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Both
the Israeli and Palestinian political arenas are in turmoil. In Israel,
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's stroke has left the country and his newly
established party, Kadima, in disarray. In the Palestinian territories,
the ruling Fatah party is rapidly losing popular support, and the Islamist
party Hamas is gaining ground. Paradoxically, Hamas' steady ascent is part
of Sharon legacy, while its imminent victory in the upcoming elections
will help Israel's new leader transform Sharon's political vision into
reality.
Sharon, the father of Israel's unruly
settlement enterprise and the person responsible for thousands of deaths
in the Lebanon debacle, including the Sabra and Shatila massacre, altered
his strategic thinking during the last couple of years. After leading
Israel's efforts to expropriate Palestinian land for three decades, Sharon
finally realized that as the messianic and militaristic visions of a
greater Israel became reality and the border between Israel proper and the
territories it occupied in 1967 was erased, the very idea of a Jewish
state, where Jews are the majority, was being "threatened." While he
considered the annexation of the West Bank and Gaza appealing from a
geographic point of view, he joined the vast majority of Israeli Jews who
feel endangered by the fact that today the majority of people living
between the Jordan Valley and the Mediterranean Sea are not Jewish.
For years this demographic "threat" was kept at bay by denying the
occupied Palestinians Israeli citizenship and subjecting them to military
rule. Israel, in other words, created an apartheid regime in the West Bank
(and Gaza) in order to sustain the Jewish majority within its borders. It
installed dual legal systems within a single territory, one for Jews, the
other for Palestinians. This incongruence between Israel's geographic
aspirations and demographic reality led to a political juncture whereby it
had to choose one of two options: continue maintaining a system of
apartheid or, conversely, give up the idea of a Jewish state.
Sharon decided to adopt a third way. He withdrew from the Gaza Strip and
made plans to annex several parts of the West Bank so as to radically
alter the region's demographic and geographic reality. He used the
separation barrier--which is made up of electronic fences, barbed wire,
patrol roads, trenches and massive concrete slates--as the means to
unilaterally implement his political vision. Thus, even though the barrier
is constantly presented as a "temporary" security apparatus, in reality
its primary objective is to redraw the map between Israel and the
Palestinian entity.
Demographically, the barrier will surround 56 Jewish settlements from the
east, annexing the land that they now occupy so that 171,000 West Bank
settlers will be incorporated into Israel's new borders. The wall being
built in East Jerusalem is meant to reinforce the 1967 annexation of this
part of the city, and to legitimize the 183,800 Jewish settlers living
there. If the barrier does indeed become the new border it will solve the
problem posed by about 87 percent of Israel's illegal settlers. The
remaining 13 percent, or 52,500 settlers, will have to be forcibly
evacuated, like the Jewish settlers in the Gaza Strip.
Geographically, the barrier is meant to enlarge Israel's internationally
recognized territory by annexing West Bank land, while creating
self-governing enclaves for the Palestinians. The barrier's route cuts up
the Palestinian territory into 16 small internal enclaves containing
specific villages, towns or cities. In addition, it cuts the West Bank in
at least two (north/south) and perhaps four larger enclaves (the north is
divided into three parts, north of Ariel, south of Ariel and south of
Jericho). Taking the Gaza Strip into account, it becomes clear that when
the barrier is complete, the future Palestinian "state" will be made up of
three to five main regions.
The regions will be closed off almost completely from each other, while
Israel will continue to effectively control all of the borders so that it
can implement a hermetic closure whenever it wishes. What is new about the
barrier is not the attempt to create enclaves in the Occupied Territories,
but the effort to transform these enclaves into quasi-independent entities
that will ostensibly form a Palestinian state.
It is not surprising that Sharon's unilateral solution has in the past two
years been sowing the seeds of hatred. One would expect the international
community to condemn Israel's myopic unilateralism. Yet now more than
before there is a good chance that once Sharon's successors try to secure
international approval for his program they will receive widespread
support, since in the struggle against Islamic fundamentalism, everything
is permitted.
This is where Hamas enters the picture. Hamas, an abbreviation of
Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya, namely, Islamic Resistance Movement,
was founded in 1987 by Sheik Ahmad Yasin at the outbreak of the first
Palestinian Intifada. While Hamas tends to be identified with its military
arm, Izzeddin al-Qassam, well known for its attacks on Israeli targets, it
has always also been a vibrant political and social movement. It has
kindergartens and schools that offer free meals for children, education
centers for women, and youth and sports clubs. Its medical clinics offer
subsidized treatment to the sick and it extends financial and technical
assistance to those whose homes had been demolished and to refugees living
in sub-standard conditions. Thus, ever since its establishment, Hamas has
offered Palestinians extensive community services and has responded
constantly to the changing political reality by making pragmatic
decisions.
The changing power relations within Palestinian society, in which the
ruling Fatah party has lost many of its supporters to Hamas, will no doubt
help Israel advance its unilateral solution. As In These Times went
to press, it seemed highly likely that Hamas would become the largest
party in the Palestinian territories in the January 25 elections, if not
winning them outright. This will benefit Sharon's heir, since it will help
him convince not only the United States but also Europe to back Israel's
intent to establish new borders, turning a blind eye to the ongoing
violation of Palestinian rights that Israel's unilateral action entails.
Ultimately, this will leave the Palestinians both rightless and stateless.
Sharon, a brilliant strategist, seems to have recognized this long ago,
and over the years implemented policies that have strengthened Hamas. The
International Crisis Group has shown, for example, that Hamas has been
empowered by the economic calamity caused by Israeli assaults and
closures. The resulting economic disaster created a gap that Hamas'
charitable organizations could fill and the Palestinian Authority could
not. Thanks to Sharon's military and economic policies in the Occupied
Territories, practically all doors have been closed except, of course, the
mosque doors.
Sharon's actions during his tenure as prime minister strengthened Hamas,
while Hamas' ascendancy in the Palestinian street will ultimately enable
Sharon's followers to pursue his plans unhindered.
Neve Gordon teaches politics at
Ben-Gurion University, Israel, and is the editor of From the Margins of
Globalization: Critical Perspectives on Human Rights
(Lexington Books, 2004), and can be reached
at: nevegordon@gmail.com.
Other Recent Articles by Neve Gordon
*
Israel and
the Corruption of American Academia
*
No
Negotiations
* From
Ghettos to Frontiers: What Will Happen After Israel's Withdrawal from Gaza
* Israel's
Military "Justice" in the Occupied Territories
* Academic
Witch-Hunt in Israel
*
Undermining the International Court
* Curtailing
US Hegemony in the Middle East Would Help Bring World Peace
* Court
Serves Israel's Interests
* The
Militarist and Messianic Ideologies
* The
Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited
* What Lies
Behind Israel's Assassination of Yassin?
* Demographic
Wars
* Israel's
Contempt for the International Court of Justice is Inimical to Its Own
Interest
* There's No
Democracy Like No Democracy
* Help the
Israeli Refusniks Sentenced to Prison
*
An Update on the Gay Couple From Jerusalem
* Help
Save the Life of Fuad Moussa
*
Laying Siege to Empire
*
Why is the World Silent in the Face of Israeli Apartheid?
*
Sharon’s Preemptive Zeal
*
Strategic Abuse: Outsourcing Human Rights
Violations
*
Nightlife in Jerusalem
*
The Bad Fence
*
Missing: The Right To Know
*
Excavating Israel’s Past
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