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Martin Sherman

Gaza 2040: If Not Incentivized Emigration, What?


Illustration: Rafah Border Crossing to Gaza by Al Jazeera English [CC BY-SA 2.0] via Wikimedia

Illustration: Rafah Border Crossing to Gaza by Al Jazeera English [CC BY-SA 2.0] via Wikimedia

INTO THE FRAY: The current situation in Gaza — and the accompanying misery — are the direct result of the misguided attempt to foist statehood on the Palestinian Arabs.

…Arafat was sober, businesslike, almost in awe of the scale of the problems that he faces in turning this impoverished strip of land into the paradise that many of his people expect will come from self-rule

Los Angeles Times (July 2, 1994) – On Yasser Arafat’s return to Gaza following the signing of the Oslo Accords.

We predicted some years ago that Gaza would fast become unlivable on a host of indicators and that deadline is actually approaching even faster than we predicted — from health access, to energy to water

Robert Piper, Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations Development Coordination, The Times of Israel (July 11, 2017)

We cannot solve our problems with the same level of thinking that created them

An aphorism attributed to Albert Einstein

Over a quarter-century has passed since Israel first permitted the arch-terrorist, Yasser Arafat, access to the Gaza Strip in July 1994. He entered the coastal enclave in jubilant triumph to the cheers of thousands who lined the streets and squares to welcome him. The mood of euphoria reflected the naïve optimism of the time, which, as some more sober souls warned, soon proved tragically unfounded.

Gaza: The ultimate indictment of the two-state prescription Of course, it was a euphoria (read “myopia”) that was not confined to the Gazan side of the border. Thus, for example the Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres, widely considered the driving force behind the Oslo Process, was quoted at the time as expressing satisfaction with Arafat's performance as a peace partner. According to Peres: “The test is in the doing and as things have been done until now, things are going beautifully… Until now it must be said that of all the Palestinian leaders, Arafat … delivered the goods."

Sadly, but not entirely unexpectedly — at least for those who opposed the Oslo process — life for the average Gazan has been in a steep downward spiral — particularly after the 2005 unilateral evacuation of the Strip by Israel.

In many ways, Gaza has become the ultimate indictment of the two-state, land-for-peace prescription. After all, after over two and a half decades, despite almost unanimous international support and massive financial aid, the attempt to foist self-governance on Gaza has failed dismally. When it became clear that there was little chance of a bilateral, negotiated settlement, Israel embarked on a rash, ill-considered unilateral evacuation, razing all trace of Jewish presence — except for the synagogues, which the Gazan mobs swiftly desecrated and destroyed.

Diversion of resources from civilian sector to military

But rather than turn their energies towards developing their society and economy, the Gazans focused on devoting their resources and efforts to enhancing their abilities for aggression against Israel — with missiles and rockets, terror tunnels and fortifications. This massive diversion of resources from civilian development to mustering military might has had a severe effect on the Gazan man-in-the-street. I have written in some detail elsewhere on the grim conditions prevailing in Gaza — see for example here, here, here and here.

Accordingly, it will suffice here to point out that the gross misgovernment of Gaza has left the general population awash in untreated sewage flows, with well over 90% of the water supply unfit for drinking, electrical power available for only a few hours a day (despite Qatari dollars, now rumored to be drastically cut back), and unemployment rates soaring to anything between 40-60% — depending on the source cited or the sector involved.

The magnitude of this failure can be gauged from a detailed report by the Congressional Research Service entitled “U.S. Foreign Aid to the Palestinians”: “Since the establishment of limited Palestinian self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the mid-1990s, the U.S. government has committed more than $5 billion in bilateral economic and non-lethal security assistance to the Palestinians, who are among the world’s largest per capita recipients of international foreign aid.”

The futility of international aid

The report goes on to stipulate the intended objectives of this generous aid: “Successive administrations have requested aid for the Palestinians in apparent support of at least three major U.S. policy priorities of interest to Congress:

- Promoting the prevention or mitigation of terrorism against Israel from… Hamas and other militant organizations; - Fostering stability, prosperity, and self-governance… that may incline Palestinians toward peaceful coexistence with Israel and a “two-state solution.” -Meeting humanitarian needs….”

Seen against the grim realities that prevail — and have prevailed unabated for decades, this aid has failed miserably in achieving any, and all, of its declared goals!

The motivation for terror attacks against Israel by Hamas and other Palestinian-Arab terror organizations has been neither prevented nor mitigated. Indeed, with Hamas still actively engaged in enhancing its offensive capacities and inciting violence on the frontier fence, there are few illusions in Israel that a further round of fighting is merely a question of “when”, not “if.”

Neither stability, nor prosperity, nor effective self-government have been in any way significantly fostered. Moreover, humanitarian needs have not been met in any meaningful manner. If anything, the opposite seems true. With the power shortages crippling the delivery of water supplies and sewage treatment, and undermining the regular operation of sanitation services, the entire civilian infrastructure system seems teetering on the cusp of collapse.

As the living conditions in Gaza deteriorate for all, except for a privileged few, an increasing number of reports warn that the entire Strip will become unfit for human habitation in the foreseeable future — see, for example, here, here, and here.

Indeed, it should be pointed out that this dismal situation has been reached despite the fact that Israel is providing the hostile Gazans, whose leaders called on them to rip out the hearts of the Israelis and to eat their livers, with significant amounts of power and water — with the latter being constrained more by Gaza’s poorly maintained infrastructure rather than by any limits on Israeli largesse.

What fate Gaza?

This, of course, should concentrate minds on what fate awaits Gaza and Gazans in 15-20 years’ time.

Without getting embroiled in the polemics of what the precise population of Gaza is, in terms of broad approximations, most official estimates put the current population at around 1.85 million. With an estimated rate of growth just under 3%, the projected population will soon top two million. Whatever the real accuracy of these figures, the picture they paint is a dire one — the dwindling of already insufficient life sustaining resources and a rapid growth of the population consuming them.

So the question that must be addressed is: What can be done to avert the human catastrophe that almost inevitably will befall the hapless entity and its people?

This is no trivial matter, since the bilateral Oslowian negotiations have failed; the unilateral Disengagement has only exacerbated the situation; generous financial aid has not helped avert the impending disaster and the attempt to “manage the conflict,” rather than resolve it, has seen the enmity in Gaza evolve from being a terrorist nuisance to a strategic threat of dimensions unimagined when Israel abandoned it in 2005.

The Quarantine: Consequence, not cause

Of course, many of Israel’s detractors will attempt to lay the blame for this bleak situation on the “Occupation” and the “Siege.” But, this is merely a flimsy pretext, that is sounding increasingly hollow and must be rejected for at least three reasons. Firstly, much of the hardship is created by intra-Palestinian in-fighting between Ramallah-based Fatah and Gaza-based Hamas. Secondly, in large part, the crisis is a result of intra-Palestinian decisions regarding resource allocation and taxation. Several reports indicate that Hamas has deprived Gaza’s water production and sewage plants of electricity, opting to use the available power for other purposes — such as Gaza’s luxury hotels, which cater for the enclave’s wafer thin affluent class. Moreover, two years after Operation Protective Edge, high level Israeli sources revealed that Hamas was seizing up to 95% of the imported cement supplies entering Gaza for its own purposes, such as construction of terror tunnels.

Thirdly, the quarantine of Gaza is the consequence, not the cause, of Arab violence against the Jewish state. Accordingly, demands to remove it are inherently anti-Semitic since they imply Jews should die meekly and give their Judeocidal enemies unfettered access to their compliant victims.

Wide-spread desire to emigrate

This brings us back to the thorny question of Gaza’s future.

After all, in light of the repeated failure of all that has been tried, there seems little point in persisting with similar measures — unless of course one believes that, at some unspecified time, the Palestinian Arabs of Gaza will, for some unspecified reason, and by some unspecified process, morph into something they have not been for over 100 years — and show no signs of morphing into in the foreseeable future.

But, what if such an unlikely metamorphosis fails to materialize? What then?

In light of the evermore harrowing living conditions and inclement prospects for the future, it is hardly surprising to learn that there is accumulating evidence that more and more Gazans desire to leave the Strip and seek their future elsewhere. It is this emerging propensity that holds the clue to arriving at the only conceivable policy that can allow the Gazan public to extricate itself from its increasingly daunting predicament.

In this regard, I have been repeatedly excoriated for suggesting that the only durable non-kinetic solution for Gaza that is consistent with Israel’s survival as the nation-state of the Jewish people, and that does not entail forcible expulsion of the Gazan population, is that of incentivized emigration to third party countries.

Such opposition is puzzling, since my proposal would appear to be consistent with the desire of a large section of the Gazan population. After all, polls conducted by a leading Palestinian institute consistently show that almost half (and occasionally more) of the Gazans wish to emigrate — even without there being any tangible economic incentives offered.

Gaza: What would Albert Einstein say?

The current situation in Gaza — and the accompanying misery — are the direct result of the misguided attempt to foist statehood on the Palestinian Arabs.

It was Albert Einstein who reportedly remarked that one can not solve a problem with the level of thinking that created it. The problem of Gaza was, irrefutably, created by the belief that land could be transferred to the Palestinian-Arabs to provide them a viable opportunity for self-governance. Accordingly, the problem of Gaza cannot be solved by persisting with ideas that created it — i.e., persisting with a plan to provide the Palestinian Arabs with land for self-governance. This concept must, therefore, be abandoned for any lasting solution to be possible.

Clearly then, persisting with humanitarian aid, as in the past, will yield essentially similar results to those of the past. Any improvements in the humanitarian conditions will be at best marginal, probably imperceptible.

The only real way to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is to offer the Gazans what they really want — a better life elsewhere, out of harm’s way, free from the clutches of the cruel, corrupt cliques, who have led them from disaster to disaster for decades.

Thus, rather than pouring millions into inoperative desalination plants and rusting sewage treatment works, the aid should be in the form of generous individual relocation grants to allow non-belligerent Gazans to seek a safer, more secure future elsewhere, outside the “circle of violence” that inevitably awaits them if they stay.

Indeed, if there is any other way — that has not been tried before and failed — to address the predicament in Gaza — i.e., an increasing population reliant on decreasing resources — I would be more than intrigued to learn of it.

 
Dr. Martin Sherman (PR Photo)

Martin Sherman is the founder and executive director of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies. Click here to read more of this writer’s work in The Jerusalem Herald.

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