Israeli settlers and Palestinians have been
fighting continuously in the West Bank, necessitating intervention from the
international community. Senior Israeli and Palestinian security officials met
in Jordan, but it seems like little has changed in terms of violence or tension
reduction.
Israeli and Palestinian officials agreed to
cooperate to stop further outbreaks during a summit on Sunday in the Jordanian
resort town of Aqaba.
"The need to commit to de-escalation on
the ground and to avert future violence" was reiterated by both sides.
But, a new round of fighting seems to have
abruptly dashed any faint hope of advancement.
After two Israeli settlers in a West Bank
settlement near Nablus were slain on Sunday, retaliatory attacks ensued,
resulting in the deaths of a Palestinian man, the torching of dozens of
vehicles and structures, and more than 300 injuries.
Just a few days had passed since Israeli
soldiers carried out their worst West Bank raid in over 20 years, which claimed
the lives of 11 Palestinians in Nablus when settlers went on the rampage in the
Palestinian hamlet of Huwara. In the West Bank city of Jericho on Monday, an
Israeli who was also a US citizen was slain.
Several commentators think Brett McGurk, the
Middle East and North Africa coordinator for the US National Security Council,
has been given an impossible task: to try to stop any further escalation of
hostilities and to facilitate greater participation in the negotiations in
Aqaba.
The summit, in the opinion of Khalil Jahshan,
executive director of the Arab Center in Washington, D.C., had little prospect
of success from the start.
Without sufficient planning or groundwork, the
US administration rushed it, primarily to save Israel from its own bad
policies, he told Arab News.
“Considering recent political and military
actions by the Benjamin Netanyahu government, particularly its deadly assaults
in Jenin, Nablus, and other occupied Palestinian villages, I actually thought
the meeting was both poorly planned and poorly timed,” he added.
A conditional, short-term truce may be
feasible, according to Oraib Rantawi, director of the Al-Quds Center for
Political Research in Amman, if Israeli authorities consent to halt settlement
construction, stop attacks on Palestinian villages, and hold settlers
accountable for their acts.
He told Arab News that until there is a
meaningful political process that can provide Palestinians with a political
horizon, such de-escalation will fail in terms of middle and long-term
solutions.