Gaza remains to be at the center of the war, but the discussion focuses on “in the future later”conflict – and who will rule the war-ravaged territory.
The Biden administration stated that a full Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip it could be unacceptable. Instead, White House officials discussed “revitalizing”The Palestinian Authority, or PA, the apparatus that rules parts of the West Bank, to take power in Gaza.
Seemingly as the first step to make this possible, The PA cabinet resigned February 26, 2024. This begins the technique of restructuring the government and appointing “technocratic government” entrusted with primary, short-term management objectives, likely in Gaza and the West Bank.
However, analysts and researchers query the role that PA can play, given the role of the body was fighting a crisis of legitimacy for over a decade. And Israel did it refused to acknowledge any PA involvement in the Gaza Strip after the end of the conflict.
Moreover, PA officials fear entering Gaza “in the back of an Israeli tank” said outgoing Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh.
How researcher of Palestinian politicsI consider that any possible solution to the Gaza war involving the Palestinian Authority will face serious challenges to its legitimacy, popular support and capability to govern.
But why do Palestinians view the PA so negatively, and is it justified? To answer this query, it is crucial to understand the changes in the Palestinian national movement since the establishment of the Palestinian Authority in 1994 and the role of the international community in these changes.
What is the Palestinian Authority?
AP was established consequently of the Oslo Accords. The agreements that formed the framework for peace negotiations that took place in the early Nineteen Nineties were the first time that the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and the State of Israel formally accepted mutual recognition.
The agreements were intended to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and achieve some goal two-state solution.
In anticipation of a future Palestinian state, the PA was established as the governing body. Elections were held and the dominant party in the PLO, Fatah, also dominated the PA.
The goal was for the Palestinians to have a state in the West Bank and Gaza by 1999. Negotiations will proceed as the PA builds state institutions, with the optimistic assumption that each may be achieved concurrently.
However, this shift from the pursuit of liberation to state-building signaled compromises in the cause the right of Palestinian refugees to return to the land from which they were expelled during the creation of Israel.
Despite, there have been many Palestinians they support having some path forward through which they’ll achieve self-determination and sovereignty.
The state-building project has redirected much of its energy and resources towards the institutions of the Palestinian Authority and the efforts of the Palestinian leadership to create a viable Palestinian state.
The aftermath of the second intifada
When the state was not achieved by 1999, the second intifada, i.e. rebellion, broke out it exploded.
The PA had difficulty maintaining order and stability during this era, largely because the Israeli military raided urban centers and attacked PA infrastructure. Analysts Call the Intifada a “Moment”infilat amni”, i.e. the collapse of order. It saw huge disruption Palestinians and Israelis, and many individuals lost their lives.
For the remnants of the PA and its American benefactors, the lesson from the second intifada was that such a decline mustn’t ever occur again.
In the aftermath, attention from the United States and the international community focused on restructuring the Palestinian Authority, expanding and “professionalization” of its security forces and ensuring that the PA can be a reliable partner for Israel in maintaining security in the occupied territories.
But for an increasing variety of Palestinians, the concentrate on security coordination and restructuring has not served the needs of a people living under occupation. In fact, in the name of security, Palestinians were increasingly repressed not only by but additionally by the occupying forces their very own government.
By the mid-Twenty first century, as the intifada died down, it was clear that the peace process was going nowhere; the Israeli government became increasingly right-wing, and Palestinian leaders seemed each less willing and less able to represent their nation’s interests.
In what amounted to A referendum on the established order, Hamas defeated Fatah and won in the 2006 parliamentary elections in these territories. But the results immediately led to instability and conflict between the two predominant Palestinian political factions: Fatah, which had until then dominated the PA, and Hamas.
The international community also didn’t support the election results and reinforced them Fatah will remain in power.
This led to a governance split between the West Bank and Gaza, with the PA completely losing control of Gaza following internal conflicts between each side.
In response, the international community – led by the US – worked to re-strengthen the Palestinian Authority.
The PA has not held elections since then, and its president, Mahmoud Abbas, remained in office well beyond his term.
Over the years, the Palestinian Authority continued to play a security coordinating role in the West Bank, even though it was perceived as as a burden by the Palestinians and as a rustic that has achieved little to improve their living conditions.
On the contrary, repression and fragmentation in Palestinian society have only worsened, at the same time as the challenges imposed by the occupation have only intensified over the current 17-year period. blockade of Gaza and continued settlement constructing in the West Bank.
Many Palestinians today view the PA as little more than “subcontractor of the career in the West Bank.
Public opinion today
Perhaps it isn’t surprising, then, that the Palestinian Authority has faced a seamless crisis of legitimacy.
IN September 2023 survey according to the Palestinian Center for Political Research and Polling, 76% of Palestinians surveyed in each territories expressed dissatisfaction with PA rule.
This lack of support for the PA doesn’t necessarily mean support for Hamas either; in questions on possible parliamentary elections, Hamas won only 34% of potential votes – giving way to Fatah.
These trends of low support are reflected in other polls. The Arabic barometerfor instance, it conducted a poll just days before October 7 and found that only 27% of respondents in Gaza selected Hamas as their preferred party. In comparison, only 30% supported Fatah. Although the next one vote in December shows growth for Hamas, this is far more visible in the West Bank than in Gaza. And most Palestinians still don’t support this proposal.
It is evident that almost all Palestinians are fed up with this their political options. Moreover, the PA has long since abandoned attempts to reflect Palestinian public opinion – largely due to the international community and the role it believes the PA plays.
Reviving the Palestinian Authority, which the United States clearly goals to do, looks like a Herculean task, given how lowly the body is rated in the eyes of many Palestinians. Moreover, any external attempt to empower irresponsible leadership – and ignore the demands and input of the Palestinian public – risks history repeating itself. After all, that is how the PA lost its legitimacy.