• (here only) a Quora - How much land does the Palestinian Authority want

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sat Nov 25 11:48:21 2023
    It is best to try to find this on Quora, so one can
    see the maps.

    Steven Haddock
    Follow
    B.A. in Political Science16h
    How much land does the Palestinian Authority want?
    Well, yeah, Mr. Putter is correct, but it’s more complicated than that.

    In 1993 the PLO said “f*ck it” and formally acknowledged that it will
    never get back what’s now formally “Israel”. Many Palestinians think that’s a sell out, but in reality that’s the way it’s going to be.

    So the question is how much of what’s controlled by Israel, but isn’t officially part of Israel, will eventually become Palestine. That’s what
    the talks have been about since 1993 when the Oslo Accords created a
    framework for future negotiation.

    So we need to define two terms here: The “pre-1967 borders” and “The Green Line”.


    After the Six Day War in 1967, Israel took control of Gaza and the West
    Bank, which up to that point had been administered by Egypt and Jordan, respectively. After the 1973 Yom Kippur War, which changed nothing, the
    UN passed a resolution endorsing Israel returning all the land it seized
    in 1967, which would become a new Palestinian state. Right now, however,
    the UN considers both Gaza and the West Bank to be “occupied
    territories” - not part of Israel, but effectively controlled by them.
    In most of its peace negotiations since 1973, Israel has acknowledged to
    other parties that it will withdraw to those borders… in time. That’s
    still official Israeli policy.


    However, Israel has expanded into parts of that territory on the West
    Bank - not much, but it has effectively excluded non-Israelis from the
    area. This is the “Green Line”, the effective limit of Israeli territory past the 1967 borders. It appears Israel wants to keep this territory permanently.

    So, in the 30 years since the Oslo Accords, Israeli and Palestinian
    negotiators have sat down on several occasions to formally define where
    the new boundaries should be. Naturally, the Palestinians want the
    entire West Bank, including that part between the 1967 border and the
    Green Line. However, they might take less. But there’s a problem.


    Settlements. Israelis, with the tacit approval and certainly the
    knowledge of the Israeli government, keep cropping up in the West Bank.
    To be fair, the Israelis removed all the settlements in Gaza by 1995, so
    they might be willing to do it. However, many of the negotiations over
    the extent of Palestinian territory are often interrupted not only by
    new settlements actually being built during the negotiations, but often
    by Israeli politicians outwardly calling for more settlements in the
    area. Last I heard, about 400,000 Israelis live in the West Bank,
    compared to about 4,000,000 Palestinians. However, with the settlements, outposts and “no-go” zones, Palestinians are currently excluded from
    about half the West Bank, and that continues to grow.

    Settlements are not popular in Israel, and Israel’s allies are downright apoplectic about them. However, people in favour of the settlements, as
    well as the settlers themselves, form a powerful voting group and
    efforts to remove them from time to time are halfhearted at best.
    Palestinians are naturally terrified that even if they agree to a
    border, Israel will use the settlements as an excuse to annex more land.
    It’s pretty clear there’s no way that the Palestinians would be able to govern the settlers, who routinely get away with displacing Palestinians
    from their own land. To be fair to Israel, the possibility a hostile
    military force could be set up in the area is a major concern.

    This is just the tip of the iceberg as well. One of the major problems
    is that the more populated and better behaved West Bank simply can’t
    properly govern Gaza given the need to cross Israel to do so. Another
    has nothing to do with territory but with individual ownership - many Palestinians used to live in what’s now Israel and a lot of them owned
    houses and property there in 1947. That’s the basis of “Right to return” - being allowed to return to property that even the Israeli government
    admits individual Palestinians own. Another issue is whether Palestine
    will be “sovereign”, an actual country with its own foreign policy and diplomatic relations. The current prime minister isn’t really a big fan
    of that concept.

    21.2K views
    View 394 upvotes
    View 2 shares
    1 of 7 answers
    86 comments from


    Jose Smith
    · 14h
    Egypt lost Gaza and Sinai to Israel in 1967 as a result of the Six-day war.

    In 1978 during Camp David negotiations Begin offered Sadat return of all
    of Egypt’s territories. Egypt agreed to return of the Sinai which
    included Suez canal but said that Gaza is not really Egypt. Begin didn’t insist. A fool.

    Jordan Vogel
    · 11h
    Guess he knew then that Gazans were developing nationalism and an
    ideology that the whole region belongs to them.

    Simon Ball
    · 7h
    Wouldn’t have mattered if he had insisted. Egypt would never have agreed
    to it. After the role the PLO played in Black September and the Lebanese
    Civil War, Egypt was never going to allow free movement of the
    population of Gaza.

    Jose Smith
    · 3h
    Possibly. He had a trump card in his hands called Suez canal. It was
    that arguably that pushed Sadat to initiate the whole peace process for
    which he later paid with his life in the first place.

    If Israelis began to act as though they were about to start getting
    comfortable with its ownership and operating it for themselves that
    might’ve pushed Egypt to re-annex Gaza, or Leviathan, as it was called
    when it was the Egyptian province.

    At this point only Jimmy Carter knows how hard Begin pushed Sadat in
    that regard and by the time I finish this post he might already be dead.
    Both Sadat and Begin spoke English so I wouldn’t be surprised if there
    were no interpreters (although unlikely).

    In any case at this point the only long-lasting solution that I see is
    for Israel to risk war with Egypt and push Gazans to storm Rafah gate. I actually think it would be good for everybody in the long run, the
    Israelis, the Gazans, the Arab world as a whole, and the rest of the
    world but… might not be for Egypt. Natanyahu already tried to offer
    Egypt to pay its World Bank debt to accept Gazan refugees but no dice.

    That’s why I think Jewish diaspora+Israel+USA+the Arab Gulf states
    (behind the scenes of course) should approach Egypt with open question:
    “What would it take?” and pay what Egypt asks, no matter how exuberantly high price it will be. In the long run it would still end up being
    cheaper for everybody than letting the Gazans resettle the Gaza strip.
    Just imho.


    Simon Ball
    · 2h
    The problem is that Hamas’s endgame isn’t merely the annihilation of Israel, but the creation of a new Caliphate; a hard-line Islamic
    theocracy spanning the entire Arab world. As such, they are even more intolerant of “moderate” Muslims than they are Jews and Christians. The latter are merely enemies and infidels; the latter are traitors and
    apostates. Consequently, they are a direct threat to Arab governments;
    and those governments know this. They have no interest in repeating
    Jordan and Lebanon’s mistake in the 70’s; allowing Palestinian refugees
    to act as a Trojan Horse for Islamic militants bent on overthrowing the
    state.

    Egypt has enough issues with the Muslim Brotherhood (of which Hamas is
    an offshoot), without allowing the entry of a huge number of radicalised Palestinians who would potentially destabilise the country, and lead to
    a radical Islamic group seizing power. Worst-case scenario, you might
    see Egypt under the control of something similar to Hamas.

    Egypt’s price, therefore, would likely be the complete and total
    eradication of Hamas and anyone who supports them with extreme
    prejudice. I’m not sure Israel can actually do that without essentially committing genocide.


    Profile photo for Jose Smith
    Jose Smith
    · 43m
    Hm… interesting. I actually disagree with you. Hamas is no ISIS, and it could’ve cared less about the idea of the Caliphate. There is a
    religious aspect to it but from what I read it’s relatively minor
    compared to the “Palestinian liberation” thingy.

    I believe that Hamas’s goals are what it says it represents, i.e. some
    sort settlement of the Gaza issue, breakage of economic blockades, and
    so on.

    Maybe even coming up with something that snowballs into favorable
    settlement of the West Bank issue too although that is secondary, and a
    bit more complex since much of West Bank seem to want to be annexed by
    Israel as oppose to everything else. Also Hamas is nowhere nearly as
    popular in a more liberal, Jordan influenced, West Bank, as it is in
    more conservative, Egypt influenced, Gaza.

    I don’t think even Hamas understands what its end game is. For them it’s some sort of a respect, ‘don’t forget that we’re here too’ type of thing.

    As Hamas saw Arab world gradually getting closer and closer to Israel
    and sort of bypassing the Gazans it decided to do something that would
    bring attention back to the Palestinian cause. So it planned the October
    7th.

    No matter how horrific those attacks were, and it was the type of thing
    where one says “it’s no time to reason, it’s time to freak out” - I believe this was a typical traditional Muslim attack. Cutting throats,
    burning homes, killing women and children, and so on. That’s the ways
    it’s been going on in the Muslim world since probably even before Islam.
    Goes to “total psychological suppression of the enemy”. It sure brought attention back to the Palestinian issue alright.

    How it’s going to end I haven’t the slightest idea. There is another
    wild card here that I think between all the massacres and bombings
    people don’t think about.
    There is a highly successful, very intelligent and astute, and extremely streetwise politician with huge ego whose legacy is in great peril.
    People of such caliber have a tendency to do very decisive,
    unpredictable things in order to correct their situation. Could it be
    extremely inventive and effective? Absolutely. Could it also be
    extremely dangerous for everybody around them? There is no doubt there too.

    But everything that I read about Hamas doesn’t point to them having any
    type of goals beyond their keep. They might pay lip service to the
    Caliphate occasionally but from them I don’t take that seriously. This
    is no Gaddafi or ISIS, albeit I’m sure personnel-wise the two sometimes overlap.

    There are a lot of variables here that I can’t reconcile into any type
    of reasonable prediction in this case. Ukraine? I can see how that is
    likely going to end up. But this? I’m at a complete loss.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)