This is the default option for getting
back on track toward an eventual two-state solution that
will include Gaza. Olmert and Abbas - both survivors
despite their mediocrity - are the default leaders. If
they fail to register even modest progress, we may all
end up confronting radical and potentially less friendly
options. Yossi
Alpher is a former director of the Jaffee Center for
Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, and was a
senior adviser to Prime Minister Ehud Barak. This
commentary first appeared at bitterlemons.org, an online
newsletter publishing contending views of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=5&article_id=83364 ----------------- نشرنا
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