The unending flow of god-awful news from Israel-Palestine
grew predictably worse today with Bibi Netanyahu’s announcement that Israel would stay in Gaza after the current war for some period of time. Staying, in this context, means controlling, or more precisely, seeking to control. This runs counter to the Biden administration’s recommendations that the Palestinian Authority, which has nominal control over part of the West Bank, should be assigned to that task. The problem with that recommendation is that the Palestinian Authority is widely and correctly viewed as a de facto agent of the Israeli government in its efforts to suppress
expressions of Palestinian discontent in the territories over which it has jurisdiction. The other problem is that Palestinians have experienced decades of the PA’s corruption, which means decades in which governmental aid has often not reached its intended Palestinian recipients. Moreover, just like Hamas, the PA has not held any elections over the past 16 years. The rickety state of the PA’s legitimacy has long been one of Bibi’s and the Israeli right’s chief policy goals. As the PA does not pursue the exterminist policies of Hamas, it’s long been a potential partner for some
kind of two-state solution—the very solution that’s anathema to Israeli settlers and Bibi himself. Under Bibi’s long tenure as prime minister, Israel has steadily uprooted and isolated Palestinian West Bank communities and rejected any possible settlement of the conflict that the PA could support. By contrast, until last month, Bibi’s government thought it had a deal of sorts with Hamas, in which Hamas would keep things quiet in return for Israel’s continued opposition to any two-state resolution, which made Hamas’s support for a Nakba-in-reverse appear to some Palestinians as no less likely than a two-state deal.
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