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February 18, 2018 3:14 pm
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Israeli-Palestinian Security Coordination Is Working — for Now

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avatar by Yaakov Lappin / JNS.org

Opinion

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas chairs a meeting of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in the West Bank city of Ramallah on April 4, 2016. Photo: FLASH90.

JNS.org – For years now, a fairly quiet security coordination agreement has been in place between the Israel Defense Forces and the Palestinian Authority — a setup that recently faced a major test.

The security coordination has served the interests of both Israel and the PA, helping them quell a common enemy — Hamas — and stop small incidents from snowballing into large-scale events that could destabilize the region.

But on February 13, an IDF officer and female soldier driving in Samaria got lost and accidentally drove into the Palestinian city of Jenin. They were surrounded and assaulted by a violent mob. One assailant stole a firearm from the soldiers.

PA police saved the situation by dispersing the attackers and transferring the shaken personnel — one of whom sustained moderate injuries — back to Israeli authorities. Hours later, the PA forces retrieved the stolen M-16 rifle, returning it to the IDF. It was the latest high-profile illustration of security coordination in action, though there are a variety of other ways that it plays out in the field.

Col. (ret.) Shay Shaul, director of research at the Institute for Policy and Strategy at the Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center, told JNS that the security cooperation would not have survived this long had it not tangibly served the interests of both Israel and the PA.

“If we look at the broader picture, the two sides profit from it. And therefore, it is taking place,” said Shaul, a former deputy head of the National Security Council of Israel.

Shaul, who also served as an intelligence officer and was the former head of the counter-terror branch in the IDF’s Southern Command, traced the cooperation back to 2004-2005, when PA President Mahmoud Abbas replaced Yasser Arafat. Abbas objected to organized armed violent campaigns against Israel due to the heavy toll that Palestinians had paid for waging them.

“This policy has been very consistent. Of course, there are ups and downs,” acknowledged Shaul. “But as a basic strategy, Abbas has been very consistent, maintaining the cooperation with Israel in almost every situation. If we look at the period between 2004 to 2018, for most of this time the security coordination has been ongoing.”

Despite various permutations, and even a few crises, until now the security coordination has stood the test of time. Shaul said that there have been many incidents in which Israeli civilians and soldiers entered violent Palestinian environments — and PA security forces intervened.

Asked whether the coordination would continue in light of those who seek to end it, such as Hamas, or whether future instability in the Palestinian arena could harm it, Shaul said “prophecy is very problematic, and it is even harder in the Middle East.”

Nevertheless, he added, even a post-Abbas future would likely see coordination continue, if the PA remains similar to its present makeup.

Alternatively, in a reality “in which Hamas is dominant in Judea and Samaria,” security coordination would be off the table, he said. “But Abbas is still with us, and even under Abbas, after 14 years of coordination, it cannot be taken for granted. Even in the current context, it must be strengthened and maintained, as both sides continue to have an interest in coordination.”

The PA’s vested interest in this arrangement lies in its need to keep Hamas at bay. Security coordination with Israel is effective in repressing Hamas’ attempts to overthrow the PA in the territories.

Shaul recalled cases in which “Hamas’ activities threatened the interests of senior PA officials. It is not just Israel that enjoys the benefits. So long as the PA exists, theoretically it will have an interest in continuing with this because it will want to stop Hamas from taking over, as well as even more extreme organizations. Therefore, it likely will not disappear.”

Uzi Arad, former national security advisor to Israel’s prime minister and the ex-head of the National Security Council from 2009 to 2011, told JNS that “the security cooperation between Israel and the Palestinian Authority is important and useful to both sides, and this is why it has been sturdy over time, despite the ups and downs in our relations with the Authority.”

Nevertheless, he cautioned, there are no guarantees that the cooperation would last faced with future potential conditions.

“For this reason, among others, it is in Israel’s interest to avoid … harming the [Palestinian] Authority … and to try as much as possible to advance a process of arrangement with the Authority,” added Arad, who now serves as a professor of government at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya.

Referring to this week’s Jenin incident, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said: “Regarding the cooperation and coordination, well we have seen the results. Here, this security coordination and the Palestinian police officers deserve a good word. Yet the Palestinians understand that the security coordination is a mutual and joint interest. Therefore, both they and [we] protect the security coordination. … I hope this lasts.”

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