Saving two-state diplomacy and the PA’s authoritarianism

Ramona Wadi

Middle East Monitor  /  August 31, 2021

Yesterday’s meeting between Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz has irked both Israeli and Palestinian officials. The Israelis have suggested that Gantz might be trying to bring down the government, while Palestinian factions denounced the meeting because Gantz tweeted later that he told: “Chairman Abbas that Israel seeks to take measures that will strengthen the PA’s economy.”

Clearly, the PA’s woes prompted this meeting during which, according to the occupation state’s Defence Ministry, Gantz and Abbas met “to discuss security, civilian and economic issues.” The PA’s unravelling after the extrajudicial killing of Nizar Banat has altered the perception of Palestinian politics and its corrupt and seemingly invincible status resulting from international diplomacy. The people of occupied Palestine have proved that they are capable of change, so the interlocutors across the political spectrum are teaming up to ensure that the will of the people does not materialize.

Gantz’s meeting with Abbas happened after Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s visit to Washington to meet with US President Joe Biden. The latter pledged the usual support for Israel’s security narrative and spoke about advancing “peace, security and prosperity for both Israelis and Palestinians.”

In both meetings, the message was unanimous: the status quo in Palestinian politics must be preserved to prevent any developments from rendering two-state diplomacy even more defunct than its non-existent implementation. It is within such a context, about which the US is also concerned, that the concessions Gantz made to the PA need to be evaluated.

Such concessions include a loan of US$155.6 million to the PA; residency rights granted to Palestinians in the occupied West Bank will also be granted to Palestinians in Gaza and foreigners married to Palestinians resident in the occupied territory; 15,000 work permits will be issued for Palestinians to work in Israel; 1,000 construction permits will be issued for Palestinians in Area C. In Gantz’s words, “The stronger the Palestinian Authority is, the weaker Hamas will be. And the greater its ability to govern is, the more security we’ll have and the less we’ll have to do.”

Bennett has not yet indicated any interest in restarting diplomatic negotiations with the PA in terms of the two-state compromise, yet his government’s politics is the bulwark propping up Abbas and aiding Israel’s “natural growth” of settlements. This is the latest euphemism for colonial expansion and de-facto annexation of Palestinian land. In his meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken last week, Bennett was reported to have emphasized that the US needs “to understand that the prime minister’s line is to preserve stability, without taking reality-changing steps.”

So while the concessions may alleviate Palestinian reality, they are juxtaposed against a harsher reality of enabling PA repression against its people. Lurking behind the meeting between Abbas and Gantz is the PA’s security coordination with Israel. How much more is it of benefit for Israel, the PA and the US to offer long-due concessions which ultimately do not encroach on Bennett’s plan not to enter negotiations? The realization that the PA has reached rock bottom can only complement Israel’s penchant for violence and Abbas’s authoritarianism.

Ramona Wadi is an independent researcher, freelance journalist, book reviewer and blogger; her writing covers a range of themes in relation to Palestine, Chile and Latin America