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Gary Kolb's avatar

Here’s political columnist Deroy Murdock writing on Martin Luther King Day in 2009 during the first of now many major military engagements with Gaza:

“In the ultimate goodwill gesture, Israelis withdrew from Gaza in August 2005. Israeli soldiers literally dragged devout Jews kicking and screaming from land they believed the Torah granted them. Authorities evacuated 21 Jewish settlements, dismantled 38 synagogues, and even excavated 47 deceased Jews from Gaza’s Gush Katif cemetery. Unwanted dead or alive, the Israelis vanished from Gaza without a trace. The 8,150 Jews who lived there linger only in the memories of their Palestinian ex-neighbors.

Gaza’s leaders had the opportunity of a millennium. “Free at last, free at last,” a Palestinian Dr. King could have said. “Now, watch us flourish.” A Gazan MLK could have asked JPMorgan Chase to help construct the Middle East’s most modern financial system. He could have called Johns Hopkins and the Mayo Clinic to help build world-class hospitals. Teams from Georgetown, NYU, and Stanford could have helped establish universities whose graduates could outthink anyone from Cairo to Kabul. Estonian experts could have jetted in to explain how free trade and a flat tax can enrich small nations with powerful next-door neighbors. Club Med could have helped Gaza’s Mediterranean beaches lure free-spending tourists. The world would have come running to help elevate this benighted, Denver-sized territory into an oasis from which the mirage of Middle East peace could blossom into reality — if Gazans had only asked.

But no.

Top Gazans had a different development strategy: pound Israel with rockets.”

Sadly, in the short term, culture is virtually immutable. If only prosperity and a better life for their children were more important to them than honor.

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Charles Knapp's avatar

The framing of the option to leave Gaza should be a pretty straightforward one that should appeal to Western notions of agency and autonomy: ask the Gazans what they want.

If they wish to leave, they should be allowed to do so as responsible adults. If they wish to remain, then certain conditions might apply: recognition of Israel, rejection of any “right” of return and agreement to live peaceably.

While no one wants terrorists to enter their territory, surely Western values require this identification to be on a case-by-case basis, otherwise you tar an entire group with a broad brush. And everyone in authority from President Biden on down assures us that the vast majority of Gazans reject Hamas and all it stands for. So calling their bluff on that point seems a reasonable thing to do.

In the same light, both Ireland and Scotland have publicly announced that they would take in Gazans, so giving them what they ask for should not be out of the question.

The “blame Israel” excuse is that any such movement out of Gaza would constitute complicity in Israel’s secret program of ethnic cleansing or forcible transfer. But even were this the case, shouldn’t the Gazans be consulted anyway. It’s their life that’s placed at risk.

That seems the only humane approach and, when everyone who can help ameliorate the Gazans’ situation balks at doing so, their hypocrisy will be highlighted … not that anyone actually cares about such hypocrisy or, for that matter, the fate of the Palestinians.

In the end, the Palestinians are double pawns. First, they are the creation of revanchist Arab nations that sought Israel’s eradication but have made a 180 to see Israel as a key to their security against Iran (and to a lesser extent Turkey) and to the modernization of their societies as they face a future in which the export of their natural resources will play a diminishing part. So the Palestinians’ entire raison d’être has gone.

Second, the Palestinians are also pawns in a larger and longstanding fight in the West in which antisemitism plays a not inconsiderable role. In a way, they are collateral damage in an effort to strike at the Jews. Irony never dies.

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