Just to let those who are unaware of the border crossing at Rafah being
opened which lets people, weapons, missiles, and terrorists and al-Qaeda
enter from Egypt - the article points out that much of this was happening
already through the tunnels - but there may be benefits such as now there is
no real purpose for flotillas - as well, it is apparent that there is no
'humanitarian crisis' in Gaza. But most of all, Israel may now be able to
completely disengage from Gaza.


The Media Action Group


Opening Rafah 


By JPOST EDITORIAL <mailto:jpostcolu...@gmail.com>   
05/30/2011 23:13 
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Editorials/Article.aspx?id=222894


There was never a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and now its populace is no
longer being denied access to the rest of the world either. 

  

Our government's concerns that the opening of the Rafah crossing by Egypt
will increase the chances of arms smuggling into Gaza are legitimate. Its
fears of terrorists exploiting the crossing are well-founded. But arms and
terrorists are finding their way into Gaza anyway and Egypt's move might, in
the final analysis, constitute a less than unremittingly negative
development for Israel, especially if Cairo maintains security control there
and does not allow the unsupervised transfer of goods.

Egypt's change of policy, reopening the crossing to pedestrian traffic after
a four-year closure, is a reflection of Egypt's new orientation in the wake
of president  <http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Hosni_Mubarak> Hosni
Mubarak's ouster rather than a shift designed to advance Israeli interests
in any way. Ahead of September's parliamentary elections, Egyptian decision
makers in the interim government are building bridges with the Muslim
Brotherhood, which is expected to be a big winner at the polls. The warming
of ties between Egypt and the Hamas, against the backdrop of the Muslim
Brotherhood's ascendancy, underlines the dangers lurking for Israel in the
Arab Spring.

One major negative consequence of the reopening of the Rafah crossing is
readily foreseeable. It will boost Hamas's falling popularity vis-a-vis
Fatah. A Pew Research Center survey conducted in March and April found that
support for Hamas had fallen among those living in Gaza to only 34 percent
compared to 75% giving a positive rating to Fatah.

By way of comparison, in 2007, 62% of Palestinians in the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip rated Hamas favorably. The Israeli-imposed blockade, which many
Gazans evidently realize is a direct result of Hamas's belligerence against
Israel, plainly contributed to this fall in popularity. Underming Hamas was,
in fact, the only express Israeli objective that was significantly achieved
by the blockade, which also set as goals the release of St.-Sgt.
<http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Gilad_Shalit> Gilad Schalit and
prevention of arms smuggling.

But while opening the Rafah crossing might strengthen Hamas, the move might
also gradually lead to Israel's complete "disengagement" from Gaza - six
years after the formal Israeli attempt to disconnect itself. The painful and
polarizing forced evacuation of thousands of law-abiding Jewish residents,
accompanied by a complete military withdrawal, was undertaken by prime
minister  <http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Ariel_Sharon> Ariel Sharon in
2005 with the specific goal of unloading the diplomatic liability caused by
Israel's "occupation" there.

Far from leading to the creation of a mini-Palestinian state there willing
to live in peace and maintain correct diplomatic and economic relations with
both Egypt and Israel, Gaza two years later was violently taken over by
Hamas, and has continued to constitute a launching ground for terrorist
attacks, Kassam rockets and mortar shells.

In response, Israel, together with Egypt, imposed a land, sea and air
blockade. In the often distorted international perception, Israel, though
not Egypt, was routinely depicted as an oppressor that had turned the entire
Strip into a giant prison, with far too little emphasis placed on the
self-evident security concerns that underpinned Israeli policy. Israel has
been widely disparaged despite facilitating Gazans' access to basic
necessities, coordinating the day to day needs of residents there and
working in conjunction with UNRWA, the UN's World Food Program, the World
Health Organization and other humanitarian organizations.

NOW, WITH the reopening of the Rafah crossing, there is a path open to the
original goal of disengagement - the complete ending of Israeli
responsibility for Gaza, and the fostering of self-reliance there. As long
as Hamas, an organization bent on the destruction of Israel, remains in
power, the border between Israel and Gaza will remain sealed. But now,
Gazans' ties to the outside world can be rerouted through Cairo.

Despite the blockade, Hamas has managed to smuggle in outrageously large
amounts of arms. In 2010 alone, hundreds of short range rockets passed
through tunnels into Gaza, as did between 20 and 40 long-range rockets,
about 1,000 mortar shells and several tons of high quality TNT, according to
Shin Bet estimates. The reopening of the Rafah crossing to pedestrians is
unlikely to drastically exacerbate that dire reality.


Meanwhile, the closure at both ends of the Strip had enabled Hamas to claim
that Gaza's citizens were suffering a humanitarian crisis, and led to
controversies and clashes with "human rights" flotillas on the open seas -
with particularly horrendous consequences in the case of the Mavi Marmara
exactly a year ago. Now, one end of the Strip is more open, and the Gaza
"prison" claims are more manifestly untenable.

Israel has already indicated a willingness to consider allowing credible
international forces to inspect any future such flotillas. Better that
Israel's navy patrol Gaza's shores as it does Lebanon's and stops suspicious
vessels such as the MV Francop - found in November 2009 to be carrying arms
destined for Hezbollah.

This was not its aim, but the opening of the Rafah crossing removes any last
justification for such flotillas. There was never a humanitarian crisis in
Gaza, and now its populace is no longer being denied access to the rest of
the world either.

 



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