You responded to my opening paragraph by saying the 2005 withdrawal of the Israeli settlers from Gaza was a dress rehearsal for a Palestinian State and completely ignored my point about the importance of economic viability and the powers of a state over borders, immigration, etc.
I did not ignore it. Gazans did not give the process a chance because they kept attacking Israel. You can't fault Israel for not working toward Gaza's "economic prosperity" or for not giving them progressively more autonomy when Gazans are shooting rockets into Israel.
Show me the timeline you are using. And then show me what changed when Palestinians began growing crops in those greenhouses and trying to get them to market, other than it no longer being Israeli Jews doing it.
Israel honoring its agreement to keep the Karni Crossing open and allowing Gazans to export flowers and produce is hardly Israel "working toward Gaza's economic prosperity." It's Israel getting out of the way so the Gazan's can work for it themselves.
I believe you did that in order to gloss over Israel maintaining a choke hold on Gaza and strangling the Gazan economy whenever the Israeli government wanted to demonstrate its power to cut off water, electricity, and the movement of goods into and out of the Strip.
Most of water Gazans have been using has always come form the Coastal Aquifer. But Gaza has been increasing in population exponentially for decades, in large part as a demographic weapon against Israel. But that has a consequence that the Coastal Aquifer got overdrawn. It is not Israel's fault that Gaza has overbred itself beyond the Strip's carrying capacity - it's the fault of Gazans having 5 children or more. You saw in during this war - all the sob stories about the "father of seven" or even the "mother of eleven". That is not sustainable.
As far as electricity, why should Israel be compelled to export electricity to a polity that is actively attacking it and has a stated goal to destroy it?
More glossing over of the choke hold with an extra side of victim blaming. And of course, the usual handwaving of collective punishments and imprisoning people due to their race/religion/ethnicity.
Israel is compelled to provide electricity to Gaza because it has made the Gazans completely reliant on Israel for everything, including food, medicine, and electricity.
IMO the Gazans should be allowed to generate electricity themselves, which they were doing before Israel blew up
the power plant. The Gazans repaired the plant and were generating electricity again when Israel blew it up a second time. The Gazans brought the plant back online but it shut down when Israel imposed a blockade and did not allow fuel to be delivered to the Strip.
So now the Gazans are utterly reliant on Israel to provide electricity and Israel can (and does) restrict when it's available. That's part of the stranglehold Israel has on the Gazan economy.
If two people get into a fight and one prevails by driving a knee into the other person's solar plexus while strangling them, the fight doesn't end if the knee is removed but the strangling hands aren't. The exchange of blows might stop, but as long as one person is controlling how much air the other one gets, there is no peace between them.
The person being thus controlled still has a knife in his hands and is desperately trying to stab the other. Would you let go?
Desperately trying to stab the other in order to get him/her to stop strangling them? That sounds like a situation in which letting go and immediately backing off should be given serious consideration. It might not resolve the fight but there's a chance it will, whereas continuing to strangle the other person can only be interpreted as trying to capture or kill them, which makes their attempts to stab you justified.
What is Israel's goal in Gaza? Is it to have an enslaved population forced to work for low wages for the benefit of Israelis? Is it to have the Gazans eventually become citizens of Israel when the Strip is annexed? Is it to depopulate Gaza so Israeli Jews can live there instead of the indigenous people of different faiths? Or is it to have peaceful, prosperous neighbors who have no reason to hold a grudge and would be willing to work cooperatively with Israelis in ways that benefit both?
Strangling the Gazan economy furthers the plan to keep Gazans as slaves but not the one where they will eventually be citizens. It helps depopulate the Strip but hinders peace and cooperation for mutual benefit.
I also pointed out that the cargo terminal at the Karni Crossing was an essential link in the transportation chain,
Karni crossing was only closed after Hamas took over Gaza. It proves my point.
No it does not.
Israel closed the Karni Crossing on 15 January, 2006.
The
legislative elections were held on 25 January.
Ismail Haniyeh was sworn in as Prime Minister and formed a government with Hamas in the majority on 29 March, 2006 and the Gaza Civil War was fought in 2007, which is when Hamas took complete control of Gaza.
Please post a link to the timeline you are using.
because that information was included in the Mondoweiss article.
Mondoweiss is a rabidly anti-Israel outfit and they advocate for its destruction. Hardly a credible source.
Also, given the high volume of this thread, I do not see all the links that are posted.
The Mondoweiss articles I posted have links to other articles from other outlets. Also, you can do your own research.
In fact, I've been encouraging people to do their own research for years and asking that they share their search results. The more information the better. Of course, if your sources are crap, don't expect anyone to take them seriously. Bloggers claiming to be 'in the know' are not in the same league as scholars, historians, and reporters working for reputable sources.
After Israel crushed their economy when it reneged on its agreement to keep the Karni Crossing open and wiped out an industry that employed approx. 4,000 Gazans (support for this claim can be found in the previously linked articles).
No, the volume of rockets increased after Disengagement and before Karni was closed.
Support this claim, please.
If Israel can't be trusted to keep its promises wrt keeping an essential border crossing open and allowing an isolated enclave to export strawberries and flowers, how can anyone trust Israelis to keep their word about anything?
Why should Israel allow the entry of exports from an entity that is actively shooting rockets at them?
And here you are making an argument based on an unsupported assertion, advocating collective punishments of a captive population, ignoring Israel's responsibility to ensure the people it is holding captive in a giant internment camp have the means to either provide for themselves or for Israel to provide food, housing, medical care, etc, that meets their needs, and ignoring the question:
If Israel can't be trusted to keep its promises with regards to keeping an essential border crossing open and allowing an isolated enclave to export strawberries and flowers, how can anyone trust Israelis to keep their word about anything?
Seriously, how can anyone trust Israel to respect the human rights of the people it is holding captive in the walls it built around them when it adopts a policy of economic warfare euphemistically described as putting Gazans on "
a diet"?
The language may be a bit crass, but note that those deliveries are in addition to food produced in Gaza. In any case, it did not stop Gaza from having high obesity rates, especially among women.
Support your claims. And be prepared for a rebuttal especially if your source is some misogynist ranting racist like Alex Jones.
I think if someone was holding Jews in an isolated enclave like the Rome Ghetto, and inflicting collective punishments whenever a Zionist pops up, you'd be howling about the abuse. But you appear to judge the rightness and wrongness of things depending on who is doing them to whom, and so we constantly disagree.
There is a difference between enclosing some of your citizens in a ghetto for no reason and partially blocking off a foreign territory that keeps attacking you.
The Camp David Summit was held when the Oslo Accords were no longer being implemented following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. They were not part of the process outlined in
the Accords themselves.
PA is the product of Oslo, so if it was truly, then PA would no longer exist. and Oslo itself never spelled out exact borders but left that for future negotiations. Negotiations like Camp David that were broken off by Arafat.
We can split hairs about this provision or that, or about timelines, but the fact is that Arafat rejected the best chance for a Palestinian state.
How would the PA no longer exist? That's like saying Israel no longer exists because the agreement that affirmed it's existence, it's Right to exist, and the location of where it has a Right to exist in Palestine, aka the Oslo Accords, was not fully implemented. I'm sure factions like Islamic Jihad would argue that, but why would you?
The Accords broke down when Israel did not transfer control of
Area C to the Palestinians as per the agreement. The militant Zionist factions rejected that part of the deal, the Prime Minister advocating for it was assassinated, Ehud Barak tried and failed to renegotiate the terms, and after a short delay Netanyahu came to power and killed any chance the agreed upon process of implementing the Oslo Accords would be resumed.
You keep claiming Arafat rejected something. You say it was the best chance for peace. But what did Barak offer? What were the terms, the scope, the means by which it would be implemented and/or enforced? Was he offering official recognition by the State of Israel of the State of Palestine, which would be recognized as existing in the West Bank and Gaza, encompassing all of Areas A and B, and nearly all of Area C? Be specific.
If you can't show us the actual offer, all you have is a cute little fairy tale you really like.
The problem is that Palestinians do not want to give up unreasonable things like the so-called "right to return" which would flood Israel with millions of Palestinians.
What proposal? Link to it. Show us what was being proposed.
Israel agreed to give up sovereignty in part of Jerusalem Old City in 2000 — document
Thank you for the link.
That is very informative. I missed that story back in 2023. I'll have to do some research of my own now.
If you think there was an actual proposal on the table, please post a summary or document that outlines it. IIRC, Ehud Barak didn't offer anything in writing, it was all word of mouth 'trust me' vagueness. There is no way of knowing what exactly was on offer, only that it wasn't what had been agreed to when the Oslo Accords were signed.
How do you know that? Afaik Oslo explicitly left the details for future negotiations.
Under the terms of the Oslo Accords, Area C was supposed to come under Palestinian Authority governance and the IDF was supposed to withdraw. That was the sticking point for the most ardent Zionists. It's what got Yitzhak Rabin vilified as a traitor to Zionism. It's what Ehud Barak was trying to renegotiate. That's why he was there at Camp David following Rabin's assassination.
Whatever Barak might have been offering, I truly doubt he was offering to face the wrath of the militant Zionists in his country by pulling the IDF out of Area C and turning it over to the PA. My impression of the man is he's not that brave or that visionary.
Does ^that^ sound legit to you?
Certainly more legit than that Arafat was in the right when he walked away.
Whether Arafat was in the right when he walked away depends on what was going on at the time.
If all Arafat was getting was the run around from Ehud Barak and bullshitting from Bill Clinton, what would have been the point of staying?
The reports I have read about the Camp David Summit said it was chaotic, the verbal-only negotiating Barak insisted on created a huge amount of confusion, and that it was basically a cluster fuck of conflicting proposals and counter-proposals with absolutely no way of telling if progress was being made because no one had a clear idea of what anyone was proposing, or agreeing to, at any given time.