Victory
is an opportunity for Israel in the midst of
crisis
One of the
issues on which my office has been working
diligently is how to proceed the day after
Hamas has been defeated and annihilated.
By
GILA GAMLIEL
NOVEMBER 19, 2023
PALESTINIANS FLEE northern Gaza
this week to go southward. The writer
proposes promoting voluntary resettlement
in other countries
(photo credit: IBRAHEEM ABU
MUSTAFA/REUTERS)
Albert Einstein was quoted
as saying: “In the midst of every crisis
lies great opportunity.”
The State of Israel is in the
midst of one of its greatest crises,
certainly for at least two generations.
More than 1,200
of our people were viciously murdered,
239 brutally kidnapped, thousands more
injured, and 240,000 made homeless by the
Nazi-like regime in Gaza.
Women were raped. The elderly
were abused and taken hostage. Children were
beheaded. Families were tortured in front of
each other for the entertainment of their
captors before being burned alive while
bound to each other. These inhuman
atrocities changed everything.
Palestinians
celebrate as they ride on an Israeli
military vehicle that was seized by
Palestinian gunmen who infiltrated areas
of southern Israel, in the southern Gaza
Strip October 7, 2023. (photo credit:
REUTERS/BASSAM MASOUD)
It is clear that much has to
change, as many conceptions were proven
wrong on the day of the pogrom on October 7.
What should be just as clear
is that many more conceptions must be
addressed, challenged, and possibly
destroyed in the weeks and months ahead.
One of the issues on which my office has
been working diligently is how to proceed
the day after Hamas has been defeated and
annihilated.
We will still have around two
million people in Gaza, many of whom voted
for Hamas and celebrated the massacre of
innocent men, women, and children.
Gaza is a breeding ground for
extremism. It is a small area, by no means
the most populated on earth, but one where
for too long its rulers have prioritized war
against the Jews over a better life for
their people.
It is a place devoid of hope,
stolen by the genocidal terrorists of Hamas,
Islamic Jihad, and other terrorist groups.
This situation has already led
to a large exodus of youths from Gaza. It
has been estimated that since Hamas
violently took over the Strip in 2007,
between 250,000 and 350,000 mostly young
adults have left Gaza to make a new life
abroad.
As we consider our options for
the day after, the international community
appears to be pushing to bring the
Palestinian Authority back to rule Gaza.
This has obvious structural flaws, as it was
tried in 2005 after the disaster of the
Disengagement when all 8,600 Jewish
residents were forcibly evicted from the
Gaza Strip. It took only two years for Hamas
to seize power, largely by throwing PA
leaders off high roofs.
Furthermore, as we are
witnessing at this very moment, the PA does
not have a markedly different ideology from
Hamas. Recently, for example, the PA
Ministry of Religious Affairs distributed
instructions to preachers in mosques
throughout Judea and Samaria to deliver a
teaching about the requirement
to kill Jews and the wider goal to
exterminate all Jews.
So, this option – bringing the
PA back to rule Gaza – has failed in the
past and will fail again. It is an option
that is seen as illegitimate by the Israeli
public and one that would put us back to
square one within a short amount of time.
ANOTHER OPTION is to promote
the voluntary resettlement of Palestinians
in Gaza, for humanitarian reasons, outside
of the Strip.
It is important that those who
seek a life elsewhere be provided with that
opportunity. Some world leaders are already
discussing a worldwide refugee resettlement
scheme and saying they would welcome Gazans
to their countries. This could be supported
by many nations around the world, especially
those that claim to be friends of the
Palestinians.
This is an opportunity for
those who say they support the Palestinian
people to show these are not just empty
words.
The United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the
global UN body that deals with refugees, is
mandated by its Statute and the UN General
Assembly Resolutions to undertake
resettlement as one of its three durable
solutions. Unfortunately, however, for the
last 75 years, the United Nations Relief and
Works Agency (UNRWA), a refugee body that
privileges Palestinians over every other
refugee population, has done zero to help
the Palestinian people, even though it has
an annual budget of well over $1 billion.
Instead of funneling money to
rebuild Gaza or to the failed UNRWA, the
international community can assist in the
costs of resettlement, helping the people of
Gaza build new lives in their new host
countries.
Gaza has long been thought of
as a problem without an answer. We have
tried many different solutions –
Disengagement, enrichment, conflict
management, and building high walls in the
hope of keeping the monsters of Hamas out of
Israel.
These have all failed.
We must try something new, and
we call on the international community to
help make it a reality.
It could be a win-win
solution: a win for those civilians of Gaza
who seek a better life and a win for Israel
after this devastating tragedy.
Israeli communities in the
Gaza border area and the South could then
return to their homes and communities and
live in safety and security. They should not
have to continue living with the constant
threat of rocket attacks and murderous
infiltrations.
THIS SOLUTION, which I
proposed already during the early days of
the war, is far from perfect. It has its
drawbacks and obstacles, but it is our job
to look at all options and decide which is
better.
I am gratified to hear that
Members of Knesset from across the political
spectrum, including both the coalition and
opposition, have joined my Ministry’s
initiative and declared their support for
it. I am certain that many others will
follow suit.
As the saying goes, perfect is
the enemy of the good. This is by no means a
perfect plan, but it is a good one. It is
feasible, and it brings security,
prosperity, and – hopefully – peace for all.
This is the solution I am
presenting for debate, criticism, and
approval.
We have to think outside of
the box and look for opportunities even in
the midst of grave crises. It is a necessity
and, above all, a duty to our children and
to all of the destroyed communities that we
will reestablish.
The writer is Israel’s
intelligence minister.