Israel Update for February 2007
With violence reaching a boiling point, warring Palestinian factions
accepted a Saudi-mediated truce in February designed to lead to the
formation of a new Palestinian Authority unity government. However the
accord was quickly dismissed as inadequate by Israeli officials, since
the radical Hamas movement, which totally rejects Israel's existence
and all peace process moves, will continue to dominate the new
cabinet. Israel's stance was later supported by the international
"quartet" members who put forward the Road Map peace plan in 2003,
although some countries, including Britain, expressed new willingness
to deal directly with some Hamas officials.
In the midst
of the escalating inter-Palestinian clashes, some Muslim clerics
attempted to spark a new wave of violence against Israel, claiming
that government-authorized repair work next to the Temple Mount
endangered Islamic shrines on the site that is sacred to three faiths.
Meanwhile Palestinian terrorists succeeded in carrying out a deadly
attack in the southern resort city of Eilat, while another planned
assault was thwarted at the last minute near Tel Aviv.
In the north, Lebanese army units opened fire on Israeli soldiers
patrolling the border amid reports that Hizbullah militiamen are
nearly up to pre-war weapons strength, due mainly to continuing
illegal arms transfers from Syria. Israeli defense officials later
confirmed that an ominous Syrian military buildup is underway near the
Golan Heights, largely funded by Iran, which continued to utter
threats of annihilation against the world's only Jewish-run state.
Facing Mecca
Palestinian Hamas
militiamen fought pitched battles with their PLO Fatah rivals in late
January and early February, leaving dozens dead and hundreds wounded,
including women and children caught up in the intensifying civil
strife. Despite the announcement of several ceasefires, some of them
mediated by Egyptian officials, the fighting escalated to near civil
war proportions by the end of the first week of February. Hamas gunmen
succeeded in capturing most of the northern third of the Gaza Strip
from PA security forces and Fatah fighters after destroying a number
of Fatah linked buildings and killing several senior Fatah officials.
As violence spread throughout the coastal zone, security analysts
warned that the internecine struggle, which left nearly 100 people
dead from early January, was likely to spill over into Palestinian
population centers in the West Bank, Jordan and southern Lebanon, and
possibly even into parts of Jerusalem.
With Shiite and
Sunni Muslim groups battling each other in violence-plagued Iraq, and
with possible civil war also brewing in Lebanon-in both countries,
fanned by Shiite-ruled Iran and Syria-regional Sunni leaders stepped
up their efforts to thwart all out civil war in Sunni-dominated
Palestinian zones of control. Following failed mediation efforts by
the Syrian Assad regime in January, Saudi Arabia, supported by Egypt
and Jordan, stepped up to the plate in February, inviting senior Hamas
and Fatah officials to Mecca for intensive talks to end the crisis.
As formal negotiations got underway on February 7, Saudi
officials made clear they would not let PLO and Hamas leaders leave
Islam's holiest city until they had settled their differences and
agreed to the establishment of a new unity coalition government.
Overall Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas, a former top aid
to the late PLO chairman Yasser Arafat, vowed that his Fatah
delegation would not exit Mecca "until we have agreed on everything
good, with Allah's blessing." Damascus-based Hamas leader Khaled
Mashaal echoed this, stating that the warring sides had "no other
option but to succeed." Indeed, many analysts said Saudi officials
were determined to keep the rival Palestinian leaders holed up in
Mecca until an accord was ironed out.
The negotiations
opened with a major Saudi sweetener: An offer of one billion dollars
in immediate economic aid if the two sides would agree to settle their
differences. With this tempting promise in hand, Abbas and Mashaal
announced they had reached an accord just one day later. The agreement
was spelled out in the form of a letter written by Abbas to PA Prime
Minister Ismail Haniyeh, who was asked to form a new unity government
led by Hamas, but also including Fatah representatives.
Ambigious Accord
The PLO-Hamas accord
featured a request to Haniyeh to form a unity government within the
space of five weeks, or before the middle of March. Hamas would
continue to hold the balance of power in the new government, being
assigned nine cabinet seats, while Fatah would garner just six
government posts. Four other cabinet seats would go to smaller
factions represented in the Palestinian Legislative Council. The new
government would then be submitted for approval by the Hamas-dominated
Palestinian legislature.
Abbas formally called upon the
Hamas Premier to "commit to the higher interests of the Palestinian
people, to preserve its rights and to preserve its achievements and to
develop them, and to work in order to achieve its national goals as
was approved by the PLO Palestine National Council, the clauses of the
Basic Law and the National Reconciliation Document." In other words,
the Fatah chief requested, but did not demand, that the extremist
Islamic movement accept previous peace agreements with Israel that
were negotiated by Yasser Arafat.
The rather ambigious
call upon Hamas to recognize previous PLO accords was amplified in the
final sentence of the letter. "Based on this, I call upon you to
respect international resolutions and the agreements signed by the
Palestine Liberation Organization." Israeli analysts noted that Hamas
leader Mashaal did not make any real concessions in order to reach the
unity accord, nor even a written commitment to accept the "advice"
given to his movement by the Fatah chief. In fact, no Hamas pledges at
all were actually contained in the announced settlement, just an
implied Hamas nod to the Quartet-backed peace process.
Hamas By Any Other Name
Israeli
officials expressed immediate aversion to the Mecca accord, and
especially to the fact that the Iranian-backed Hamas movement did not
even begin to overtly meet the requirements spelled out by the Quartet
sponsors for further participation in the international peace process.
In a meeting held in Europe on February 21, Quartet members issued a
statement reaffirming that any PA government must adhere to the three
basic requirements for participation in any future peace moves:
Recognition of Israel's right to exist in the Middle East, formal
renunciation of terrorism, and acceptance of previous peace accords
signed between Israel and the PLO.
Hamas officials
openly boasted that they had come out on top in the Mecca accord,
forcing Abbas to formally admit that the once-vaulted PLO is now
effectively suvbservient to the radical Palestinian Islamic movement.
They especially noted that Mashaal had succeeded in getting Abbas to
accept a new government that will not formally recognize Israel's
existence, nor necessarily build upon previous Israeli-PLO peace
accords as the basis for future negotiations. Indeed, Hamas leaders
reiterated that they have absolutely no intention of sitting down with
the detested "Zionist entity" to conduct any further peace talks.
While Abbas himself may do so on behalf of his Fatah party, his power
to secure overall PA government approval for any agreements, let alone
Palestinain Legislative Council consent, remains virtually nil, said
Israeli analysts.
In his initial response to the Mecca
agreement, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told his cabinet on
February 11th that "Israel still insists that all of the Quartet's
demands are met, as they were presented in the past." However he added
that he intended to keep up contacts with Abbas, indicating he
understood that the PA leader was basically forced to make major
concessions to Hamas given the Islamic group's ongoing popularity with
the Palestinian people.
Knesset opposition leader
Binyamin Netanyahu warned Olmert that any dealings with Abbas from now
on would basically mean he was dealing indirectly with Hamas as well.
"Hamas has not moved in the direction of Abbas, rather he has moved in
the direction of Hamas," the Likud party leader told reporters in
Jerusalem. He added that if Abbas "gives legitimacy to Hamas, then
that is bad, but if we give legitimacy to Hamas, that is even worse."
Israeli officials are concerned that the unity accord
might further erode Western determination to keep the Hamas movement
at bay unless it meets the Quartet conditions. Russian officials
immediately announced they would invite Hamas representatives to
Moscow for diplomatic discussions. Even more distressing to officials
in Jerusalem, British Prime Minister Tony Blair told Parliament on
February 21 that "It's far easier to deal with the situation in
Palestine if there is a national unity government. I hope we can make
progress, including even with the more sensible elements of Hamas."
Israeli officials noted that the militant Islamic group has resisted
all international and PLO attempts over the past year to persuade it
to modify its Koranic-based rejection of Israel's permanent right to
exist in the turbulent Middle East, giving scant indication that "more
sensible elements" in the deeply religious group even exist, let alone
hold any sway over fundamentalist leaders like Khaled Mashaal or
Ismail Haniyeh.
World Illusions
Netanyahu's warning did not stop the Israeli Premier from
holding a summit meeting one week later with Abbas in Jerusalem,
hosted by visiting American Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
However the fact that relations between Olmert and the PA leader
remain strained was amply illustrated by the fact that neither leader
joined Rice in making a public statement after the summit, as had
previously been expected. Indeed, the Secretary of State refused to
take reporters questions, simply stating that the Bush Administration
would continue its efforts to shepherd a final peace accord between
Israel and the Palestinians, adding that Olmert and Abbas had pledged
to meet again.
Many Israeli political analysts termed
the summit meeting a total waste of time. They noted that Abbas has
been the leader of the Palestinian people in name only ever since
Hamas won a landslide victory in PA legislative elections in January
2006. With Palestinian opinion surveys indicating that the
fundamentalist movement would triumph in any new ballot as
well-despite strong economic sanctions imposed upon the PA government
by international donor nations-they said it is abundantly clear that
the PLO and its previous peace accords with Israel are now basically
relics of history.
On top of this, the Kadima party head
has become the weakest Israeli leader in living memory, with public
approval ratings hovering below 20%. Olmert is widely perceived to
have badly mishandled last year's conflict with Hizbullah forces in
Lebanon, and has abandoned his party's election platform commitment to
carry out further unilateral withdrawals from portions of Judea and
Samaria. Analysts note that he spends a good deal of time just staying
in office, especially after the resignation of Armed Forces Chief of
Staff Dan Halutz in late January which drew many calls for Olmert to
immediately follow suit.
How the emasculated Palestinian
and Israeli leaders could hammer out any serious final peace accord
that would be acceptable to their respective parliaments and people is
anybody's guess, said many analysts. Added to this, the Bush
Administration itself is now viewed with intense suspicion by most
Palestinians, along with many Muslims around the region, given the
continuing crisis in Iraq. This means its ability to successfully
oversee any new Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations is also highly
questionable at best.
Terror Returns
Palestinian groups continued to launch Kassam rockets from
the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory in February amid reports that
plans for a major IDF military operation to stem the assaults were
being formulated. Fresh attempts to damage Israel's sprawling
electrical power plant south of Ashkelon took place. This came as
intelligence officials said even deadlier weapons were being smuggled
into the PA coastal zone, including Russian-made Kornet anti-tank
rockets that produced over half the IDF casualties in last year's
Lebanon conflict.
The southern Israeli city of Eilat
suffered its first ever Palestinian suicide attack on January 29 when
an Islamic Jihad terrorist blew up a bakery in the Red Sea resort,
killing its two Israeli owners-both married with children-along with a
Jewish employee. The 20 year old Arab attacker from Gaza City had
earlier infiltrated Israel from the largely unguarded Sinai border
with Egypt. Several weeks later, Israeli officials warned all Israeli
tourists to immediately leave the Sinai Peninsula after Egyptian
officials apprehended a Palestinian wearing an explosive belt who had
tunneled under the Gaza border with Egypt heading toward Sinai's
coastal resorts. Several other suspected Palestinian terrorists were
said to be still on the loose in the area. Just days earlier, another
Islamic Jihad homicide bomber was arrested outside of Tel Aviv on his
way to carry out an atrocity near the city's central bus station.
After the terrorist revealed that he had been sent on his deadly
mission by the Iranian-backed group's Jenin branch, IDF forces killed
the Islamic Jihad commander in the Palestinian town. Troops later
entered the town of Nablus to apprehend wanted Palestinian terrorists.
Meanwhile trouble returned to Jerusalem's Temple Mount
in early February after Israeli workers began scheduled repairs on a
foot bridge onto the hallowed site which was partially destroyed in an
earthquake several years ago. When diggers discovered ancient
archeological remains at the site next to the Western Wall, as widely
expected, all construction work was halted so experts could study the
remains, as mandated in such circumstances by Israeli law.
This action prompted numerous Muslim leaders to issue ludicrous
accusations that Israel was attempting to somehow destroy Islamic
shrines on the nearby mount, which in turn sparked rioting in and
around the walled Old City. The violence later spread to Bethlehem and
other places. It was fanned by a prominent Arab Muslim leader from the
Galilee region who rushed to the city to lead protests against the
archeological work while calling for a "new intifada" against Israel.
However when most international media outlets accurately reported that
the factual basis for the shrill allegations was nonexistent, the
violence subsided, although scattered clashes were still occurring at
the end of the month.
On Alert
Lebanese soldiers fired upon their Israeli counterparts in early
February, and later in the month at IDF jets flying reconnaissance
missions over Lebanese territory. This came as Israeli security
officials confirmed that the extremist Shiite Hizbullah group is
nearing pre-war missile strength, due to constant illegal arms
smuggling from Syria. Reports said additional Russian anti-tank
rockets are also being delivered to the Iranian-funded force.
Israeli media outlets reported in late February that Syria is
significantly reinforcing army positions near its Golan Heights border
with Israel while also receiving new Iranian-funded equipment for the
small Syrian navy. The reports came just before intelligence officials
briefed the Olmert cabinet on various regional threats facing Israel
in 2007, stating that while the chances for a major regional conflict
are considered fairly slim, armed clashes could break out again with
Hizbullah militia forces, and also with Syria. Military Intelligence
chief Amos Yadlin spoke of a "deterioration in the strategic
environment" that has increased the danger of conflict in the region.
He added that the prospects for peace with the Palestinians are
extremely remote.
The officials also noted that
tensions remain extremely high with Iran, which defied yet another UN
deadline in late February to halt its uranium enrichment program.
Israeli government leaders, who believe the program is a likely
prelude to the construction of nuclear weapons, denied media reports
that Israel has asked the White House for permission to fly over Iraq
in planned air strikes designed to cripple the Iranian program.
Various Arab media reports said Israel had already received such
permission from three small Gulf countries known to be extremely
concerned over the prospect that their aggressive Iranian neighbor
will become a nuclear power.
Meanwhile Israeli officials
announced that they had conducted a successful test in early February
of the sophisticated Arrow anti-missile system, which demonstrated its
ability to destroy strategic missiles slicing through the planet's
upper atmosphere. Iran has threatened to fire such missiles, built
with North Korean assistance, against Israel.
From Darkness To Light
One thing seems
beyond question: 2007 is destined to be another unsettled year for the
violence-plagued Middle East. But despite it all, the God of Israel
still reigns over the troubled affairs of men, and His plans and
purposes will stand in the end.
Indeed, some rabbis note
that a full lunar eclipse will take place hours after the Purim
holiday begins on the evening of March 3, reaching its climax in the
Middle East just after midnight. The eclipse is especially unique in
that scientists say it will be at least partially visible from every
continent on earth. It is also occurring on the very day that marks
Israel's deliverance from ancient Persia's nefarious plans to wipe out
all of the Jews living in Queen Esther's day.
With
modern Persian leaders issuing the exact same vows today, some rabbis
see the celestial event as a divine sign that the God of Israel
intends once again to eclipse the contemporary annihilation plot
emanating from Iran. If so, King David's modern kin can repeat his
ancient words of praise, uttered in the midst of turmoil: "Though I
walk in the midst of trouble, You will revive me. You will stretch
forth Your hand against the wrath of my enemies, and Your right hand
will save me." (Psalm 138:7).