Mattox | The Road Out of Gaza Journal ArchivesLetters from ReadersNews & AnnouncementsBook & Site ReviewsFrom the EditorForeign Service LifeAmerican Diplomacy HomeA Look BackCommentary & Analysis
Navigation

The Road Out of Gaza
www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=19911 &prog=zgp&proj=zme
By Nathan J. Brown (Carnegie Endowment & George Washington University)
Reviewed by Henry E. Mattox, Contributing Editor

Professor Nathan Brown, a specialist in Middle Eastern studies, has published four books in the field since 1990. He has received Fulbright grants to study in Egypt and the Gulf and to teach in Israel. In this commentary, Dr. Brown focuses on one geographically limited but highly intractable, complex threat to regional peace — the Gaza Strip imbroglio. He reviews the background that has led to the “stunningly bleak” life there under Hamas. Add in the elements of blockade, the Hamas-Fatah divisions, institutional decay, and the context of political chaos and one has a clear picture of Palestine as a failed state.

The author suggests in broad outline a strategy that involves calming the Israeli-Palestinian confrontation. Brown does not, however, suggest “engaging” Hamas as a pre-condition to restoring the pre-June 2006 arrangements. And he notes the negative American attitudes toward Hamas. The policy path Brown lays out has, he notes, real risks, especially given that elections would be involved. But that path, he writes, seems more likely to have positive results than the current international strategy of total isolation, “abstract” diplomacy, a modicum of aid, and military operations.

Clearly the recent actions by Israel in imposing a blockade, which led to the destruction of portions of the wall dividing Gaza from Egypt, have been a retrograde move. Two years after Hamas' electoral victory in Gaza, conditions in this Israeli-Palestinian drama show no signs of improvement. It might be well for all concerned to heed Professor Brown's proffered steps toward ameliorating the continuing, difficult problem.

Return to top
April 15, 2008

American Diplomacy
Copyright © 2008 American Diplomacy Publishers Chapel Hill NC
www.americandiplomacy.org

Search the American Diplomacy website
Google

Navigation