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Israel-Palestine
Israeli troops to exit Gaza within a month
2005-08-25
JERUSALEM - Israel said on Wednesday all its soldiers would be out of the Gaza Strip within a month, ending four decades of occupation after the historic pullout of Jewish settlers from the Palestinian territory.

Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz confirmed that the equally momentous departure of his troops was being fast-tracked. But with the images of settlers being hauled kicking and screaming by fellow Jews from the heart of Biblical Israel still fresh, Mofaz said it was too soon to expect further evacuations in the occupied West Bank.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon expressed relief that the evacuations had passed off largely peacefully, especially in the northern West Bank settlements of Sanur and Homesh on Tuesday where there had been predictions of a bloodbath. “I think that this finished pretty well in comparison to our concerns,” Sharon said at a meeting of ministers overseeing the so-called disengagement with the Palestinians.

With the operation to clear settlers completed, Mofaz said that the troops were looking to get out of Gaza ahead of schedule. “It will take at least until the middle of September, maybe a few days more, maybe a few days less,” Mofaz said when questioned about when the military withdrawal would be finalised. Before the pullout began, Mofaz predicted that troops would be out of Gaza before the start of the Jewish New Year, or October 3.

After lengthy negotiations with Cairo, officials said a deal had been reached for Egyptian soldiers to man Gaza’s border with Egypt, allowing all Israeli troops to withdraw. A source close to the Egyptian presidency, however, said fine-tuning remained to be done.

Egyptian-Israeli relations have improved significantly in recent months and both countries are keen to ensure that the pullout does not create a vacuum which is subsequently filled by the radical Islamist movement Hamas.

Despite the operation, the head of Israel’s main anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now said there had been a big increase in the West Bank settler population since Sharon unveiled his plan to leave Gaza 18 months ago. “We know for example that just between December to the beginning of July of this year, 6,000 people have moved” to the West Bank, Yaariv Oppenheimer said.

The major Yediot Aharonot daily said the lightning operation had ”broken a 38-year-old taboo on the evacuation of settlements” and urged the government to use the momentum to clear unauthorised settlement outposts. Mofaz said, however, that Israel should take stock of the momentous events of the last week before targeting outposts. “After the painful process of disengagement, we should have a definite pause,” said Mofaz.

Israel’s shell-shocked settler movement has defiantly vowed to return to Gaza and to unseat bete noire Sharon. “With God’s help, we will go back,” said Yesha chairman Bentzi Lieberman. “We need a few days to pull our thoughts together, know where and when to gather, and define our future goals,” said senior official Pinhas Wallerstein.
Move to the parts of the West Bank that the Israelis can manage to keep and build there.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  Abba Eban once said that the Paleos have never missed an opportunity to miss an opportunity. I would love to think there was a possibility that the two sides could coexist in peace. I don't rationally believe that is possible. What I suspect will finally happen (but only after a tremendous number of Israeli lives have been lost)is a forced evacuation of all Muslims from both Gaza and the West Bank. By the time that happens, though, things of much greater magnitude will have occurred--like nuclear attacks on most Arab Middle East capitals in response to a WMD used on Israel. With the MMs getting the bomb in the near term it's just a matter of time.
Posted by: mac   2005-08-25 06:59  

#3  The media has a (deliberately) short memory. The Camp David Plan was for Israel to help bootstrap the paleo economy through engagement and trade. Terrorism killed that idea and the Israelis paid a terrible price for trying to help the paleos. The paleos are now the Arabs/UN/Europeans problem.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-08-25 02:09  

#2  Oh, I think the Israelis understand that they can't keep the whole West Bank. They're going to do what they should have done in August, 1967 -- slice off the choicest morsels for themselves and leave the rest for the Paleos. They'll keep Jerusalem, the settlements that are large and close to the Green Line, and other locations that have some strategic value (e.g., water, defensive positions). Build the wall high and thick, and let the Jordanians know that there's only one way in to the West Bank.
Posted by: Steve White   2005-08-25 01:47  

#1  I'm still frustrated that they have pulled out at all. Maybe the Gaza but why the West Bank.
I still feel this is so very wrong.
Posted by: Jan   2005-08-25 00:11  

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