By A.M. Goldstein
HAIFA
—The military and police actions that
evacuated Jewish settlements from the Gaza Strip area and a small section of the
West Bank
are campaigns of the past, according to Brig. Gen. (Res.) Eival Gilady, who
headed Coordination and Strategy in the Prime Minister's Office.
"A
dynamic that is now growing and developing will allow the start of a movement of
people, who of their own free will move themselves out," he told a
University
of
Haifa
audience yesterday.
Speaking
to the University's
National
Securities
Studies
Center
on "Strategic Planning and National Security," Gilady
said that the dynamic of settlement residents leaving their homes will cause a
large proportion of them to vacate freely.
"In
a settlement where only some 5-6 families remain," he said, "the level
of services will deteriorate. It
won't be worthwhile for the supermarket to continue working.
And so a large proportion of the people will simply vacate."
Gilady
believes that early next year the government will pass an appropriate
compensation law, and this will lead to movement out of the isolated settlements
on the other side of the separation fence.
"No
one will move them out," he predicts.
"I do not
see any disengagement authority, and I don’t think the government needs to
repeat something that we did not succeed with.
"But
we will offer a financial compensation package, and people will make their own
decisions. They will have time.
It won't be so urgent. Vacating
settlements within three-four weeks just doesn't go."
In regard to Hamas, the strategic expert had both a warning and a prediction for
his
Haifa
University
audience. He
cautions that the
organization will not abandon its ideology so quickly or easily. "What can
be achieved," he believes, "is a basic change in the way they do
things, in the pattern of their conduct."
He sees this change taking place within four-five months.
"I
don't think it will be through elections,"
Gilady says. "But there is a
good chance that the reality will cause the Hamas government to fall.
They will then put together another government
that will have other partners."
A.M.
Goldstein is the English language editor for the University of Haifa's Department
of External Affairs.
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