Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Bruce Raben's avatar

All great. All possible. One slight problem. Hamas!

Expand full comment
Tamritz's avatar

The reader of the article might assume that when Israel carried out its disengagement from Gaza in 2005, it left it under siege. This is not true. Everyone anticipated economic growth. However, Hamas launched terror attacks from Gaza and subsequently rose to power in elections, leading to the siege policy. In reality, the siege diminished over the years, and recently there was no shortage of anything in Gaza. This set the background for the strategic surprise Hamas prepared for Israel. The Israeli assessment was that Hamas aimed to focus on economic growth.

Moreover, the challenge for Gaza residents in leaving the strip stemmed from restrictions imposed by Hamas itself, unrelated to Israel

Expand full comment
60 more comments...

No posts