The recent spate of reports, warning of a looming “humanitarian crisis” in Gaza, underscores the painfully obvious: The endeavor, spanning almost a quarter century, to transform the coastal enclave of the Gaza Strip into a self-governing Arab entity has failed — resoundingly and irretrievably.
The magnitude of this failure can be gauged from a recent document composed by the Congressional Research Service entitled, “U.S. Foreign Aid to the Palestinians”: “Since the establishment of limited Palestinian self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the mid-1990s, the U.S. government has committed more than $5 billion in bilateral economic and non-lethal security assistance to the Palestinians, who are among the world’s largest per capita recipients of international foreign aid.”
The Futility of International Aid
The report goes on to stipulate the intended objectives of this generous aid:
“Successive Administrations have requested aid for the Palestinians in apparent support of at least three major U.S. policy priorities of interest to Congress:
- Promoting the prevention or mitigation of terrorism against Israel ..;
- Fostering stability, prosperity, and self-governance …that may incline Palestinians toward peaceful coexistence with Israel…”
- Meeting humanitarian needs…”
Given the grim realities today, this aid has clearly failed miserably in achieving any, and all, of its declared goals!
Neither stability, nor prosperity, nor effective self-government have been in any way significantly fostered. Quite the reverse.
The motivation for terror attacks against Israel by Hamas and other Palestinian-Arab terror organizations have been neither prevented nor mitigated. Indeed, there are few illusions in Israel that another round of fighting is merely a question of “when,” not “if.”
Thus, despite decades of generous international goodwill, all the Palestinian-Arab leadership has managed to create is an untenable, divided entity, crippled by corruption and cronyism, with a dysfunctional polity and a feeble economy with a minuscule private sector and bloated public one, and utterly dependent on foreign aid.
Moreover, humanitarian needs have not been met in any meaningful manner — with the entire civilian infrastructure system teetering on the cusp of collapse — with perennial power outages, undrinkable water supplies, failing sanitation services, and awash in uncontrolled and untreated flows of raw sewage.
Powers Outages, Undrinkable Water, Untreated Sewage
Moreover, power shortages have crippled the operation of a new desalination plant and sewage treatment site, and undermine the operation of regular sanitation services.
Significantly, the reasons for the shutdowns/disruptions are not related to Israel’s security quarantine of Gaza, but rather to intra-Palestinian quarrels between the Fatah-controlled Palestinian Authority and Hamas in Gaza; and to Hamas’s own priorities in the use of electrical power.
The grave results of this dysfunctional governance are not difficult to discern.
Both international and Israeli bodies estimate “that some 96 percent of water in the Gaza Strip is now undrinkable after the collapse of the enclave’s main aquifer.”
Thus, with much of the sewage conveyance pipes in a state of disrepair, leaking into the coastal aquifer, Gaza’s sole source of natural water; with the aquifer itself being depleted at three times its recharge rate from rainfall; with massive flows of untreated sewage channeled directly into the sea, making the beaches and swimming a distinct health hazard, future prospects for the average Gazan look bleak indeed — with little hope for improvement on the horizon.
The Only Real “Reconstruction” in Town
Of course, many of Israel’s detractors will attempt to lay the blame for this dismal situation on the “Occupation” and the “Siege.” But, this is merely a flimsy pretext that is sounding increasingly hollow. Indeed, as mentioned the entire crisis is a result of intra-Palestinian decisions regarding resource allocation and taxation — as unequivocally affirmed by examining just how the Palestinian-Arabs in Gaza have chosen to invest their energies and divert their resources.
Thus, high level Israeli sources revealed that Hamas was seizing over 90 percent of cement supplies entering into Gaza for its own purposes, such as construction of terror tunnels. Moreover, Hamas’s efforts were not confined to underground terror installations. The organization invested considerable effort in replenishing and enhancing its overhead weaponry.
Thus, Hamas Political Bureau Member, Fathi Hammad, proudly informed Al Aksa TV: “our Jihadi, ‘Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam units have become an army, Allah be praised…This army has its own industry…These are advanced missiles. If you look into the missile or weapon industries of developed countries, you will find that Gaza has become the leading manufacturer of missiles among Arab countries…”
With “commendable” commercial enterprise, he went onto propose a new export industry for the beleaguered enclave: “We are prepared to sell them (to Arab countries) – so that they will launch them against the Jews…” Significantly, according to reported IDF assessments, by the beginning of 2017, Hamas’s “military capabilities had been restored to their pre-2014 war strength” — which is, of course, an impressive feat of “reconstruction.”
So, despite Israeli restrictions, it appears that where mobilizing against the hated “Zionist entity” is concerned, Gazans seem able to find the ingenuity and productive energies that evidently elude them in other fields of endeavor.
Gaza: What Einstein Would Have Said?
The current situation in Gaza — and the accompanying misery — are the direct result of the misguided attempt to foist statehood on the Palestinian-Arabs.
Accordingly, it is hardly surprising to learn that polls conducted by Palestinian institutes consistently show that almost half (and occasionally more than half) of Gazans would like to emigrate — even without there being a tangible economic incentive offered.
It was Albert Einstein who famously said that one could not solve a problem with the level of thinking that created it. The problem of Gaza was, irrefutably, created by the belief that land could be transferred to the Palestinian-Arabs to provide them a viable opportunity for self-governance. Accordingly, the problem of Gaza cannot be solved by persisting with ideas that created it — i.e. persisting with a plan to provide the Palestinian-Arabs with land for self-governance. This concept must, therefore, be abandoned for any lasting resolution to be possible.
The Need to Restructure Humanitarian Aid
Clearly then, persisting with humanitarian aid, as in the past, will yield essentially similar results to those of the past. Any improvements in the humanitarian conditions will be at best marginal, probably imperceptible.
The only real way to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is to offer the Gazans what they really want — a better life elsewhere, out of harm’s way, free from the clutches of the cruel, corrupt cliques who have lead them from disaster to disaster for decades.
Thus, rather than pouring millions into inoperative desalination plants and rusting sewage treatment works, the aid should be in the form of generous individual relocation grants to allow non-belligerent Gazans to seek a safer, more secure future elsewhere, outside the “circle of violence” that inevitably awaits them if they stay.
This should be the real humanitarian effort to effectively eliminate the suffering in Gaza. This should be the call to the international community: Let their people go!
Dr. Martin Sherman is the founder and executive director of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies, dedicated to the preservation and propagation of joint values shared by the USA and Israel as embodied in the U.S. Constitution and Israel’s Declaration of Independence. He served for seven years in operational capacities in the Israeli Defense establishment and acted as a ministerial adviser to Yitzhak Shamir’s government. Sherman lectured for 20 years at Tel Aviv University in Political Science, International Relations, and Strategic Studies. He holds several university degrees — B.Sc. (Physics and Geology), MBA (Finance), and PhD in political science/international relations. He was the first academic director of the internationally renowned Herzliya Conference and has authored two books as well as numerous articles and policy papers on a wide range of political, diplomatic and security issues. He was born in South Africa and has lived in Israel since 1971. To read more of his reports — Click Here Now.
@ Felix Quigley:
It’s against policy to tell you. It’s a high level conspiracy against you.
@ Felix Quigley:
focuss
Please address my point…
“The big question obscured is WHY is the Israeli ruling elites not putting exactly the proposal of Martin into operation. What really holds them back?”
If you do not address THAT question and provide an answer, Martin has not actually done so but he does provide a basis for doing so, then you waste your time and everybody’s time.
This is the question that is never posed in Zionist circles, especially in the most progressive, but it is the key question which urgently need an answer.
You do not even discuss it.
Am I wrong? If so state how!
Martin nailed what would be a real solution in lieu of throwing money down the drain called Gaza.
This is a great article, one of many, very focused.
So it is with great concern that I read the comments. If you are going to comment then please show some focus.
When I read it the key point made is that there is a very large number of Arabs who wish to get out, even without being paid a penny, and set up a new life somewhere else.
“Setting up a new life somewhere else away from the warlords of Hamas and Fatah who destroy their lives. Even if those Arabs have no love for Israel that is beside the point. You can imagine how the discussion can be changed around on these European Israel haters like the British Labour Party. But not on the commenters on Israpundit it seems.
I have differences with martin, real differences, but those differences also reflect on my own powerlessness, having no presence on the ground in Israel. (I take that back because anything is an invitation to certain people to take and quote a whole book at me)
The big question obscured is WHY is the Israeli ruling elites not putting exactly the proposal of Martin into operation. What really holds them back?
Perhaps, and here I just advance this as a mere thought, the Israeli politics is dominated by a type of clique, or set of cliques, and they are all playing against each other, but all reinforcing their powerlessness. I had hoped that Ted having lived now there for years could advance some of his observations of real life there.
@ Edgar G.:
My comment on the article was only concerning the “Stupidity” quote anyway.
@ Sebastien Zorn:
Right now all I can remember about Einstein is that he formulated E= MC2, and his comment on stupidity. Oh yes, I recall that he was picked one night by the police in a European city, I forget which one. He looked like a beggar with his old violin, with no lace in one shoe and string in the other and was hauled away to the cells. On being questioned he mentioned he was due at the palace to play with the king..Prince or Duke, can’t recall. They checked it and it was true. He was part of a quartet…. Maybe it’s just one of those stories that journalists make up to fill columns with..who knows.
Anyway, the large report you just posted shows me that he spoke from both sides of his mouth st the same time. He didn’t really know what being a Zionist meant, and was a Jew mainly by birth. I always felt ambiguous towards him after he refused the offer of being President in the first Jewish Sovereign Nation for over 2000 years.
Weitzman was manoeuvred into that position, but this was a cunning move by Ben Gurion which kept Weitzman, -who did much of the work resulting in a state; More than Ben Gurion in fact-out of politics, as they were political enemies.
Sorry, I misremembered. AME Zionist Methodist Episcopal Church
AME Zion Church, West 10th and Bleecker
At best, Albert Einstein should be described as Thomas Jefferson was described by the African-American pastor of the AME Zion Baptist Church on the occasion of the final abolition of slavery in New York in 1827, not by name, but in a way that everybody clearly recognized who he was talking about:
“That ambidexter philosopher”
[
https://books.google.com/books?id=B-MFnQTblDQC&pg=PT29&lpg=PT29&dq=new+york+slavery+ambidexter+philosopher&source=bl&ots=H6TBycNR3N&sig=_E5gkSkCOkmtfk9QON83-G0FODA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwio7oTahp_ZAhVPvlMKHZZjDK4Q6AEILzAC#v=onepage&q=new%20york%20slavery%20ambidexter%20philosopher&f=false
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_slavery_in_New_York
]
@ Edgar G.:
Please read this and then say that again.
Only people transfer by force (historical examples: India and Pakistan, etc.) will solve the problem.
@ Edgar G.:
“Even Martin Sherman, with his highly exaggerated philanthropic intentions (with our money) know it,”. And THAT speaks volumes……
In the words of the immortal Lemmy Caution….”Just Slinging The Same Old Hash”. My big question is that is Sherman KNOWS that Hamas confiscates 90% of the Cement and building materials for their own nefarious purposes, which are to being damage and murder on Israel, why do they continue to send it in……??? ”
“EINSTEIN…ALBERT EINSTEIN,,,,,CAN YOU HEAR ME….. You’re badly needed here The Israeli govt and IDF don’t know something that that every simpleton in creation actually DOES know.-except for American and Israeli Liberal lefty Jews…….of course.
This article is right on the mark. I sent it to Jason Greenblat, yesterday.