Photo: Flickr/Creative Commons/Marsmet543
Jerusalem is Israel's Achilles Heel and Palestinian resistance may have moved into a new phase. Hamas's involvement in this has been minimal so far. Its ability to affect politics remains, however.
Hamas has been one of the main drivers of violence in
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since the 1990s. Events in the past
decade and, especially, in the past few months seem to be changing
this. The replacement of suicide bombing attacks with rockets and the
subsequent deployment by Israel of its Iron Dome missile defence
system have dramatically reduced Hamas’s violent effect on
Israelis’ everyday lives, not just when compared to the horror of
the early 2000s, but also when compared to the 1990s. In addition,
since the most recent round of conflict between Israel and Hamas,
there has been a surge of violence from within the Israeli side of
its security barrier. This violence has been carried out by
Palestinians (with gruesome reprisals from Jewish vigilantes) who
live on that side of the barrier. It is also notable that these
latest attacks are mostly not carried out at the behest of Hamas or
any other militant group. Has the threat from Hamas receded? Is the
new threat from within the ‘wall’ now greater?
Jerusalem is potentially Israel’s Achilles Heel.
Palestinians living there are not separated from Israelis by a
security barrier. They are not coordinated by a governing authority
that could be targeted in the same way that Hamas in Gaza can.
‘Civil’ measures like policing and intelligence are the only
possibilities for deterrence. These, along with Jerusalem
Palestinians’ separation from those in the rest of the Occupied
Territories and their generally better quality of life, seem to have
worked thus far in keeping violence originating from Palestinians in
Jerusalem and from Arab Israelis to a minimum. Punitive measures,
like imprisonment and home demolitions, can actually undermine
deterrence as the situation escalates, however: If security at holy
sites intensifies to the detriment of Muslim worshippers and punitive
measures damage Jerusalem Palestinians’ way of life, they may feel
they have less to lose by turning to violence. Such a move would have
little to do with Hamas.
Palestinian resistance has gone through several phases,
but it has appeared recently to be settling on pushing for
international pressure. As the Jerusalem specialist Michael Dumper
points out, the sheer density of holy sites in Jerusalem ensures that
there is constant international attention on the city. Israel is
limited in the harshness of measures it can implement there without
incurring international opprobrium. Escalation in Jerusalem would
further increase international attention and reinvigorate drives to
resolve the situation by establishing a Palestinian state that would
incorporate majority-Palestinian portions of Jerusalem.
As attention focuses on Jerusalem, then, might Gaza and
Hamas slip into the background? This is unlikely. The confrontation
cannot be resolved without addressing the issue of who controls Gaza
and its relationship to any future Palestinian state. As long as
Hamas remains in power there, it will therefore remain relevant and
be capable of influencing, and quite possibly scuppering, any deal.
No solution can thus be found without dealing with Hamas. Hamas has
so far always acted as a spoiler in the peace process and rejects two
states as a final solution to the conflict. Violence undermines the
moral force of Palestinian demands for statehood upon which much of
current international actions by Palestinians are predicated. Rising
violence in Jerusalem could have this effect, or it could come from
Hamas. Hamas may therefore seem less important at present, but it
remains in a position to influence events in the larger conflict
between Israelis and Palestinians and no solution could succeed that
ignored it. It is not irrelevant yet.
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