Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, this week announced that Israel would retain an open-ended security presence in Gaza. Israeli officials talk of imposing a buffer zone to keep Palestinians away from the Israeli border. They rule out any role for the Palestinian Authority, which was ousted from Gaza by Hamas in 2007 but governs semi-autonomous areas of the occupied West Bank.

The United States has laid out a much different vision. Top officials have said they will not allow Israel to reoccupy Gaza or further shrink its already small territory. They have repeatedly called for a return of the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority and the resumption of peace talks aimed at establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel.

These conflicting visions have set the stage for difficult discussions between Israel and the U.S.

    • Ooops@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      Sadly the Palestinian Authority has done the same so many times. Nutjobs on both sides are legitimizing each other with their hatred.

          • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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            7 months ago

            What happened in 2001 and 2008? Because if you mean Camp David then that shit was a farce. Israel’s then-minister of foreign affairs said he wouldn’t accept the offer if he was in Mahmoud Abbas’s place. And the offer in 2008 was behind closed doors so we don’t know whose fault it was it didn’t work out, but Israel wanted to keep way too much of the West Bank.

  • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    The ideology of Hamas has deep support in Gaza; no matter how thoroughly the organization is destroyed now, it will be rebuilt unless it is kept actively suppressed. I don’t see how that’s possible without an occupation, and I suspect American leadership would privately agree, given the experience of the USA in Iraq and Afghanistan. (How much of what the USA publicly announces is the same as what it says to Israel in private?)

    An occupation would be expensive, bloody, and globally unpopular - it can’t last forever and the only way I see of ending it eventually without a return to the pre-war status quo is to find some organization that is capable of both coexisting with Israel and ruling Gaza. If that’s not the Palestinian Authority, what is it? The Israelis opposed to a two-state solution haven’t offered a realistic alternative.

    • PugJesus@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      The ideology of Hamas has deep support in Gaza; no matter how thoroughly the organization is destroyed now, it will be rebuilt unless it is kept actively suppressed.

      I think this is a mistake. Hamas’s popularity doesn’t come from the fact that their ideas are wildly popular, but because Fatah was exposed as horrendously corrupt in the late 90s and early 2000s. Hamas’s radical ideology is not a core part of Palestinian identity - it is simply a result of circumstances that were in no small part urged on by Israeli manipulation.

      • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        Their popularity also comes from how peace is just not working. Which is why even if it’s destroyed, another armed resistance organization will spring up. Hamas is the only logical answer to a situation where peace 100% won’t work, while violence only 90% won’t work.