By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Day After
In early April, in
the seventh month of Israel’s campaign to dismantle Hamas, the Israel Defense
Forces (IDF) withdrew the majority of its ground troops from the Gaza Strip,
leaving just one brigade in the central part. This included pulling Israeli
forces out of Khan Younis, the sprawling area in southern Gaza below which U.S.
intelligence officials believe Hamas leader Yahya
Sinwar is hiding in an extensive tunnel network. In explaining the decision
to pull these soldiers out, Israeli officials pointed to their military
campaign’s success in destroying 18 of Hamas’s 24 battalions. Israeli forces
needed time to rest before returning to Rafah in the southernmost part of Gaza
to dismantle the four Hamas battalions based there. For several weeks, daily
life in Gaza was not dominated by continuous airstrikes and ground forces
maneuvering. But neither humanitarian groups nor civilians knew where to look
for basic security, for no one was running Gaza.
That is why some UN
officials now refer to Gaza as “Mogadishu on the Mediterranean.” In some areas,
remnants of Hamas-run ministries are providing services or diverting
humanitarian aid, while in others criminal networks loot and then distribute
it. Elsewhere, communities and humanitarian groups are contracting with armed
groups other than Hamas to provide security. Gaza is an ungoverned space with
parallel and competing authority structures taking root. The conditions for
long-term instability have already emerged.
In the same month as
generalized lawlessness spread across the strip, The New
York Times reported that consultancies, development
agencies, and financial institutions had begun expansive planning
efforts for Gaza’s reconstruction. Talks were held in London in December 2023,
bringing together development experts, private-sector representatives, and
international financiers to map out an alternative future for Gaza. Under this
plan, Gaza would have a deep water port, its currency, and a soccer stadium.
But basic matters—including ensuring that Hamas has no role in this modern
economy, establishing a political framework for governing, and determining
Gaza’s connection to the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank—were not
discussed. Meanwhile, Israel refuses to plan for what will come after its
forces leave Gaza.
The paucity of
realistic solutions for the “day after” in Gaza reflects a more troubling
absence of planning. Observers are paying attention to the wrong day. What
matters most is the “day in between,” when the flow of civilian support and
services beyond emergency humanitarian aid is needed, even as IDF military
operations continue. This support—which will require Israeli political resolve
to plan and to prioritize Palestinians, combined with international expertise
and funding—will be critical to ensuring that the “day in between” is not
wasted.
Over The Horizon
When officials and
commentators talk about the “day after,” they are referencing the period of
time after Israel ends its active military operations to dismantle Hamas’s
military infrastructure. In this “day after” scenario, the expectation is that
the IDF will have effectively collapsed Hamas as an organized entity, leaving
it unable to govern the Gaza Strip. It is also expected that there will be an
agreement, acceptable to Arab capitals, Israel, the United States, and
international bodies, to create a security force on the ground, a framework for
non-Hamas governance, a plan for increased humanitarian aid delivery and
distribution, and funding for stabilization and reconstruction.
Such an ambitious
plan for postwar Gaza requires detailed planning and sequencing,
civilian-military coordination, and international support that should have
started concurrently with the IDF campaign in Gaza in October 2023. But Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has intentionally avoided that kind of
planning, seeing it as a concession that relieves pressure on Hamas. That,
however, should not keep Israel from planning for the “day in between”—or what
organizations such as RAND refer to as the “golden hour.” This is weeks and
months immediately after active military operations end but before long-term
reconstruction begins. This short period is critical because it sets the
post-conflict recovery on either a positive or a negative trajectory.
Recent history is
rife with examples of failures to plan for this period directly contributing to
bad actors seizing opportunities, accelerating insurgencies, enabling
terrorism, and inflaming additional cycles of violence. U.S. officials are
aware of how difficult it is to effectively stabilize a post-conflict society
and prevent an insurgency. To that end, the U.S. State and Defense Departments
have repeatedly offered to share lessons learned and best practices with
Israeli counterparts. Not only has Israel declined to learn from this body of
knowledge and experience on the sequencing of activities to prevent the worst
outcomes for post-conflict societies but it also appears that Israel is on
track to repeat the same mistakes.
Untapped Expertise
There is an extensive
and easily accessible body of scholarship focused on learning from past
failures to plan post-conflict activities. This makes it even more remarkable
that discussions on post-Hamas Gaza are so underdeveloped. U.S. and UN
experiences in Somalia in 1992, Haiti in 1994, Bosnia in 1995, Kosovo in 1999,
Afghanistan in 2001, and Iraq in 2003 provided valuable experience and
information for international organizations, nongovernmental groups, and the
U.S. government. These organizations and bodies devoted significant time and
resources to restructuring planning efforts, training personnel, and
documenting the decisions, or lack of decisions, that led to unsuccessful
outcomes when seeking to stabilize and reconstruct societies after deadly conflicts.
At the height of the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, for example, when the U.S. armed forces failed to
plan for armed insurgencies and governance vacuums, U.S.-government-funded
bodies focused on ensuring that lessons were learned. Since 2005, the U.S. Institute
of Peace (USIP) has convened a group of civilian and military experts in
humanitarian crises and relief and recovery efforts. This group has argued
persuasively that uniformed military personnel are warfighters, not peace
builders—although they frequently find themselves responsible for postwar
activities before civilian workers arrive on the ground. The trouble is that
these civilians are not included in warfighting planning, leaving them to try
to insert themselves into military chains of command to manage inherently
nonmilitary activities. In 2009, USIP released a manual called “Guiding
Principles for Stabilization and Reconstruction.” This manual argued that
civilians lack doctrine and road maps for working in the unique context of
post-conflict environments alongside active-duty troops. In 2011, USIP opened
the Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding to offer
continuous training for U.S. government employees, so that past failures would
not be repeated.
In 2004, the U.S.
State Department, recognizing that its personnel lacked the knowledge and
skills necessary to effectively conduct diplomacy, development, and military
coordination in post-conflict situations, opened a new entity called the Office
of the Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization, or CRS. The following
year, CRS published a list of more than 100 essential tasks for post-conflict
reconstruction, including ending hostilities, disarmament, interim policing,
and clearing unexploded ordnance, as well as building transitional governance,
civil service staffing, and famine prevention. In 2011, the CRS office became a
bureau, and today it is led by a Senate-confirmed assistant secretary. It has
the personnel and expertise to partner with the Israeli government and support
a planning process that effectively addresses immediate postwar needs in Gaza.
The bureau could also leverage its international relationships to support
planning for post-Hamas Gaza.
In 2018, the U.S.
secretary of state, secretary of defense, and USAID administrator jointly
released a “stabilization assistance review” to streamline U.S. government
efforts in conflict-affected areas. This review noted that more than half of
conflicts that “achieve peace” fall back into violence, and warned that without
political stability longer-term development efforts are unlikely to be
successful. The review called for civilian stabilization experts to coordinate
with their military counterparts through “institutionalized mechanisms,” and
observed that “stabilization is an inherently political endeavor that requires
aligning U.S. Government efforts—diplomatic engagement, foreign assistance, and
defense—toward supporting locally legitimate authorities and systems to
peaceably manage conflict and prevent violence.” It also argued that
stabilization planning should be integrated with military plans from the
beginning and warned that counterterrorism operations can have a destabilizing
effect. The conclusions, recommendations, and warnings from the 2018 review are
yet another example of readily available expertise that Israel appears to be
willfully setting aside in the case of Gaza.
Seize The Moment
The golden hour is
the critical period that is missing in Gaza planning. During this period, those
on the ground will be traumatized and the social contract broken. Humanitarian
aid may be available, but no occupant of Gaza will readily accept a life of waiting
in lines for foreigners to distribute assistance. Civilians will want to
understand the plan and who will be responsible for implementing it. They will
want to know if they can go home and what remains for them to return to. They
will want information on whether they will be safe and on what authority will
organize essential services and respond to their needs as they seek to rebuild
their lives. Without confidence that there is a plan, armed groups and foreign
powers will move in and create parallel structures that set conditions for
further instability. This is the opportunity that Hamas, Iran, and others are
cynically waiting to exploit.
A 2020 RAND study,
“Seizing the Golden Hour,” states that in this short period “first impressions
are established, expectations are created, and local support and resistance
begin to coalesce.” The report identifies dynamics that affect the trajectory
of the post-conflict period. It highlights the need for the United States and
its partners to provide reassurance that there will be sufficient protection
for a new political order, as well as long-term political and financial
support. Armed remnants of the pre-war regime must be co-opted or disrupted
before they have an opportunity to create alternative or illicit networks. Most
alarming is RAND’s conclusion that in every post–Cold War U.S.-led intervention
a larger force was required on the ground to stabilize the situation than was
used to fight the war itself. If the IDF will not be on the ground in large
numbers and there is no consensus on a postwar security force, the golden hour
will be lost.
Israel is already
running risks by not planning for the golden hour. The IDF withdrew most of its
forces from northern Gaza in January as it progressed south, declaring that
Hamas battalions in the north were dismantled. As IDF forces left northern
Gaza, the U.S. director of the UN World Food Program, Cindy McCain, declared
that this area was already in “full-blown famine.” Then, in May, the IDF
returned in large numbers to Gaza City and the Jabalia refugee camp, areas
previously declared free of Hamas, to address renewed terrorist activity.
Without a credible security presence and a plan to provide for the needs of the
civilian population in northern Gaza, Hamas and others will continuously
return, filling the governance and security gaps.
Send In The Peacemakers
The United States has
painfully learned that without a civilian-centric approach to stabilizing an
area after war, any military accomplishment will be fleeting. The Israeli
campaign in Gaza is at risk of not only squandering opportunities during the
golden hour but also of missing the opportunity to set conditions for postwar
recovery in Gaza that will be critical for Israel’s security. These are all
mistakes that have been made elsewhere by the United States, the UN, and
others. It is a political decision to disregard the weight of historical
experience when it comes to planning and decision-making for post-Hamas Gaza.
To reverse this
trajectory in Gaza, civilian-focused activities must be elevated to the same
priority as military operations. Most urgent, Israel must articulate a proposal
for a law enforcement presence that it finds acceptable and meets the minimum
conditions necessary to provide services to Palestinian civilians and an
alternative to Hamas. This proposal has the best chance for success if it is
internationally recognized and supported by the United States and Arab
capitals, including Abu Dhabi, Amman, Cairo, and Riyadh. Second, outside
stakeholders committed to preventing Hamas’ resurgence, including Israel, the
Palestinian Authority, and the United States need a partner on the ground that
retains legitimacy in the eyes of civilians to distribute aid and begin other
essential activities, including rubble clearance and explosive ordnance
disposal. This could be done under the same international mandate, with
Israeli, U.S., regional, and international support. Finally, Israel’s governing
coalition must identify civilian leads within the Israeli government to relieve
the IDF from the primary decision-making role in postwar Gaza. Then genuine
civilian-military planning must begin.
Israel’s campaign
against Hamas has only military benchmarks, foremost among which is collapsing the
terrorist organization’s command-and-control structure. This is to be achieved
by targeting Hamas’s fighters, neutralizing its terror tunnel infrastructure,
and eliminating its top leaders. But with only these metrics to assess progress
and with two of them—tunnel neutralization and leadership elimination—nowhere
near completion, Israel risks focusing on the elimination of threats rather
than on formulating a proactive vision for what replaces Hamas.
Netanyahu has stated
that Israel does not want to occupy Gaza in the long term. Israel shares the
goal with Arab capitals, the United States, and other countries that Hamas
should not be able to return to power, impose a stranglehold over Gaza, and
export terrorism. This suggests that there is still political space for unity
on post-Hamas governance in Gaza. The sequencing is key: first, an interim
multinational or UN-led mission must be established, which should eventually
hand over governance responsibility to a Palestinian-led entity.
Who Governs?
Two urgent tasks
remain. The first is forming a law enforcement presence in Gaza, both
immediately and in the long-term. If order cannot be maintained, no meaningful
stabilization and recovery activities can take place. Arab capitals that have
ties to Israel through peace treaties or normalization agreements may be
willing to contribute personnel, equipment, and funding for the post-Hamas
security presence. But first they will need reassurance from Israel that
Palestinian civilians are a priority, that the IDF will not jeopardize the
safety of this law enforcement presence, and that there is a roadmap for
postwar Gaza recovery and an international framework for Palestinian
self-determination. Because local solutions are the most enduring, Palestinian
forces should ultimately protect Palestinian civilians. Security forces
associated with the Palestinian Authority should begin training now, with the
assistance of the U.S. Security Coordinator in Israel and Jordan.
The second urgent
task is achieving consensus on a governing framework for Gaza. To coordinate
postwar activities and demonstrate to local communities that there is a
credible alternative to Hamas, an internationally empowered and resourced
entity should be positioned to immediately take action and prioritize civilian
engagement. The Wilson Center, for example, recently proposed that a
multi-national authority and international contact group administer Gaza, under
an international charter that provides legitimacy for the mission. Members of
the group could include the G7, some Arab capitals, the United States and
perhaps Asian treaty allies including Japan and the Republic of Korea. The
Palestinian Authority should have a role, but it will first need regional
support and pressure to address its own weaknesses. A multinational
governing mission, eventually transitioning to a Palestinian-led entity,
appears to be the best option at this point in the war. This mission will need
to partner with local actors, including former Palestinian Authority civil
servants, aligned with the goal of building a non-Hamas governing framework for
Gaza. Israel has successfully coordinated with Gaza-based Palestinian business
leaders and non-Hamas civil servants in the past, meaning that the necessary
local cadre exists today and is best positioned to be trusted by Gaza’s
civilian population. Israel can accelerate this process by readying vetted
lists of civil servants and businesspeople to coordinate with, and supporting
cooperation mechanisms between these individuals and the multinational
governing mission so that planning and sequencing are underway.
Reorganizing Israeli
roles and responsibilities for Gaza will also be necessary if the golden hour
is not to be squandered. Today, daily oversight of the West Bank and Gaza is
conducted by COGAT or the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories.
COGAT is within the Ministry of Defense and has the Israeli lead for
coordinating humanitarian assistance into Gaza, retaining the primary role for
civilian issues in the West Bank. But COGAT has never led a postwar
stabilization mission and has not invested in the personnel, skills, or
relationships with international partners required to successfully implement
such a mission. Retaining COGAT as the Israeli lead for postwar activities in
Gaza risks failing to learn the lesson that uniformed military actors are not
best positioned to lead inherently civilian tasks. Reconstructing Gaza will
require civilian partners. As months of planning for postwar Gaza have already
been lost, a civilian-military planning cell that includes diplomatic,
development, and security representatives from Arab capitals, Israel, the
Palestinian Authority, the UN, and the United States should convene
immediately. It must build relationships and organizational ties so that
coordination mechanisms are in place for the golden hour.
Finally, responding
to urgent needs in Gaza and enabling long-term reconstruction will require
funding and resources. The UN Development Program has described the
reconstruction requirements for Gaza as the most significant since World War II
and estimates that it will cost tens of billions of dollars. This funding will
be possible only through an international, pooled mechanism. There are plenty
of examples across the UN and international financial institutions of -funding
programs, including when, in 2022, the World Bank mobilized financial
commitments and pledges for Ukraine to support civil servant salaries, public
health initiatives, infrastructure repair, and flexible funding facilities for
relief and reconstruction efforts. The maritime route from Cyprus to Gaza for
delivering humanitarian aid is already operating on a pooled funding scheme,
approved by Israel. This offers helpful proof that when political will align
with the recognition of urgent needs for Gaza, countries can cooperate on
funding. This alignment will be crucial to ensuring that the critical golden
hour is not squandered.
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