Dan Diker on ‘The Israeli-Palestinian Path to Peace through Economic Prosperity’
By Jerry Gordon and Rod Bryant (September 2018)
Israel Minister for Public Security Gilad Erdan with Dan Diker of Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs
In late June 2018, Special Envoy for Middle East Peace, Jason Greenblatt and Assistant to the President, Jared Kushner made a trip to Israel and several Middle Arab Monarchies, Emirates and States endeavoring to discuss a working version of a Trump Middle East Peace Plan between the Palestinian Authority an Israel. That was in the face of implacable opposition by the autocratic PA leader Mahmoud Abbas to President Trump’s move of the US Embassy to Jerusalem that opened on May 14th, the 70th anniversary of the Jewish nation. Israel’s attention was riveted to the weekly violent protests on its Southern frontier with thousands gathered by Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad for what was called the Great Return March. The protests feature new threats: fire kites, exploding balloons causing extensive fires in the Eshkol region agricultural fields and nature preserves setting blaze to more than 6,300 acres. There were mortars and precision rockets fired by Hamas and the PIJ some of which landed dangerously in kindergartens in south Israel communities. Israel’s air force and IDF ground forces made selected retaliatory attacks and pushed back those attempting to penetrate the frontier. The casualties to civilians in Gaza were in the hundreds killed and thousands injured. Yet, throughout the more than four months of provocations, Israel delivered humanitarian and commercial supplies and even reached out to discuss establishment of an external port on the Island of Cyprus to deliver supplies under Israeli security monitoring. The Israeli government had its attention on its northern Golan frontier with Syria as the Assad regime with Russian air support and Iranian proxy Shiite militias ranged across the Southwest Syrian frontier with Israel and Jordan retaking Daraa province from rebel militias and ISIS pockets creating another humanitarian crisis with tens of thousands of civilians fleeing to the Israeli and Jordanian frontier. For its part Israel launched a covert emergency humanitarian and medical assistance effort to Syrians huddle on its border under its Good Neighbor program. All while the IDF employed artillery and tank units to address any Syrian and Iranian proxy threats.
In early July, the Trump White House Middle East Peace team returned from its diplomatic discussions to rethink and retool their Middle East Peace proposals communicating that they had lowered expectations and thought that concentrating on Gaza first might enable unification with the Palestinian Authority. Yet, the Palestinian Authority was at the center of the problems, given clashes with its citizens demanding lifting of sanctions against Gazans, as well as continuing violations of human and civil rights in the territories administer in the West Bank. Moreover, there were complaints from Palestinian entrepreneurs and business owners about corruption and the lack of incentives for economic development and employment opportunities with over 40 percent of the labor force unemployed.
At the same time that the Trump Middle East team were attempting to obtain “buy-in” for their peace proposals, another successful initiative begun by Israel in Area C with 16 industrial zones and 30,000 employees of both Jewish an Arab owned enterprises was unveiled at seminars sponsored by the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs with the launch of a book with several Israeli and Arab authors, edited by Dan Diker, Director of the Program to Counter Political Warfare.
In an April 2018, New English Review interview with Diker, Defeating Denormalization of Israel, we asked him about the Area C experiment. He said:
The book presents a path-breaking approach to Palestinian-Israeli relations for the following reasons: It is the first policy book that has ever been authored by both Palestinian and Israeli authors who present a perspective which is on the shared economy. All ten authors, yours truly included, believe that the way to get the path to peace is paved through shared economic goodwill and shared economic profitability and benefits. The book’s articles are authored by several Palestinian professors, Arab Israelis, Palestinian managers of companies such as the International Soda Stream Company and the path-breaking Rami Levy Supermarket chain in Israel. They have built established branches throughout Judea and Samaria on the West Bank, especially in areas where Palestinians and Israelis live in close proximity. These Israeli companies are hiring both Palestinians and Israelis on the bases of pure meritocracy without any bias on racial, ethnic or religious grounds. These companies located in industrial zones throughout the disputed territories were established about twenty years ago by then Commerce and Trade Minister Natan Sharansky. 30,000 thirty Palestinians work close to their homes in these industrial zones protected by Israeli labor law equally applicable to their Israeli Jewish counterparts. This book documents the excellent results of this experimental economic situation for Palestinians and Israelis in Area C of Judea and Samaria on the West Bank, as well as, in parts of Jerusalem.
In a Jerusalem Post article concerning PA corruption and deprivation of Arab workers and owners, two of the Arab authors of Denormalization cited the problems thwarting normalization.
For Nabila Basher at, a factory manager for the Israeli company SodaStream, the BDS movement caused hundreds of factory workers to be laid off.
“The BDS movement has threatened my job security and livelihood,” Basher at wrote in his chapter of the book. “It damaged the livelihoods of hundreds of SodaStream factory workers, who were laid off as SodaStream left its Mishor Adumim facility in the West Bank.”
According to Basher at, the factory closed due to BDS protests in the US and Europe.
en had to find new jobs or emigrate. Some workers chose to commute to a different SodaStream factory that was farther away, choosing it over working for Palestinian companies that were closer.
Nadia Aloes, a Palestinian employed for 13 years at the Israeli supermarket chain Rami Levi and another contributor to the book, lamented that BDS has done nothing for her.
“I am against the BDS,” Aloes said. “What are they doing for us? They have a lot of money for themselves . . . we have not seen one penny. All that money that they have, they spend it on themselves.”
In her chapter, Aloes wrote how people worldwide donate aid money to the Palestinian Authority (PA).
“I do not understand how the entire world can donate aid money to the PA when its bureaucrats refuse to create jobs for their own people,” she said.
The PA also gets money from taxes. Palestinian workers in an Israeli industrial zone must pay 1,000 NIS a month to the PA, Basher at said.
“The PA takes this tax money while supporting the BDS movement domestically and abroad,” Basher at wrote. “Logically speaking, they should be supporting a company like SodaStream for employing Palestinians who pay local taxes—but instead they just tried to punish us, allowing us to lose our jobs without understand how the ramifications of their actions also hurt PA economic interests.”
The industrial zones in Area C operate under Israeli law and work standards providing a salutary work environment. Note these comments from other Arab and Jewish authors of Denormalization in the Jerusalem Post article:
According to the Palestinian workers in the book, Israeli companies provide better insurance and benefits than most Palestinian companies. They also provide economic stability, which, while not a complete solution to the conflict, is believed to be part of the path to peace.
“The industrial zones were made for everyone,” Col. (res.) Dr. Danny Tisza said. “They are in the hands of the Israeli authorities, but they are giving workplaces for everyone. More and more Palestinians are coming these days to open a business in the industrial zones.”
The diversely-staffed factories provide an environment for Palestinians and Israelis to build relationships with each other and start breaking down stereotypes.
“It helps Palestinians to work with Israelis on an equal level and it gets them to know one another,” Professor and peace activist Mohammed S. Dajani Daoudi said. “It also helps start a dialogue on the human level,” he said.
SodaStream CEO Daniel Birnbaum agreed.
“I witnessed far more than simply ‘experiments’ or ‘exercises’ in coexistence and tolerance, but actual peaceful and harmonious relations between Israeli and Palestinian employees,” Birnbaum wrote.
Diker in early July 2018 was afforded the opportunity to brief Middle East Special Envoy Jason Greenblatt and others on the Trump White House team on the success of the bottom up approach to peace making through prosperity in Area C. Further, it presents an alternative future should the Palestine Authority collapse because of the lack of succession to obdurate autocrat, President Mahmoud Abbas.
On August 20, 2018 PepsiCo announced the acquisition of the SodaStream International, Ltd. According to the announcement, “the deal gives PepsiCo a new line through which it can reach customers in their homes.” SodaStream is the iconic Israeli company with respect to the JCPA Normalization proposals. Will PepsiCo continue the Normalization effort in Israel and Area C after consummation of the Soda SodaStream acquisition? If it does, it would be a significant endorsement by a world class marketing company. Then it could claim that “PepsiCo brings Peace.”
Against this background, Jerry Gordon and Rod Bryant of Israel News Talk Radio—Beyond the Matrix discussed these promising experiments towards normalization of relations between Palestinians and Israel building prosperity and a path to real peace in Area C of the West Bank.
What follows is an excerpt from the interview with Dan Diker of the JCPA.
Jerry: Dan, what about the Middle East Peace Plan that US Special Envoys Jason Greenblatt and Jared Kushner discussed with these US Arab allies. How are the Palestinians going to handle that?
Rod: The question that I have is how could the Arab states along with Israel and the United States actually force the PA to do anything? Either we have to seek the removal of Abbas and at some level the dismantling of the Palestinian Authority. Until now it seemed like it would be an impossible thing to force something on the Palestinians. Abbas has refused every agreement that has been placed before him. Can the Arab states develop some type of agreement that they can force on the Palestinians?
Jerry: Given the prospect of how dangerous would be the collapse of the PA if Abu Mazen left or was sidelined completely, what will Israel and these new Arab partners do to assure what you just talked about becomes the reality of normalization with the Palestinians?
Dan: Normalization is the key word here and that is exactly what is happening on the ground across the West Bank. Normalization especially in Area C is under full administrative and security protective control of the Israelis. You have an unprecedented demand by the Palestinian professional middle class and the working class who have normal relations with Israel. They have come off this political treaty calling for have a Palestinian state to be established on the pre-1967 June War 1949 Armistice lines which their own leadership actually refuses to sign on a deal. Because, and this is the key point that your listeners must understand the Palestinian political leadership is motivated to destroy any possibility of having a deal because they make too much money by preventing a deal as opposed to accepting a deal. They are getting millions and millions of dollars every year, much of it goes into their own pockets in order to continue their status as a non-state state, crying poverty and crying weak to the international community and media. In my estimation it is highly unlikely that in our lifetimes we will see a bilateral deal between some Palestinian Authority leadership and any Israeli government. Because the interest of the Palestinian political leadership is in preventing this peace deal not in promoting a peace deal. Israel has exactly the opposite approach. I can tell you authoritatively that Prime Minister Netanyahu is willing to go very far in signing and carrying out a deal with the Palestinian people. I have been in meetings with Mr. Netanyahu when he was head of the opposition with very distinguished Palestinian Jordanian leaders and he said I want to see the West Bank, the Judea and Samaria growing GDP at nine percent a year like Ireland and Netanyahu could do that. He is you know he is a very accomplished economic expert. I know that there is a deep appreciation for him among the Palestinian professional classes. The problem is the Palestinian political leadership has backed them into a corner and essentially they are going to go off into the sunset having accomplished nothing.
Rod: In essence what you are saying is the opportunity for anything too really change, the status quo is going to remain the same until somehow the Palestinian people can revolt, remove their government in a grassroots movement against the PA. That nothing much is going to change.
Dan: The only thing that can really change is the type of normalization with Israel. This is how it can work. There is a way of really going over the heads of the corrupt Palestinian government, what they call their national government. The Arab Muslim world is really constituted of tribes, families and clans. If you go to the Emirates in the Gulf, to Syria, to Iraq, you look at these Arab states, they define themselves by families, tribes and clans, not by the Westphalia notion of a nation state, which is the way we in the West have organized our thinking about national sovereignty. Now, taking that as a fact it is a very practical idea to begin in the West Bank for Jewish community heads such as mayors and heads of municipalities and local government to begin to work directly with local Palestinian Arab governments, their Mukhtars of villages and heads of local councils. We need to use Area C which is the area comprising 60% of the West Bank Judea and Samaria under the full control of the Israeli government and Army in order to help the Palestinian economy take off. The Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs unveiled a plan to do that. The key point is that the 1,450,000 Palestinians, can come to Area C, develop, get a good education through partnerships with international universities, and work at international companies which is under full Israeli control. There, they would have the backing of an Israel democracy and its Army protecting international organizations, associations, businesses and their interests. Then things start to work well. Therefore, we can help the Palestinians help themselves by using Area C as an enabling area not as an area to control Palestinians, God willing, to create a viable, prosperous, independent Palestinian economic life.
Rod: Brilliant.
Jerry: Dan, do you think that Messrs. Greenblatt and Kushner understand what you are talking about and would buy into this?
Rod: This is really encouraging because we see a similar strategy that President Trump has used with North Korea dangling the carrot of prosperity for the whole nation, the people of North Korea and it its dictator in classic political warfare that you were talking about earlier. Is that what the new JCPA book, Defeating Denormalization aims for? Dan, take a moment and introduce our listeners to what is meant by the concept of denormalization?
www.jcpa.org and then put in, “defeating denormalization.” You can download the full pdf for free.
Jerry: Dan, can you give us some examples, drawn from of a recent JCPA seminar with the co-authors of this book, citing examples of normalization but also ways in which the existing PA has sought to prevent it from happening?
Jerry: Dan, there were also huge protests in the PA at the same time as the publication of Defeating Denormalization. How bad are the human rights there?
Dan: Human rights are a real challenge in the Palestinian Authority. That is one of the issues that the public is concerned about. The number one issue is economics. There is upwards of 18% unemployment in the West Bank, Judea and Samaria and well in excess of 40% in Gaza. Among young people it is even higher. The outcry on the Palestinian street towards the PA leadership is about jobs and the economy. That was a major part of the truth behind the Gaza Return March that the Palestinians were crying out blaming their own leadership, not Israel. Hamas very skillfully, with Iranian help, turned that outrage towards Israel and made it seem to International media that Israel was just shooting unarmed protestors. In the West Bank you have a less critical situation, but still you have people demonstrating for their own rights protesting anti-corruption and the economy of their own government. Because the Palestinian Authority is not a democracy, people are arrested and mistreated by the Palestinian Security Forces for these types of civil actions.
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Jerome B Gordon is a Senior Vice President of the New English Review and author of The West Speaks, NER Press 2012. Mr. Gordon is a former US Army intelligence officer who served during the Viet Nam era. He was the co-host and co-producer of weekly The Lisa Benson Show for National Security that aired out of KKNT960 in Phoenix Arizona from 2013 to 2016. He is co-host and co-producer of the Middle East Round Table periodic series on 1330amWEBY, Northwest Florida Talk Radio, Pensacola, Florida.
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