By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
A Gaza Solution?
As Israel’s war in
Gaza enters its fourth month, an intensifying debate has unfolded about who should
rule the territory when the fighting stops. Some have suggested an Arab force,
a notion already rejected by Egypt, Jordan, and other Arab states. Others have
proposed a reconstructed Palestinian authority, ignoring the fact that less
than ten percent of Palestinians would support such an outcome, according to a
recent Palestinian poll. Yet a third idea is to put Gaza under international
control, an approach that has already been rejected by Israel, which does not
want to set such a precedent
But there is a larger
reason these envisioned solutions are doomed to fail: they all treat Gaza in
isolation as if it can be addressed without regard to the broader issue of
Palestinian statehood and self-determination. In this way of thinking, once
Hamas is made to disappear and once the question of who rules Gaza is answered,
there can be a return to the status quo ante. Both assumptions are
fundamentally flawed, and any policy based on them will lead to disaster.
To be truly durable,
a solution for the future of Gaza must be framed within a larger endgame for
all Palestinians under Israeli control. It must finally address the root cause
of unending violence: the Israeli occupation of East Jerusalem, Gaza, and the
West Bank. Years of failed negotiations have also made clear what such a plan
will require to succeed: unlike so many of its predecessors, it must be
credible and time-bound, and the endgame itself must be well-defined at the
outset.
Establishing such a
comprehensive process will require extraordinary effort. But the alternative is
far worse. The current war has already led to the killing of huge numbers of
civilians, the destruction of Gaza, the undermining of Israel’s security and international
support, the creation of another 1.5 million Palestinian refugees, and the
looming threat of a further mass transfer of Palestinians out of their
ancestral lands. Any attempt to resolve the day-after problem by reverting to
the old paradigms will simply invite these catastrophes to be repeated.
The Missing Endgame
To understand the
true scope of the day-after problem, it is first necessary to recognize that
the current conflict did not begin with Hamas’s attack on October 7. Nor
is it limited to Gaza alone. Although the Palestinian question begins with the
1948 war, in which an estimated 750,000 were dispossessed of their homes, the
best starting point for today’s crisis is the 1967 war. That conflict led to
Israel’s occupation of Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem and produced an
estimated 300,000 new Palestinian refugees. It also marked the beginning of
decades of efforts to end the occupation and establish a viable Palestinian
future.
The first such
attempt was UN Security Council Resolution 242, passed in November 1967.
Although the resolution referred to “the inadmissibility of the acquisition of
territory by war,” it did not envisage a separate Palestinian state. Instead,
Gaza was supposed to revert to Egyptian control and the West Bank to Jordanian
control. Nor did the resolution define a time frame for ending the occupation,
calling only for a political process that was open and not binding. Indirect
negotiations among the Jordanian, Egyptian, and Israeli sides were held through
a UN mediator, without any results.
Two and a half
decades later, the Madrid conference—launched by President George H. W. Bush in
1991 after the first Gulf War—finally brought the Palestinians directly to the
negotiating table. Once again, however, the process left the endgame unclear
beyond referring to Resolution 242, which was interpreted by Israel in a
drastically different way than by the international community. (Although the
resolution called for Israel to withdraw from occupied territories, Israel
interpreted this to mean not withdrawal from all such territories but only to
so-called safe borders it never specified.) Even after the Palestinians started
negotiating separately with Israel once the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin came to power in June 1992, the process never defined a separate
Palestinian state as the objective of negotiations.
Then came the Oslo
Accords in 1993, perhaps the most well-known of all of these peace efforts. In
this case, not only did the two sides mutually recognize each other and
establish a Palestinian interim authority in Gaza and parts of the West Bank,
but they also set up a five-year negotiation process toward a durable peace.
But although the process was supposed to result in a lasting solution to the
conflict, the parties failed to specify what that solution is: in other words,
the endgame was not clear at the outset. Moreover, the Oslo Accords did not
freeze settlement activity, meaning that the two sides were negotiating over
the future of the occupied territories even as one of them—the Israelis—was
continuing to change these territories’ geography and demographics. Indeed,
Rabin, in his last speech to the Knesset in September 1995, when the parliament
ratified the second part of the Oslo Accords, declared that Israel’s objective
was a Palestinian “entity which is less than a state.”
The conflict’s main
players did not agree on a two-state model until 2000, near the end of U.S.
President Bill Clinton’s tenure. At the time, Clinton presented the two sides
with an overall framework based on a Palestinian state, largely defined by the
1967 borders, that would be established alongside the state of Israel, with
special arrangements for Jerusalem, refugees, and security. When last-minute
negotiations over these parameters failed and the second intifada broke out,
both parties became convinced that they had no partners for peace at the other
end of the table. Successive efforts since then, including the 2002 Arab Peace
Initiative, the Middle East Road Map of 2002–2003, the 2007 Annapolis
conference, and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s shuttle diplomacy in
2013—the last official effort by the U.S. to help negotiate a settlement—have
all failed.
Although there are
many reasons why each of these rounds of negotiations ran aground, there were
larger shortcomings that were common to most of them: they were almost always
either open-ended or did not specify the endgame at the outset. They also lacked
a credible monitoring mechanism to make sure the parties were meeting their
stepwise obligations on the road to a permanent settlement. Moreover, on
numerous occasions, negotiations broke down over what the endgame should be,
rather than on the steps needed to reach that goal.
From Failure To Catastrophe
For Palestinians, the
consequences of these failures have been devastating. Israel has been able to
continue settlement activity, illegal under international law, in the occupied
West Bank and East Jerusalem (and, until 2005, in Gaza), absorbing Palestinian
land and rendering the establishment of a viable Palestinian state increasingly
difficult. Since the signing of the Oslo Accords, the Israeli settler
population has grown from about 250,000 to more than 750,000, almost a quarter
of the population in the entire West Bank and East Jerusalem, while the
relentless expansion of settlements has steadily broken up contiguous
Palestinian territory.
Amid these failed
negotiations, Gaza suffered a particularly harsh fate. In 2005, then-Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon decided to withdraw unilaterally from Gaza, ending
Israel’s direct military presence. However the Israeli government built a
security barrier around the territory to isolate it, and Israel continued to
control who went in and out of the strip. Israel also prevented its Palestinian
inhabitants from having an airport or a seaport, effectively cutting off Gaza
from the world. As a result, Israel’s occupation effectively continued, with
brutal consequences. After Hamas gained full control of the strip following a
split with the Palestinian Authority in 2007, living conditions further
deteriorated to the point where the per capita income of Gazans has been
reduced to a fraction of that of Palestinians in the West Bank.
Then, when the Obama
administration ended, the United States gave up on negotiations between the two
sides entirely. First under U.S. President Donald Trump and then under U.S.
President Joe Biden, Washington replaced peacemaking efforts with the Abraham
Accords, a series of bilateral treaties among several Arab states and Israel
that are not based on the “land for peace” formula derived from Resolution 242.
The Palestinians had no involvement at all. The Biden administration, in
particular, assumed that if it encouraged regional cooperation, peace between
Israelis and Palestinians could wait for better times. In turn, the Israeli
government used the accords to argue that it was no longer necessary to settle
with the Palestinians since they could forge separate agreements with Arab
states in the region.
This is the context
in which the October 7 attacks took place. Targeting civilians is abhorrent in
any scenario, regardless of which side is the perpetrator. But it is impossible
to ignore the reality that Gaza has become a giant, walled-off prison over the
last ten years, with millions of inmates who no longer had any reason to think
that the occupation would end.
Prerequisites For Peace
The Biden
administration has recognized that there will need to be a political process
after the war in Gaza ends. Guided by the October 1973 war, which ultimately
led to peace between Egypt and Israel, and the first Gulf War of 1991, which
led to the Madrid conference, the Biden administration has started to discuss
plans for the day after for Gaza. But if that thinking is limited to who rules
Gaza after Hamas, or if Washington commits to an open-ended process that simply
repeats the mistakes of earlier ones, the prospects for success are practically
nonexistent. Overwhelmingly, Palestinians today feel that they were taken for a
ride, engaging in peaceful efforts to end the occupation while Israel was
creating facts on the ground that make a two-state solution impossible. Thus,
any political process for Gaza has to be credible, time-bound, and with a
clearly defined endgame—before any negotiations start. Otherwise, it will
simply be a waste of time.
As of now, it is
crucial to acknowledge that the elements necessary for a serious U.S.-led
process are absent. The United States is entering an election year in which the
chances for launching a peace process that requires applying pressure on all
sides—particularly Israel—are remote. The current right-wing Israeli government
has also repeatedly and publicly declared that it has no intention of ending
the occupation or helping establish a Palestinian state. And although a
majority of Israelis indeed hold the current government responsible for the
security lapses on October 7—and polls indicate that the opposition would
handily win new elections if they were held tomorrow—the public divide in
Israel today is no longer between pro-peace and anti-peace camps, as it was
decades ago. Instead, it is merely between pro- and anti-Netanyahu camps, with
both sides holding a hard-line, almost identical stance against a Palestinian
state.
Meanwhile, the
Palestinian Authority has lost much of its credibility and legitimacy. It has
not held elections since 2006, and its approval rating was very low, even
before October 7. In a poll conducted during the brief cease-fire in Gaza in
late November, the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research found that
88 percent of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza want Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas to resign. Only seven percent want the PA under Abbas
to rule Gaza after the war. No side can claim to represent the Palestinians in
any political process without elections, but the PA, Israel, and the United
States will almost certainly oppose such elections in the near term, given that
Hamas might get a plurality of votes, as the poll suggests. While the same poll
indicates that figures like Marwan Barghouti enjoy wide support among both
Fatah and Hamas publics, it is doubtful that Israel would agree to his release,
precisely because the current government is not interested in a political deal.
But despite these
difficulties, it is worth setting down the specific elements that a credible
process would require so that Washington can avoid the pitfalls of past
negotiations. First, the United States should present a political plan that
would lay out a clearly defined objective of ending the occupation within a
specified time frame, say three to five years. Precise borders based on the
1967 lines with minor and reciprocal land swaps to accommodate the settlements
along the border would be subject to negotiations. The United Nations
would issue a resolution recognizing a Palestinian state based on the 1967
border, with details to be worked out through negotiations. New
settlement construction would be completely frozen.
Then, to carry out
this plan, negotiations would be focused on the steps needed to reach the
objective rather than on what the endgame looks like. Many of the necessary
possible steps are already in view. Referendums on the plan should be held in
Israel the West Bank and Gaza to establish and ensure popular support: voters
would go to the polls based on the plan’s clearly defined political horizon,
which might break the impression on both sides that a two-state solution is no
longer possible. In this framing, the issue of who rules Gaza would become a
step on the road to ending the occupation, rather than an endgame in itself: in
questions of governance, Gaza and the West should be treated as one.
Once such a process
is underway, both sides will have an incentive to reconsider solutions that were
rejected in the past because of the absence of an overall political framework
or a concrete timeline. For example, the reconstruction of Gaza could become a
step along the road to a final settlement, with parties such as Gulf states,
the European Union, and the World Bank ready to take part in ways they are not
today. (The case of Syria offers a useful lesson here: although the civil war
has been effectively over for nearly five years, little reconstruction has
taken place in the absence of a comprehensive plan for the future of the
country.) An international fund could be set up to help Palestinians in Gaza
and the West Bank stay on their land to alleviate fears among Palestinians that
they will be mass transferred outside of their historic territory. The Arab
Peace Initiative, which offered collective peace treaties and collective
security guarantees for Israel by all Arab states, could be then revived,
giving Arab states a political, security, and economic role in the Palestinian
territories and a strong incentive for Israelis to embrace the plan.
Although this outline
may seem ambitious, it is grounded in realism: its purpose is to show what a
serious political process will entail and to make clear that the failed
processes of the past cannot simply be resurrected. It is worth noting that
this plan leaves aside the still more difficult issue of what to do with the
existing settlements. Even if the political will exists on both sides to end
the occupation and adopt a two-state solution, coming up with an ingenious
solution to the settlement question will still be a daunting task. If the
international community decides this overall plan is too unrealistic to
achieve, they should weigh the costs of the alternatives.
From Bad To Worse
If, at the end of the
war in Gaza, a serious political process proves impossible to put into play,
three alternative scenarios could unfold. First, the parties could revert to
waiting for a quieter, better time—much as the United States did for years leading
up to the October 7 attacks. This strategy, if returned to now, would certainly
fail. It assumes that a two-state solution is ultimately the preferred outcome
for all parties and that it is simply a matter of having the right political
forces in power to make it happen. But in Israel, support in the Knesset for a
peace agreement to share the land has dropped from a majority of members 30
years ago to no more than 15 members today. Moreover, the logic of waiting
assumes that there is a static status quo, which is not the case given Israel’s
continued expansion of settlements. If the number of settlers today already
makes it extremely difficult to separate the two communities into two states,
the situation could become irreversibly worse in a few years, once the settler
population exceeds one million.
A second alternative,
in the absence of a serious political process, could be even worse: a mass
transfer of Palestinians out of their historic land either through force or by
making Palestinian life in the occupied territories untenable or unbearable. The
reason that such a drastic outcome needs to be taken seriously is the
demographic reality Israel now faces: the number of Palestinian Arabs in areas
under Israel’s control is now 7.4 million—greater than the 7.2 million Israeli
Jews inside Israel and the occupied territories. Given that Israel at present
does not want to end the occupation and accept a two-state solution, and given
that it does not want to become a minority ruling over a majority in what many
human rights organizations describe as apartheid, then its preferred option
will be to transfer huge numbers of Palestinians out of territories under
Israeli control: from Gaza into Egypt and from the West Bank into Jordan.
Already, the Israeli
government has made clear that it is thinking along these lines. Large parts of
Gaza have been rendered practically uninhabitable, and several Israeli cabinet
ministers, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu himself, have directly
or indirectly promoted the idea of moving Palestinians to other countries.
Several Israeli and international commentators have also portrayed the Egyptian
and Jordanian decisions to close their borders to Palestinians as an inhumane
act, perhaps to pressure both states into letting Palestinians flee. But the
Israeli government would then bar them from coming back.
However, any attempt
at mass transfer will not be easy to implement. Jordan and Egypt have already
drawn international attention to this scenario, to the point where the United
States and other countries have publicly come out in strong opposition. Palestinians
themselves also appear uninterested in leaving, having learned from 1948, when
750,000 were forced to leave their land and were never permitted to return.
That leaves a third
and most likely alternative: continued Israeli occupation, but now under even
more unsustainable conditions. Palestinians have a birth rate higher than that
of Jewish Israelis, and as they increasingly lose hope for the prospect of a Palestinian
state, their demands for equal rights with Israelis will grow louder and more
insistent. The conflict could then become more violent. According to the
Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research poll, 63 percent of
Palestinians today say they would support armed resistance to end the
occupation. Such resistance had already started in the West Bank in the months
before October 7, with young, leaderless youth taking up arms and shooting at
Israelis.
Moreover, if it
chooses to continue the occupation, Israel’s challenge won’t just be internal.
The country is also confronting an emerging younger generation in the United
States and many other Western countries that have shown it is far more
supportive of Palestinians and the issue of equal rights than its predecessors.
As this generation rises to positions of power, the world will become
increasingly critical of the Israeli occupation, and the focus will shift from
defining an illusory peace settlement to tackling the problem of deep injustice
in indefinitely occupied lands. It is also likely to make Israel increasingly
isolated on the world stage.
This is where a
continuation of the status quo will likely end. The international community is
certainly partly to blame for all the violence that is unfolding today. By
abandoning any serious attempt to address the underlying causes of conflict in
recent years, Western leaders, as well as governments in the region, have
helped create the untenable situation that now exists. Another process may be
initiated along the lines of many earlier ones. If that happens, it, too, will
fail, and violence will continue to define the world of the Israelis and
Palestinians. Either the United States and its international partners must make
a historic decision to end the conflict now and move both sides swiftly toward
a viable two-state solution, or the world will have to contend with an even
darker future. Soon, it will no longer be a question of occupation but the more
difficult issue of outright apartheid. The choice cannot be clearer.
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