by Prof. Eyal Zisser
Hamas and the PA have no interest in a new intifada, and the Palestinian public also lacks enthusiasm. At the end of the day, they would be the ones to pay the price for it.
The
recent uptick in terrorist attacks across Judea and Samaria and on the
Israel-Gaza Strip border has raised concerns that we are on the brink of
another wave of terrorism, if not a full-fledged third intifada. Both
Hamas and the Palestinian Authority encourage this, the former in a
blatant and aggressive manner and the latter more subtly, albeit
explicitly, and they each have their own reasons. For now, however,
recent events are still sporadic enough not to spell a conflagration.
Truth be told, the situation on the ground
is agitated and tensions are fueled mostly by the chaos that
characterizes Palestinian politics. Hamas is fighting for its survival
as well as for its status as Gaza's ruler, and the Palestinian Authority
has quietly begun gearing up for the day after President Mahmoud Abbas.
Economic realities on both sides are also
difficult: Gaza has been plagued by a prolonged economic crisis, made
worse by Hamas' failed administration, and it is on the brink of a
humanitarian crisis. Things in the West Bank are better but the
Palestinian Authority's economic growth has also stagnated.
The Palestinians' frustration is further
compounded by the fact that hopes of reviving the moribund regional
peace process are fading, and U.S. President Donald Trump's Dec. 6
recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital has augmented their
animosity.
As the political and military turmoil that
has been plaguing the Middle East in recent years is finally ebbing, the
fear that a Palestinian uprising would escalate into a chaotic Iraqi-
or Syrian-like reality is waning as well. This fear was something of a
restraining element in a reality where many Palestinian youth still see
violence as the default option and where one terrorist attack breeds a
series of copycats.
Still, we cannot say that we are on the
brink of a third intifada. Both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority have
no interest in provoking an all-out security escalation, mainly because
they fear things would spiral out of control and the current regimes in
Ramallah and Gaza would be unseated.
The Palestinian public also seems to lack
the necessary enthusiasm to launch a wave of frenzied violence, as they
know that at the end of the day, they would be the ones to pay the price
for it. Their view of a future intifada is sober and somber, and they
know that a new wave of terrorism would not serve their national
interest.
This view is shared by the majority of Arab
leaders, who have no interest in backing Palestinian violence at a time
when they are trying to rally the Arab world against Iran, rather than
Israel.
The recent spate of terrorist attacks
should be addressed as sporadic and unrelated events. This does not take
away from the fact that the complex realities in Judea and Samaria and
Gaza pose a strategic question that Israel has to monitor and deal with
while being prepared for any scenario.
Prof. Eyal Zisser is a lecturer in the Middle East History Department at Tel Aviv University.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/palestinians-wary-of-new-wave-of-terror/
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