Sunday Jan 27, 2008
Posted by Martin Kramer
"This may be a blessing in disguise." This is how an unnamed Israeli official greeted the destruction by Hamas of a chunk of the border barrier separating Gaza from Egypt, followed by an unregulated flood of hundreds of thousands of Gazan Palestinians across the border into Egypt. "Some people in the Defense Ministry, Foreign Ministry and prime minister's office are very happy with this. They are saying, 'At last, the disengagement is beginning to work.'" Obviously, a broken border between Egypt and Gaza is a major security problem for Israel. But war matériel and money for Hamas crossed the border anyway. An open border effectively absolves Israel of responsibility for the well-being of Gaza's population, and may prompt Israel to sever its remaining infrastructure and supply links to Gaza. A large part of the responsibility for Gaza would be shifted from Israel to Egypt, which might explain the satisfied murmurings in Jerusalem.
But the implications of the big breach go further. Given that Gaza and the West Bank are unlikely to be reunited, the question of Gaza's own viability as a separate entity is bound to resurface. In the 1990s, economists talked about Gaza's viability as a function of economics: massive investment could turn it into a high-rise Singapore. But in an article written back in the summer of 1991, a leading geographer argued that this wasn't feasible, and that a viable Gaza would need more land. Most of it, he argued, would have to come from Egypt.
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About this blog
Inside the Middle East
Shalem Center's Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies' scholar of Islam and the Arab world Martin Kramer on this turbulent region.
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Recent Comments
Donulvi Dolam - Australia: South America was once full of so called Freedom Fighters (called terrorists by some and comunists by others) This went on until a smart guy somewhere realised that it was the USA who was behind everything they did, planned or thought of, so they changed tactics and went legal. Today the Tupamaros are a political party in Uruguay (in power) also in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Venezuela etc. Quite frankly sir Terrorism doesn't work exept for those who keep promoting it or otherwise keep it alive by talking about it constantly. A terrorist is neither a moderate nor a radical, he is a fool
S McCosker Australia: See Quran Surah 9. See Robert Spencer, 'Onward Muslim Soldiers', 'The Truth About Muhammad' & 'The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam & the Crusades'; Bat Yeor, 'The Dhimmi'; & Bostom 'Legacy of Jihad'. Muslim texts + history show awful truth: Mohammed is a 'prophet' of war, Quran a book of war, Islam a religion of war.
Adina Kutnicki: One can always count on the so called intellectual, guilt ridden, Jewish progressives to take up every other cause, but that of their own people. It is as if they cannot contort themselves into enough knots in order to lend their full weight behind what the 'other' is claiming.
To call them useful idiots is underestimating the depth of the damage they have created. And that is precisely their intentions to harm their own people. Idiots they are not, selfhaters they are.
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