Israel-Palestine Conflict

Photo Source: Agence France-Presse/Getty Images/NewYorkTimes
   NIAS Course on Global Politics
National Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS)
Indian Institute of Science Campus, Bangalore
For any further information or to subscribe to GP alerts send an email to subachandran@nias.res.in

Israel-Palestine Conflict
Revisiting the recent violence: Three takeaways

  Udbhav Krishna P

With a new government in place in Israel, will there be peace? Both sides have enough firepower to continue violence. Do they have the political will to kickstart a peace process?

The recent violence in Israel - first in Jerusalem and later between the State and Hamas witnessed numerous rockets being fired, substantial casualties and damages to physical infrastructure. Though there was a ceasefire, both sides have enough resources and energy to continue fighting. 

One could identify the following three of the takeaways from the recent Israel-Palestine conflict.

Return of violence 
After seven years of calm, the Israel-Palestine conflict returned to the world stage again, being in the headlines every day for more than a week. The violence began with Palestinian protests in Jerusalem against an anticipated decision of the Supreme Court of Israel to evict six Palestinian families from Sheikh Jarrah, a neighbourhood of occupied East Jerusalem. The protests quickly escalated into violent confrontations between Jewish and Palestinian protesters.

The Israeli Police storming the al-Aqsa Mosque compound, the third holiest site in Islam, added fuel to the fire. The Police used tear gas, rubber bullets and stun grenades against stone-throwing Palestinians. This violence and escalation coincided with Ramadan and Jerusalem day, festivals and celebrations where lots of people gather together from both sides. More than 300 people were injured during confrontations, mostly Palestinians, drawing international condemnation. The Supreme Court ruling was then delayed for 30 days as the attorney general of Israel, Avichai Mandelblit, sought to reduce tensions. On 10 May, after Israel ignored an ultimatum to remove their forces, two Palestinian militant groups, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, began firing rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip, hitting multiple residences and a school. 

Israel began a campaign of airstrikes against Gaza. Later on, Israel also used artillery shells and deployed troops and tanks on the borders of Gaza, reminding the world of the enormous bloodshed of the 2014 Gaza war. The rocket attacks from Gaza militants on Israel and Israeli air and artillery strikes on Gaza have continued since then, resulting in the destruction of infrastructure and bloodshed on both sides. There have been many protests and confrontations with the Israeli Police in the West Bank region regarding Gaza's hardships and sufferings. 

Return of Hamas 
The Israelis, this time, underestimated Hamas's strength and capabilities. The enormous barrage of rockets in their hundreds (1,500) in two days surprised the Israelis. The Hamas were well prepared from before, with military and economic support from Iran and Qatar. The rockets used by Hamas is a result of re-engineering rockets from; the unexploded artillery shells which Israelis had fired on Gaza in the 2014 Gaza war, the underground metal pipelines left by the Israeli settlers who left Gaza in 2005 and a few missiles found from the deck of two sunken British ships from WWI. The idea behind Hamas's firing thousands of rockets at once is to exhaust and overwhelm the highly advanced Israeli missile defence system, the Iron Dome. 

Rise of communal tensions 
There have been increased communal tensions between the Israeli Jews and 21 per cent of the Arab minority who stay in Israel. The State of Israel has to balance between managing external threats from Gaza and looking into internal instability within Israeli society at home. Old and new tensions among Jewish and Arab citizens have exploded into riots and attacks. The city of Lod has been the epicentre of communal violence. Arab mobs have torched three synagogues in retaliation. The next day, the Jewish groups lit Arab buildings aflame. 
A Vox report stated while fighting between Israel and Hamas is common, the street violence inside Israel's internationally recognised borders is not. Nothing at this scale happened in the last three Gaza wars; in fact, nothing like this has happened since a wave of ethnic rioting in October 2000. Even then, the centers of the current violence — so-called "mixed cities" like Lod, with high proportions of both Arab and Jewish citizens — were relatively calm.

To conclude...
The Israelis under Netanyahu wanted to inflict enough damage on Hamas, destroying most of their capabilities, so that rocket attacks will not happen again. The same goes with Hamas; they wanted to show the world and their Palestinian public that they can still fight against Israel even after the enormous hardships they have to face in the Gaza strip, with the sanctions and blockades. 

With a new government in place in Israel, will there be peace? Both sides have enough firepower to continue violence. Do they have the political will to kickstart a peace process?


About the author

Udbhav is currently pursuing Masters in International Studies from the Department of International Studies, Political Science and History, CHRIST (Deemed to be University), Bengaluru. His areas of interest include the Middle East, Nuclear and Weapons Technologies etc.

Print Bookmark

PREVIOUS COMMENTS

March 2024 | CWA # 1251

NIAS Africa Team

Africa This Week
February 2024 | CWA # 1226

NIAS Africa Team

Africa This Week
December 2023 | CWA # 1189

Hoimi Mukherjee | Hoimi Mukherjee is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science in Bankura Zilla Saradamani Mahila Mahavidyapith.

Chile in 2023: Crises of Constitutionality
December 2023 | CWA # 1187

Aprajita Kashyap | Aprajita Kashyap is a faculty of Latin American Studies, School of International Studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi.

Haiti in 2023: The Humanitarian Crisis
December 2023 | CWA # 1185

Binod Khanal | Binod Khanal is a Doctoral candidate at the Centre for European Studies, School of International Studies, JNU, New Delhi.

The Baltic: Energy, Russia, NATO and China
December 2023 | CWA # 1183

Padmashree Anandhan | Padmashree Anandhan is a Research Associate at the School of Conflict and Security Studies, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangaluru.

Germany in 2023: Defence, Economy and Energy Triangle
December 2023 | CWA # 1178

​​​​​​​Ashok Alex Luke | Ashok Alex Luke is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science at CMS College, Kottayam.

China and South Asia in 2023: Advantage Beijing?
December 2023 | CWA # 1177

Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri | Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri is a postgraduate student at the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at the University of Madras, Chennai.

China and East Asia
October 2023 | CWA # 1091

Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri

Issues for Europe
July 2023 | CWA # 1012

Bibhu Prasad Routray

Myanmar continues to burn
December 2022 | CWA # 879

Padmashree Anandhan

The Ukraine War
November 2022 | CWA # 838

Rishma Banerjee

Tracing Europe's droughts
March 2022 | CWA # 705

NIAS Africa Team

In Focus: Libya
December 2021 | CWA # 630

GP Team

Europe in 2021
October 2021 | CWA # 588

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

TLP is back again
August 2021 | CWA # 528

STIR Team

Space Tourism
September 2019 | CWA # 162

Lakshman Chakravarthy N

5G: A Primer
December 2018 | CWA # 71

Mahesh Bhatta | Centre for South Asian Studies, Kathmandu

Nepal
December 2018 | CWA # 70

Nasima Khatoon | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

The Maldives
December 2018 | CWA # 69

Harini Madhusudan | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

India
December 2018 | CWA # 68

Sourina Bej | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

Bangladesh
December 2018 | CWA # 67

Seetha Lakshmi Dinesh Iyer | Research Associate, ISSSP, NIAS

Afghanistan