When the security cabinet meets Sunday to finish its discussion on how
to grapple with the Kassams from Gaza, one hopes that beyond dealing
with the very acute problem of how to reduce the rocket attacks on
Sderot, it will also take up the issue of how Israel will react if the
Palestinian Authority collapses.
For the spiraling anarchy inside Gaza is not something Israel can watch
from outside. A collapse of the PA as a government, something that the
events of the last few days have shown is a real possibility, would
have far-reaching strategic ramifications for Israel and could
fundamentally change the two-state concept that has underpinned Israeli
policy since 1993 and the Oslo Accords.
Since that time, successive governments have adhered to a strategic
approach based on the idea that if Israel wished to remain a Jewish and
democratic state, it was not in its long-term strategic interest to
continue to control the 1.3 million Palestinians in Gaza, or the 2.5m.
Palestinians in the West Bank.
But at the same time, said Gidi Grinstein, head of the Tel Aviv-based
Reut think tank, certain factions inside Palestinian society were not
interested in the two-state solution. They were, he said Thursday,
interested in drawing Israel back into Gaza, perpetuating Israeli
occupation, believing that this would lead to Israel's collapse from
within.
In a paper Reut published last November, Grinstein wrote that the aim
of this strategy "is to establish one Palestinian/Arab/Islamic state in
place of Israel through actions that will bring about Israel's internal
collapse as a state."
According to this strategy, "the occupation accelerates Israel's
implosion and therefore should be sustained. Either way, the Hamas
government in and of itself serves the 'Strategy of Implosion' because
it creates a political deadlock, deepens the Palestinian crisis of
representation, and erodes the PA's capacity to govern."
Grinstein, who was an adviser to Ehud Barak when Barak served as prime
minister, said that the collapse of the PA - a situation of
"non-governance there" - was bad for Israel. "We will have no one to
talk to, and too many people to shoot at," he said.
"There are groups, Palestinian and Muslim Arabs, who are beginning to
question whether their immediate goal should really be to try to push
Israel out of the West Bank, and who are saying that the continuation
of the occupation may accelerate Israel's implosion," he said.
Grinstein noted that over the last year, there has not been any
significant pressure on Israel from the PA, or from the Arab world, to
get out of the West Bank.
"We got used to an environment where there were powerful forces pushing
us out of the West Bank," he said, saying that these voices have been
silent for the last year.
Because of some of the Palestinian factions' desire that Israel remain
an occupying force, the threat of the IDF moving back into Gaza is a
hollow one. That's what they want, Grinstein said.
To support this argument, Grinstein quoted Damascus-based Hamas head
Khaled Mashaal, who said in March 2006 that Hamas has always seen the
establishment of the PA "as a mistake."
He said that Hamas would not "hesitate to declare the dissolution of
the PA and the return back to square one: that of being under
occupation."
The philosophy that Israel can be defeated easier from within than in a
military attack from outside is also shared by Hizbullah's Hassan
Nasrallah and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Grinstein said he doubted whether the current chaos was premeditated by
Hamas to provoke an Israeli response that would draw it back into Gaza,
but that local events - such as clan feuds over weapons and drug
smuggling - have a dangerous momentum of their own, and that other
issues can piggyback on them.
Faced with the possibility that the PA could collapse, Israel is
essentially faced with two unattractive choices: drop the three
conditions established when Hamas came into power and deal with a
Hamas-led PA, under the logic that some address is better than none at
all, or side with Fatah in its battle with Hamas.
Original
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What a PA collapse would mean for Israel
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