The Abraham Accords Aren’t an Abandonment of the Palestinians, but an Opportunity https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2023/04/the-abraham-accords-arent-an-abandonment-of-the-palestinians-but-an-opportunity/

April 11, 2023 | Ghaith al-Omari
About the author: Ghaith al-Omari is a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. From 1999 to 2006 he served as an adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team and participated in numerous rounds of negotiation at settings including the 2000 Camp David summit.

In a three-part interview, the scholar and former advisor to Mahmoud Abbas Ghaith al-Omari discusses the current Palestinian predicament, and what can be done to improve it. In the second segment, he addresses the decline of the Palestinian Authority, and the opportunity it creates for terrorists:

There’s a political and security vacuum in the West Bank that is prompting its people to abandon their government and institutions and turn to other actors. . . . In every town, every area in the West Bank, people are taking matters into their own hands because the authorities are unable to ensure their security. That explains—in part—the emergence of small armed groups in the West Bank. In the town of Jenin, it’s Islamic Jihad [an armed Islamist group] that dominates, alongside other small groups. In Hebron, further south, it’s tribes and clans that are maintaining the peace.

Hamas is doing everything it can to encourage an explosion in the West Bank and a collapse of the Palestinian Authority. Hamas’s view in general is that if the Palestinian Authority collapses, then it is the “last man standing” and it becomes the only [actor] for the international community and for the region to deal with. So Hamas is doing this in a number of ways. First of all, we know that it is trying to get its terrorist cells in the West Bank to conduct terror attacks.

In the final segment, al-Omari addresses the claim that in normalizing relations with Israel, Arab states abandoned the Palestinians:

I don’t believe that the signatories of the accords have turned their back on Palestinians. We are witnessing a new way of doing politics in the Middle East, centered in the Gulf. The Arab countries that are undertaking this new approach did this to pursue their national interests, and they have every right to do so. I think the Palestinian leaders don’t realize that the region is changing; they still live in the past.

If [Palestinian leaders] choose to engage, they will obtain strengthened political support from Arab countries. . . . More than political support, there are also possibilities for economic benefits. . . . There is much to gain but they need to make the choice of joining. The region is changing, and the Abraham Accords are here to stay.

Read more on France24: https://www.france24.com/en/middle-east/20230406-the-abraham-accords-palestinian-leaders-don-t-realise-that-the-region-is-changing