Gaza:
Israel's $4 billion gas grab
Never
mind the 'war on terror' rhetoric, writes Nafeez Ahmed. The purpose
of Israel's escalating assault on Gaza is to control the Territory's
1.4 trillion cubic feet of gas - and so keep Palestine poor and weak,
gain massive export revenues, and avert its own domestic energy
crisis.
Nafeez Ahmed
18
July, 2014
Israel's
defence minister is on record confirming that military plans to
uproot Hamas' are about securing control of Gaza's gas reserves
The
conquest of Gaza is accelerating. Israel has now launched its ground
invasion, bringing the Palestinian death toll to 260, 80% of whom are
civilians.
A
further 1,500 have been wounded and 1,300 Palestinian homes
destroyed. Israel's goal, purportedly, is to "restore
quiet" by
ending Hamas rocket attacks on Israel.
Last
Tuesday, Israeli defence minister and former Israeli Defence Force
(IDF) chief of staffMoshe
Ya'alon announced
that Operation Protective Edge marks the beginning of a protracted
assault on Hamas.
The
operation "won't
end in just a few days",
he said, adding that "we
are preparing to expand the operation by all means standing at our
disposal so as to continue striking Hamas."
The
price will be very heavy ... yes, $4 billion!
The
following morning, he went on: "We
continue with strikes that draw a very heavy price from Hamas. We are
destroying weapons, terror infrastructures, command and control
systems, Hamas institutions, regime buildings, the houses of
terrorists, and killing terrorists of various ranks of command ...
"The
campaign against Hamas will expand in the coming days, and the price
the organization will pay will be very heavy."
But
in 2007, a year before Operation Cast Lead, Ya'alon's
concerns focused
on the 1.4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas discovered in 2000 off
the Gaza coast, valued at $4 billion.
Ya'alon
dismissed the notion that "Gaza
gas can be a key driver of an economically more viable Palestinian
state" as "misguided".
The
problem, he said is that "Proceeds
of a Palestinian gas sale to Israel would likely not trickle down to
help an impoverished Palestinian public. Rather, based on Israel's
past experience, the proceeds will likely serve to fund further
terror attacks against Israel ...
"A
gas transaction with the Palestinian Authority will, by definition,
involve Hamas. Hamas will either benefit from the royalties or it
will sabotage the project and launch attacks against Fatah, the gas
installations, Israel - or all three ...
"It
is clear that without an overall military operation to uproot Hamas
control of Gaza, no drilling work can take place without the consent
of the radical Islamic movement."
Resource
competition is at the heart of the conflict
Operation
Cast Lead did not succeed in uprooting Hamas, but the conflict did
take the lives of 1,387
Palestinians (773 of whom were civilians) and
9 Israelis (3 of whom were civilians).
Since
the discovery of oil and gas in the Occupied Territories, resource
competition has increasingly been at the heart of the conflict,
motivated largely by Israel's increasing domestic energy woes.
Mark
Turner,
founder of the Research Journalism Initiative, reported that the
siege of Gaza and ensuing military pressure was designed
to "eliminate" Hamas
as "a
viable political entity in Gaza" to
generate a "political
climate" conducive
to a gas deal.
This
involved rehabilitating the defeated Fatah as the dominant political
player in the West Bank, and "leveraging
political tensions between the two parties, arming forces loyal to
Abbas and the selective resumption of financial aid."
Ya'alon's
comments in 2007 illustrate that the Israeli cabinet is not just
concerned about Hamas - but concerned that if Palestinians develop
their own gas resources, the resulting economic transformation could
in turn fundamentally increase Palestinian clout.
It's
not called Leviathan for nothing
Meanwhile,
Israel has made successive
discoveries in
recent years - such as the Leviathan field estimated to hold 18
trillion cubic feet of natural gas - which could transform the
country from energy importer into aspiring energy exporter with
ambitions to supply Europe, Jordan and Egypt.
The
chief obstacle is that much of the 122 trillion cubic feet of gas and
1.6 billion barrels of oil in the Levant Basin Province lies in
territorial waters where borders are hotly disputed between Israel,
Syria, Lebanon, Gaza and Cyprus.
Amidst
this regional jockeying for gas, Israel has its own little-understood
energy challenges. First, it could take until 2020 for much of these
domestic resources to be mobilised.
Worse,
a 2012 letter by two Israeli government chief scientists - which the
Israeli government chose not to disclose - warned the government that
Israel still had insufficient gas resources to sustain exports
despite all the stupendous discoveries. The letter, according
to Ha'aretz,
stated:
"We
believe Israel should increase its use of natural gas by 2020 and
should not export gas. The Natural Gas Authority's estimates are
lacking. There's a gap of 100 to 150 billion cubic meters between the
demand projections that were presented to the committee and the most
recent projections. The gas reserves are likely to last even less
than 40 years!"
Israel's
looming power crisis
As
Dr Gary Luft - an advisor to US Energy Security Council - wrote in
the Journal
of Energy Security, "with
the depletion of Israel's domestic gas supplies accelerating, and
without an imminent rise in Egyptian gas imports, Israel could face a
power crisis in the next few years ...
"If
Israel is to continue to pursue its natural gas plans it must
diversify its supply sources."
Israel's
new discoveries do not, as yet, offer an immediate solution
as electricity
pricesreach
record levels, heightening the imperative to diversify supply. This
appears to be behind Prime Minister Netanyahu's announcement in
February 2011 that it was now time to seal the Gaza gas deal.
But
even after a new round of negotiations was kick-started between the
Fatah-led Palestinian Authority and Israel in September 2012, Hamas
was excluded from these talks, and thus rejected the legitimacy of
any deal.
Earlier
this year, Hamas
condemned a
PA deal to purchase $1.2 billion worth of gas from Israel Leviathan
field over a 20 year period once the field starts producing.
Simultaneously,
the PA has held several meetings with the British
Gas Group to
develop the Gaza gas field, albeit with a view to exclude Hamas - and
thus Gazans - from access to the proceeds. That plan had been the
brainchild of Quartet Middle East envoy Tony Blair.
But
the PA was also courting Russia's
Gazprom to
develop the Gaza marine gas field, and talks have been going on
between Russia, Israel and Cyprus, though so far it is unclear what
the outcome of these have been. Also missing was any clarification on
how the PA would exert control over Gaza, which is governed by Hamas.
The
curse of Gaza's fossil fuel wealth
According
to Anais Antreasyan in the University of California's Journal
of Palestine Studies,
the most respected English language journal devoted to the
Arab-Israeli conflict, Israel's stranglehold over Gaza has been
designed to make "Palestinian
access to the Marine-1 and Marine-2 gas wells impossible."
Israel's
long-term goal "besides
preventing the Palestinians from exploiting their own resources, is
to integrate the gas fields off Gaza into the adjacent Israeli
offshore installations."
This
is part of a wider strategy of "separating
the Palestinians from their land and natural resources in order to
exploit them, and, as a consequence, blocking Palestinian economic
development.
"Despite
all formal agreements to the contrary, Israel continues to manage all
the natural resources nominally under the jurisdiction of the PA,
from land and water to maritime and hydrocarbon resources."
Hamas
- an obstacle to peace? Or an obstacle to a gas deal?
For
the Israeli government, Hamas continues to be the main obstacle to
the finalisation of the gas deal. In the incumbent defence
minister's words:
"Israel's
experience during the Oslo years indicates Palestinian gas profits
would likely end up funding terrorism against Israel. The threat is
not limited to Hamas ... It is impossible to prevent at least some of
the gas proceeds from reaching Palestinian terror groups."
The
only option, therefore, is yet another "military
operation to uproot Hamas".
Unfortunately,
for the IDF uprooting Hamas means destroying the group's
perceivedcivilian
support base -
which is why Palestinian civilian casualties massively
outweigh those of Israelis.
Both are obviously reprehensible, but Israel's capacity to inflict
destruction is simply far greater.
The
IDF's aggressive new combat doctrine
In
the wake of Operation Cast Lead, the Jerusalem-based Public
Committee Against Torture in Israel (Pcati)
found that the IDF had adopted a more aggressive combat doctrine
based on two principles:
- "zero casualties" for IDF soldiers at the cost of deploying increasingly indiscriminate firepower in densely populated areas;
- and the "dahiya doctrine" promoting targeting of civilian infrastructure to create widespread suffering amongst the population with a view to foment opposition to Israel's opponents.
This was confirmed in practice by the UN fact-finding mission in Gaza which concluded that the IDF had pursued a "deliberate policy of disproportionate force" aimed at the"supporting infrastructure" of the enemy. "This appears to have meant the civilian population", said the UN report.
The
Israel-Palestine conflict is clearly not only about resources. But in
an age of expensive energy, competition to dominate regional fossil
fuels are
increasingly influencing the critical decisions that can inflame war.
Dr.
Nafeez Ahmed is
an international security journalist and academic. He is the author
of A
User's Guide to the Crisis of Civilization: And How to Save It,
and the forthcoming science fiction thriller, ZERO
POINT.
ZERO POINT is set in a near future following a Fourth Iraq War.
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