by Prof. Efraim Inbar
A Gaza version of the Marshall Plan is a bad and harmful idea.
Voices
 from inside the IDF and out are advising Israel to spearhead a broad 
international aid plan for the Gaza Strip. According to the plan's 
initiators, its purpose would be to prevent economic deterioration that 
could spark unrest and bring to power forces even more radical than 
Hamas. Improving the economy in Gaza, supporters of the plan hope, would
 also reduce motivation for terrorism against Israel.
The logic behind this aid plan is flawed for several reasons:
1. The assumption that poverty creates 
terrorism is a factually baseless liberal myth. There is no correlation 
between standard of living and political violence and terror. Poor 
countries do not suffer from terrorism any more than richer countries. 
Take India, for example. The Palestinians launched their campaign of 
terror in 2000, when their economy was at its peak.
2. Believing that economic prosperity among
 Gazans will temper the worldview of Hamas' military wing is 
unforgivably naive. Radical ideology and religious zealotry will not be 
affected by the wealth of unarmed Gazans. In dictatorial regimes such as
 the one in Gaza, whoever controls the weapons makes the decisions. 
Middle Eastern tyrants do not hesitate to shoot their political rivals.
3. Large-scale economic aid to Gaza means 
supporting a bitter enemy determined to destroy the Jewish state. Did 
the West ever consider economic help for the people living under Islamic
 State's so-called caliphate in an attempt to curb increasing 
radicalization? Israel does not need to concern itself with the 
viability of Hamas, the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood. 
Radical Islam can be defeated only when enough Muslims realize the 
extremist version of their religion is the main source of their 
suffering, not their well-being.
4. It is an Israeli interest for Hamas to 
be weak. This is precisely what Egypt wants, as does the Palestinian 
Authority. A Hamas mired in problems is far less likely to seize control
 of the PA. A weak Hamas is also more responsive to Egyptian pressure 
aimed at forcing the group to reduce the help it provides to radical 
Islamist elements in Sinai fighting the Egyptian army.
5. Any measure to bolster Hamas will come 
at the PA's expense. Although none of the Palestinian factions are true 
peace partners, the PA is less militant. Ultimately, it is a more 
palatable partner for the purpose of managing the conflict.
6. Israel's fight against Iran's hegemonic 
aspirations in the region – the country's predominant strategic problem –
 would also be impaired by Israeli efforts to help the Hamas government.
 Hamas cooperates with Iran. Egypt, Saudi Arabia and its allies in the 
moderate Sunni camp are fed up with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood. 
These countries are also gravely fearful of Iran's expanding regional 
influence. Sending Israeli aid to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip is  
not conducive to improving relations with the moderate Sunni countries 
in their stance against Iran. Giving Hamas economic aid buttresses the 
radical Islamic camp, of which Iran is a part.
A Gaza version of the Marshall Plan is a 
bad and harmful idea. Israel needs to persist with its carrot-and-stick 
policy, which has been substantially successful over the years, even if 
finding the perfect balance in this fragile equation is complicated and 
fraught with uncertainty. Israel has no interest in a humanitarian 
crisis in Gaza (and concerns about that have been overblown), but the 
proposal to institute a Marshall Plan for Gazans is certain to disrupt 
the delicate balance between punishment for bad behavior and incentives 
for behavior that Israel does not find pernicious.
Prof. Efraim Inbaris president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategic Studies, professor emeritus at Bar-Ilan University, founding director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies and a Shillman-Ginsburg fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/a-baseless-liberal-myth/
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