Can Israel
halt the stabbings? Hard right and military disagree on how.
Palestinians in the southern West Bank are facing severe
travel restrictions, but hard-line members of Israel 's government are seeking
tougher measures. The military disagrees.
By Joshua
Mitnick, Correspondent DECE
SA'ER, WEST BANK — The entrances to Palestinian
villages like this one are either blocked by a swinging gate or bottlenecked by
Israeli soldiers checking IDs and conducting occasional body searches.
But the clampdown around Hebron, which some are calling the
most severe in years, represents only a compromise between Israeli politicians
and security chiefs, who are increasingly – and publicly – at odds over how to
rein in a wave of stabbing attacks that refuses to die down after more than two
months.
While shifting from East Jerusalem to the West Bank, the
attacks remain mainly the work of young Palestinians who act independently
without links to militant groups – leaving Israel without a clear formula for
a response.
The heightened security in the southern West Bank recalls Israel ’s
response to the last Palestinian uprising of more than a decade ago. But for
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hard-right coalition partners, the
measures are not enough. They want a broader crackdown and even a reoccupation
of Palestinian cities as was implemented in 2002 following a year of suicide
bombings.
The military’s top brass and some former security chiefs
meanwhile have been openly pushing in the opposite direction: They’re trying to
avoid an all-out crackdown like 13 years ago and have even advocated steps to
strengthen the Palestinian government. At stake for them is whether Israeli
moves help douse the flames of the current unrest or add fuel to the fire.
“We are concerned that the political echelon will prefer to
use the old toolbox. The context of the second intifada is totally different
than the context of the terrorism we face now…. It would be a strategic mistake
to use the same tools,” says Kobi Michael, a former Strategic Affairs Ministry
official.
'The answer is societal'
Mr. Michael argues that Israel should find ways to
strengthen the Palestinian Authority (PA) by helping it improve conditions for
everyday Palestinians.
“We need to distinguish between the mass population and the
perpetrators of the terrorism. Pressuring the whole population might be
something that is counter-productive. It won’t prevent Palestinians teenagers
from attacks.... The answer is societal,” he continued.
In a briefing to Israeli military affairs reporters that
received wide coverage, the head of Israel ’s Central Command suggested
a similar approach. Maj. Gen. Roni Numa told reporters that the army had
recommended measures to Mr. Netanyahu’s government that would strengthen the
Palestinian economy and the PA.
Education Minister Naftali Bennett of the pro-settler Jewish
Home party, by contrast, wants IDF troops to reoccupy Hebron – a bastion of both Israeli and Palestinian
extremists – as well as the surrounding villages. “We need to go into Hebron with very large
forces,” he said in a radio interview. “There is no alternative.”
Different agendas for politicians, officers
To be sure, there have been several recent precedents for
clashes between Israeli security chiefs and cabinet ministers: Hardline cabinet
members and the military’s top brass clashed over the goals of the 2014 war in
the Gaza Strip, and Netanyahu and top security chiefs debated how to confront Iran over its
nuclear program.
The arguments reflect the differing agendas of career
military commanders and politicians. However, they also point to diverging
approaches to Israel ’s
relations with the Palestinian Authority.
Mr. Bennett, former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, and
many in Netanyahu’s Likud party are hostile toward the PA and see it as a main
force inciting violence. Israeli security chiefs see the PA – especially its
security forces – as a critical stabilizing factor in the West
Bank that is fighting militants.
“The military is more supportive of the PA because it helps
provide security for Israel ,”
says Udi Eiran, a political science professor at Haifa University .
“The military is more supportive of the PA because it helps
provide security for Israel ,”
says Udi Eiran, a political science professor at Haifa University .
“The Naftali Bennetts are very critical of the PA: He
thinks Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is weak, his statements are
negative, and support the violence.” Prime Minister Netanyahu, says Mr. Eiran,
seems to be siding with the military for now.
On the outskirts of Sa’er one day last week, lines of cars,
taxis, and trucks were backed up in both directions at the improvised
checkpoint. Pointing assault rifles in the direction of motorists, soldiers
briefly interrogate passengers before checking for weapons. In a recent report,
the Israeli non-profit group Machsom (Checkpoint) Watch said movement
restrictions in the Hebron
region were the worst in 11 years.
“Every day I wait two hours at the checkpoint. In the
morning it’s three hours,” says Amer Halaikeh, 33, a delivery driver, after
passing through an inspection point with an 18-year-old passenger who was body
searched. The passenger “didn’t do anything,” Mr. Halaikeh says. “All of the
people are afraid. It makes problems.”
Yet the blockades in and around Hebron – from which a large
percentage of the Palestinian attacks originate – appear to be an attempt by
the Israeli military to adopt a middle ground, boosting security measures while
limiting the impact on the larger population.
For example, the army has resisted calls from some
politicians to revoke work permits for Palestinians employed in Israel , and there’s less of a clampdown in the Bethlehem region because
fewer attackers have come from those villages.
But to deter attackers at a frequently targeted traffic
intersection where an American gap year student was killed two weeks ago, small
groups of soldiers are posted at bus stops and turn away Palestinian motorists
from the parking lot of a shopping center.
“We realized we had to create a mechanism that would help us
find a person who plans to carry out an attack: We decided that we are putting
blockades in the area of Hebron ,” says a senior
Israeli army officer in the West Bank , who
spoke about the blockades on the condition of anonymity. “Some of the measures
create traffic and delays. Though it’s not foolproof, we don’t have another
way.”
For the Israeli residents of the West
Bank who are a core constituency of the Netanyahu government, the
measures are superficial. Many settler leaders are calling on the government to
boost Israeli building in the West Bank and go
deeper into Palestinian towns. At road junctions patrolled by soldiers, Hebrew
posters shout “sovereignty” – a call for annexation of the settlements.
“Right wing politicians are attacking [the government] for
not doing something more visible to fight the terrorism,” says Gerald
Steinberg, a political science professor at Bar Ilan University . “That’s an emotional
response, not a strategic response.”
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