By Melissa Schwab
HAIFA
—The Jordan Valley,
a regional "breadbasket," will more and more tempt Palestinians to
leave the densely populated Gaza Strip for the
West Bank
's open spaces and opportunity for a livelihood.
Israel
has no choice, though, but to hold onto the Valley, even in the face of
U.S.
objections, if it wants to win the war on terror.
Prof.
Arnon Soffer, a noted geographer at the
University
of
Haifa
, a demographer, and a gadfly who has advised Israeli governments, reaches
this conclusion in his newest work, "The Future of the
Jordan
Valley
and Considerations Pro and Con for Its Staying in Israeli Hands."
Soffer acknowledges that giving the Palestinians the
fertile Valley will open up another region where they can make a living.
This might relieve economic-demographic pressure on the Gaza Strip,
where the lack of reasonable sources of livelihood and general air of
despondency help create, among others, suicide bombers.
There
will, he believes, be international and, especially, American pressure to
allow this move. But, he warns,
it must be resisted even at the cost of confrontation with
Washington
and perpetuating the Palestinian conflict.
Palestinian control of both banks of the
Jordan
, coupled with Islamic terrorism, Soffer argues, will pose a threat to
Israel
's very existence. It will hinder
consideration of a military response, gaining a certain strategic depth, and
possibly reducing the terrorist threat from the East, he writes.
Soffer,
who has lectured at West Point, feels that in the final analysis the
United States
will continue to go along with
Israel
. "Islamic terror will aid
us more than empty words," as he puts it.
The
University
of
Haifa
geographer recognizes the need for lifting the cover somewhat of the
Gaza
pressure pot before it explodes into
Israel
. The solution he proposes is a
west-east corridor—actually two corridors—to relieve the pressure on
Israel
's narrow waste.
Though
he terms the corridors "a necessary evil," there is no choice but to
use them as a kind of valve, in his opinion.
Israel
's role in maintaining the
Jordan
Valley
is not limited to the army. "If
indeed the
Jordan
Valley
is so important," he says, then
Israel
must make every effort to settle it. Up
to now, this has proven to be a stinging failure."
Soffer
calls for raising the level of discussion of the matter, claiming that
"most of the public is fed on slogans and shallow political
declarations."
The
Hebrew-language monograph, written with the assistance of Lee Kahaner and
Yuval Kenaan of the
University
of
Haifa
's Dept. of Geography, was published by the Chaikin
Chair in Geostrategy, which Soffer occupies.
Schwab is an intern in the external relations department of
the University of Haifa
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