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The Prisoner Swap
Like so many other diplomatic and political initiatives in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the recent announcement of a new prisoner release is based on the same solution that has been proposed dozens of times before – only to collapse because the time, and usually Israeli political will, wasn’t right. In this case, the separate announcements made by Hamas leader Khaled Meshal and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, asserted that Hamas would release Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, captured by Hamas in 2006, while Israel would release 1023 Palestinian prisoners, some of whom had been in jail for decades.
As Tony Karon wrote in Time magazine’s blog, “Win-win outcomes are all too rare in the Middle East, but the agreement that will see Hamas free captive Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in exchange for a reported 1,000 Palestinian prisoners will allow each of its stakeholders to claim victory.”
Palestinian prisoners at Israel's Nafha jail
That arrangement has been bandied about for years. The fact that it now appears imminent (though its success cannot be claimed till all the prisoners walk out of jail) reflects two seemingly contradictory realities. Israel, the occupying power, continues to control the lives of the occupied Palestinian population, and new regional and international conditions are challenging Israel in dramatic ways.
Asymmetry of Power
The control Israel wields over the occupied Palestinian population is evident in the disparity of the prisoner exchange: Palestinians, in this case Hamas, control the life of exactly one Israeli, a captured soldier (and in fact Hamas violated international law by denying Shalit access to the Red Cross). On the other side, even if we put aside Israeli control of land, borders, economy, food, education, and virtually every facet of life in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, Israel directly maintains power over the lives of thousands of Palestinian prisoners, some convicted in military courts (illegal under the Geneva Conventions), and others, including elected members of the Palestinian parliament, imprisoned under administrative detention orders (similarly illegal).
Almost from the moment Shalit was captured, Palestinians attempted to arrange a prisoner swap – his freedom in exchange for the freedom of a thousand or more Palestinian prisoners. In this high-stakes poker game, with so many human lives at stake, Shalit was and remains the Palestinians’ only chip. In fact, holding Shalit for a future prisoner exchange was the only reason for Hamas to detain him at all.
Israel gained far more in holding thousands of prisoners (about 6,000 at the moment, up to 11,000 at a time in recent years). As the occupying power it gains complete control over individuals it believes – or claims to believe – represent a security threat. It demoralizes the prisoners’ families, friends, neighbors and political allies. It undermines the family unity that provides the crucial basis for Palestinians’ sumud, or steadfastness, in resisting occupation. And it weakens the already minimal power of Palestinian leaders in the occupied territories, as their inability to win the freedom of the prisoners dilutes their tenuous claim to authority.
Again and again, Israel considered, and ultimately rejected similar deals to release large numbers of Palestinian prisoners in return for the freeing of Shalit.
What Changed
As the Arab Spring, new governments in the region, changing regional power relations, the Palestinian statehood bid at the UN, and political shifts inside Israel all came together, both sides of the prisoner deal faced new pressures.
Hamas, which governs in the Gaza Strip, suddenly had to answer a rare surge of support (whether long-term or not remains unclear) for its political rival, the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority (PA) in the West Bank. When the PA’s leader Mahmoud Abbas, speaking in the name of the Palestine Liberation Organization, brought the demand for Palestinian statehood and UN membership to the General Assembly last month, he won a sudden increase of popular acclaim. Although Hamas had long sought exactly this kind of prisoner swap, part of the recent effort was likely influenced by its longstanding political rivalry with the PA. Particularly because Hamas’ selection of prisoners to be released (from what we know so far) was carefully drawn to include not only Hamas members but activists from all political factions, and from all parts of the occupied territory, the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, broad popular excitement was certain.
Some of the remaining uncertainties involve just which prisoners are to be included, and whether they will all be allowed to return to their homes or whether some might face forced exile. Rumors swirled that Marwan Barghouti, perhaps the best-known Palestinian prisoner and a noted leader of Fatah’s younger generation, would be included, as well as perhaps Ahmed Sa’dat, a respected leader of the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, who has been imprisoned for almost a decade. But then superseding rumors denied that either Sa’dat or Barghouti would be included. So, questions about the list remain – including whether the elected Palestinian legislators would finally be freed.
Regional Shifts
Other changes had to do with the region. Despite the recently escalating tensions between the population and the military council which holds overall power in Egypt, the post-Tahrir Square Egyptian government is playing a significantly new role in the region. Particularly, it has placed a high priority on helping to negotiate a Palestinian unity agreement between Hamas and Fatah, and, reportedly, was involved in negotiating the current prisoner deal. Turkey, similarly, has been playing a far more intensive regional role in support of Palestinian rights. And with Israel facing a region without being able to count on its longstanding (however uneasy) allies in Cairo and Ankara, Netanyahu was getting worried.
The Israeli leader’s political fears were undoubtedly also heightened by his dwindling popularity at home. Israel’s growing isolation in the region is now matched by a rising opposition to Netanyahu’s leadership, demonstrated most vividly in the Tel Aviv protests throughout the summer. Although they began with protests over rising housing costs (and never did make the critical link with Israeli occupation), the demonstrations rapidly morphed into a broad political attack on Netanyahu, punctuated with the previously unimaginable equation of Israel’s elected prime minister with despised Arab dictators. “Mubarak…Assad…Bibi Netanyahu” emerged as the iconic chant of the protesters.
So, a sudden shift toward acceptance of the prisoner deal, despite his previous claims that such an arrangement would somehow put Israel at risk, became a political necessity for Netanyahu. The broad public demand for the government to “do something” to win the release of Shalit had resonated across the political spectrum in Israel, and achieving that will certainly raise Netanyahu’s beleaguered electoral fortunes.
The question now remains whether the deal will go through, whether 1023 Palestinian families and one Israeli family, plus all the millions on both sides waiting, waiting….will finally see their loved ones go free.
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24 Comments so far
Show AllUnrepentant, false humanism? False? You're accusing Bennis of being a liar / hypocrite. And your evidence is...? Humanists who may agree with Bennis are narrow-minded? Perhaps there's a language barrier creating a problem with your coherence, but how can you claim that Netanyahu is responsible for anyone's existence or that he was elected "unwittingly"? Did the fine citizens of Israel sleepwalk through the elections? Were they hynotized? You have a problem with the sanctity of human life? that means that some people deserve to survive and others do not - who decides / judges and on what basis? (Perhaps those who carry out mass murder do not deserve to exist.) Humanism is not abstract - ask anyone who's been out of work and medical care for a couple of years, or who's been festering in Gitmo for 10 years. Yes, Netanyahu is a fool, but who is really the pawn in that dirty chess game - the White king or the Black king? both are traitors to their people. The atrocity of the Israeli oppression and mass murder of Palestinians is not an existential war - I'm assuming you mean the existence of Israel. It is an atrocity that violates every Palestinian's right to exist. Try to remember that the insertion of an "Israel" in Palestine was a violent, brutal process from the very beginning. It's time for Israel to remember how to be human and how to accept the humanity of others. As long as Palestinians are under the gun, we are all under the gun.
The Jewish community in Palestine was under the gun long before Israel...much like the Copts are in Egypt. Partition of the land which was thought up in 1936 by Britain and adopted by the UN, was done so for a reason. And guess what...no one argued when Jordan was carved out of original Palestine. I wonder why...
Two wrongs never make a right. The Palestinians deserve to be recognized by the UN, they deserve to recognized as a State and the illegal, inhumane embargo agianst the people of Gaza needs to lifted immediately. A people who suffered under the Hitler acting in almost like manner towards the Palestinians, is amazing to me, and should be to every caring human being on the face of this planet.
The people of Gaza chose that route by electing Hamas. They are no different than the Taliban by hosting and not handing over bin Laden when they had the chance. They choose terrorism and not making peace.
You may want to put away the revisionist histoy books you grew up on and read some Uri Avnery, some Saul Landau, some Michael Neumann, some Jonathan Cook, and this:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/10/11/the-real-story-of-how-israel-was-created/
Hamas is a recent creation of Israel, remember - all the atrocities existed before them. The most bellicose element in the ME is Israel: clobbering Palestinians. and the Syrians. and the Lebanese. and the Egyptians. and stray cruise ships off Tunisia. etc etc etc. Israel is not a victim. Stop with the global guilt trip already.
"The people of Gaza chose that route by electing Hamas."
Bzzzt ... WRONG!
Ditto for the rest of the Israeli revisionist history propaganda you and "oldy" parrot.
As Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts."
Hypocrites will always use our finest ideals to cloak their deeds, and that does not delegitimize the ideals but the hypocrites. Who is this "oldest civilization" you refer to? If you mean that a long history should determine the "worthiness" of a culture to exist, or grant it the right to eradicate another, then your ideas are truly terrifying. Slip "Aryan" in there and see what your idea looks like. You reduce an entire culture to a "few thousand sociopaths" - where have we seen that tendency before? 4000 years of history? also a crock. Then Egypt would have the right to eradicate Israel and every other culture on the planet. And that 4000 years is completely debatable anyway. The bible is not history but mythology borrowed from cultures over 4000 years old. If you use the lifespan of the pentateuch as your standard for measuring the length of the history, then the Greeks win, as do the Phoenicians, Assyrians, Akkadians, Hittites, Persians, Sumerians, Indus Valley, who then have a greater right to exist. Ad hominem? No - I find your anti-humanistic stance racist chauvinistic, ignorant, hostile. You use your reconstructed "history" in a most dishonest way. Yeah, and I no longer have another minute of my precious time left for you either.
BRAVO...well stated
I would like to see a prisoner swap between Hamas and Al Fatah. At least the two have agreed to stop torture.
An important aspect the author failed to mention is that the Shalit family lobbied extensively with the Israeli government to make this deal. According to the report I heard, they gained the support of common Israelis and lobbied the PM to make this deal. I thought that was very important that the soldiers family worked so hard to confront their own government to make a deal. A small victory trying to use collective, equitable solutions to solve large problems. May your son come home safe Mr. Shalit.
Will Obama buy his re-election with Jonathan Pollard?
I was extremely happy when I read this article. It made me deeply sad to think of the thousands of Palestinians languishing in the Israeli jails, many of them innocent, allowed no visits from relatives or doctors. That is excessively cruel and inhumane treatment by Israel. Then again Israel is excessively cruel and inhumane in her treatment of the Palestinians, so we should not be surprised at how the prisoners are treated.
That is why Hamas is hated so much by Israel, and the people of Gaza who voted for them are being severely punished by an illegal, inhumane embargo. Hamas is the only group that speaks the language that Israel understands. One man's terrorist, is another man's freedom fighter.
Israel cannot be handled with kid gloves, they are ruthless and although they do try to place themselves above Hamas, they both have a lot in common.
"One man's terrorist, is another man's freedom fighter"--Osama bin Laden
The title of this article is incorrect. It should be, "The Prison Swap". The Israelis are simply moving 1,000 innocent Palestinians from one prison to another. The Israeli occupied territory is just another prison.
As are Native American "reservations" in the US
Your point is? A fact you may have overlooked is some reparations have been paid to Native Americans, and they are not forcibly held on reservations through curfews or militarized borders. Things have improved for them. When exactly can we expect things to improve to that extent for the Palestinians?
"innocent"....awesome
Let's be honest - peace will come to the Middle East when the world has the courage to de-countrify Israel and force Zionists to pay reparations to the entire world for the harm they have done.
Such a shame Hitler didn't finish the job...just what the Arabs had hoped for.
That's just a hateful comment. Don't you ever think first before pushing the submit button.
Essentially what you guys are saying is there shouldn't have been an Israel and the Jews should have stayed in Europe. Since you align yourselves with Arab plight only, you must agree that Hitler didn't finish the job.
"The world is governed by very different personages from what is imagined by those who are not behind the scenes." Benjamin Disraeli. Coningsby, 1844.
Their's an agenda being played out by the moneyed elites whose power from generation to generation has only increased; the entire planet is awash in chaos because of it and the only way out of it is to arm ourselves with knowledge.