Since Hamas took over the Gaza Strip in
2007, Israel and Egypt have enforced a blockade on the territory. The
intention was to weaken Hamas by cutting it off from weapons and
other supplies and to weaken support for it by making life difficult
for Gaza’s residents. Hamas has still succeeded in arming itself
and, though support for the group has fallen, it is not clear that
this is due to the blockade nor is Hamas’s imminent downfall
apparent (though this is a region where attempting to predict the
future often proves to be a foolhardy endeavor). The blockade thus
does not seem to be working. Israel has instead entered a tenuous
deterrence relationship with Hamas, whereby retaliations for Hamas
violence against Israel have mostly kept that violence to a minimum.
The prospects for continued deterrence, albeit with occasional
outbreaks of hostilities, are reasonably good, but the blockade does
not necessarily help them. Given the massive cost of the blockade in terms of lost opportunities and economic hardship for the residents of Gaza and the damage this does to Israel’s reputation, one wonders if the policy can
safely be eased—to everyone’s benefit.
Deterrence relies on threats of
punishment if an opponent alters the status quo. It also relies on a
promise of no punishment if the status quo is maintained. This
doesn’t mean a deterrer must reward an opponent for good behavior,
but it doesn’t rule that out, either. What’s more, there are
reasons that easing the blockade could even help bolster deterrence.
This could work in three ways. Perhaps the most obvious is that, by
making the status quo more tolerable, the threat of punishment
becomes that much worse. An additional factor, however, and one that
is often overlooked by overly hawkish deterrence practitioners and
theorists alike, is that deterrence often breaks down due to “push”
factors rather than due to opponents taking advantage of a perceived
weakness. A Gaza resident I recently spoke to told me how Gazans felt
in 2008 in the run-up to the 2008-09 Gaza war: People were so fed up
and angry, and had grown so accustomed to the idea that a war with
Israel was coming, that many felt that any change, even a war, was
better than the status quo. If your opponent prefers a war with you
to leaving things as they are, deterrence will be difficult to say
the least, and an eventual reconciliation or peace deal even more so.
The final reason that easing the
blockade can help deterrence is that it may grant Israel greater
leeway in the case of future escalation. A gracious Israel that,
despite having previously been attacked by its neighbor, eases
restrictions on it, ought to have an easier time gaining support for
future reprisals if it suffers violence. This also provides the
opportunity to wrong-foot anti-Israel campaigners: If they continued
to claim Israel was acting unjustly in Gaza, it would be clearer that
their problem is more about what Israel is than what it does—a sign
of prejudice behind a veil of humanitarianism.
Easing the blockade needn’t mean
dealing with Hamas or easing sanctions on it. It needn’t happen all
at once, either, and could be reversed in steps as easily as it is
eased in steps, provided more possibilities for deterrence-related
reprisals. This means there is little risk in easing the flow of
goods and people across the border and much to gain in terms both of
security and quality of life. One caveat though: Easing must only be
done during periods of quiet and it should be done then.
Easing after a period of escalation rewards that escalation. Given
recent rocket barrages from Gaza, now wouldn’t be the best time,
but if things settle down again soon, soon would be a good time.