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Showing posts with label PLO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PLO. Show all posts

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Palestine: The Second Intifada – The Uprising That Divided a Nation

By J. André Faust (Oct 26, 2025)

The Second Intifada – The Uprising That Divided a Nation

The Second Intifada (Arabic: al-Intifāḍa al-Thāniya), which erupted in late September 2000, was a major Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation that lasted roughly until 2005. It marked the collapse of the optimism born from the Oslo Accords and a return to large-scale violence after years of stalled diplomacy (Beinin & Hajjar, 2014; BBC, 2010).

1. From the First Intifada to Oslo

The First Intifada (1987–1993) was a largely grass-roots movement driven by daily hardship under occupation. It combined strikes, boycotts, and demonstrations to challenge Israeli control (Khalidi, 2007). The resulting Oslo Accords were intended to establish Palestinian self-rule within five years and move toward a two-state solution. However, continued settlement expansion, economic restrictions, and growing cynicism within both societies eroded the process long before it reached fruition (Lustick, 2006).

2. The Road to the Second Intifada

By 1999, peace talks had stalled. Many Palestinians perceived Oslo as perpetuating dependency rather than ending occupation. Critics saw the Palestinian Authority as weak and corrupt, while many Israelis viewed continued violence as proof that concessions were futile. The immediate spark came on 28 September 2000, when Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon visited the al-Aqsa Mosque compound (Temple Mount) in Jerusalem—a site sacred to Muslims and Jews. The visit was widely seen as a provocation, igniting protests that spread across the territories (AP, 2000).

3. From Protest to Warfare

Unlike the civil resistance of the first uprising, the Second Intifada quickly became militarised. Armed factions—including Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and Fatah’s al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades—launched bombings and shooting attacks inside Israel. Israel responded with targeted assassinations, large-scale incursions into West Bank cities (notably Operation Defensive Shield), and the construction of the separation barrier (Human Rights Watch, 2002). By 2005, roughly 3,000 Palestinians and 1,000 Israelis had been killed (B’Tselem, 2006).

4. Continuity and Divergence

AspectFirst Intifada (1987–1993)Second Intifada (2000–2005)
NatureCivil resistance, boycottsArmed uprising, suicide bombings
LeadershipGrass-roots / PLO coordinationFatah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad factions
TriggerAccumulated hardshipSharon visit + Oslo collapse
OutcomeOslo Accords, creation of PARe-entry of IDF into West Bank; Fatah–Hamas division

The Second Intifada was thus an eruption of unfulfilled expectations from the first. Where Oslo had promised transformation, Palestinians witnessed deeper control and fragmentation—culminating in the political split that endures between Fatah in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza.

5. The Oslo Framework: A Fragile Architecture

Between 1993 and 2000, a sequence of agreements known as the Oslo framework attempted to transform the conflict into a phased peace process. Each accord advanced the idea of Palestinian self-rule, yet none resolved the core disputes of sovereignty, borders, refugees, and Jerusalem. The structure looked solid on paper but remained fragile in practice—a temporary architecture suspended between hope and hostility.

Oslo I: Declaration of Principles (1993)

Signed at the White House on 13 September 1993, Oslo I established mutual recognition—Israel acknowledged the PLO as the representative of the Palestinian people, and the PLO recognised Israel’s right to exist—and set a five-year transition toward final-status talks, with limited Palestinian self-government in Gaza and parts of the West Bank (Beinin & Hajjar, 2014).

Oslo II: The Taba Agreement (1995)

Signed on 28 September 1995, Oslo II expanded autonomy and divided the West Bank into Areas A (full PA control), B (PA civil control with Israeli security), and C (full Israeli control—about 60% of the West Bank). It also provided for Palestinian elections and security coordination. The division created a patchwork geography that complicated movement and governance; Rabin’s assassination weeks later further eroded trust.

Later Attempts to Salvage Oslo

  • Hebron Protocol (1997): Partitioned Hebron into Israeli- and Palestinian-administered sectors.
  • Wye River Memorandum (1998): Called for further redeployments and security steps; implementation stalled.
  • Camp David Summit (2000): A final-status push on borders, refugees, and Jerusalem collapsed; weeks later, the Second Intifada began.

Each agreement produced a brief moment of coherence in a system under strain.

6. The Oslo Accords: A Promise Deferred

The accords created the Palestinian Authority (PA) and recognised mutual legitimacy (Rabinovich, 2017), but left the most critical issues—Jerusalem, refugees, settlements, borders—for later. Israel retained full control over Area C and movement between Palestinian zones. By the late 1990s, settlement growth and frequent closures convinced many Palestinians that Oslo had repackaged occupation rather than ended it. Within Israel, politics polarised; Rabin’s 1995 assassination signalled the domestic cost of compromise.

7. Marwan Barghouti: The Imprisoned Symbol of Unity

Marwan Barghouti emerged during the First Intifada as a Fatah organiser and later a leading member of the Palestinian Legislative Council. Advocating a two-state solution while defending a right to resist occupation, he sought to bridge diplomacy and defiance (Milton-Edwards, 2008). During the Second Intifada, Israel accused him of directing the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades. Captured in 2002 and convicted in 2004 for involvement in attacks that killed five Israelis, he received five life sentences. He refused to recognise the court’s authority, turning the trial into a political statement.

From prison, Barghouti became a rallying figure, often compared to Nelson Mandela. Polls consistently rank him the most popular potential successor to Mahmoud Abbas. His name resurfaced in 2025 when the U.S. signalled that Israel might be pressed to consider his release as part of post-Hamas reconstruction efforts (Associated Press, 2025).

8. The 4D Perspective: Cycles of Entanglement and Collapse

Within the 4D dynamic connectivity model, the two Intifadas appear as successive phase transitions in a single historical field. Each cycle builds pressure, releases energy, and re-entangles actors in new configurations of conflict and control.

Phase One (1967–1987): Compression of Energy

Post-1967 occupation created a high-pressure field—intense social energy constrained by external dominance. The First Intifada was the spontaneous discharge of that pressure through largely non-violent means.

Phase Two (1993–2000): Oscillation and Interference

The Oslo Accords generated overlapping expectations: peace versus sovereignty. These waveforms interfered destructively as settlement expansion and checkpoints eroded trust, setting conditions for the next collapse.

Phase Three (2000–2005): Resonance Collapse

The Second Intifada represented the decoherence of Oslo’s waveform: both sides locked in violent resonance until the system lost coherence, bifurcating into Fatah’s West Bank and Hamas’s Gaza.

9. Present Layer: Toward a New Equilibrium

Current discussion surrounding Marwan Barghouti’s potential release illustrates another attempt at re-stabilising the field (Associated Press, 2025). From a systems view:

  • Barghouti embodies latent legitimacy—an unmeasured particle capable of re-cohering Palestinian politics.
  • Hamas’s decline dissipates one energy mode, allowing reconfiguration.
  • The two-state framework remains the lowest-entropy equilibrium, achievable only if political vectors align toward coexistence rather than control.

10. Closing Thought: The Field Remembers

Suppressed energy does not vanish; it accumulates. The First Intifada converted despair into diplomacy. The Second turned disillusionment into division. The next phase will test whether the system can transform trauma into coherence: a stable alignment of justice, security, and recognition.


References

Associated Press. (2000). Timeline: Ariel Sharon visit to al-Aqsa Mosque and subsequent clashes.
Associated Press. (2025, October 23). Trump mulls asking Israel to free Palestinian leader Barghouti.
BBC News. (2010). Q&A: Second Intifada.
Beinin, J., & Hajjar, L. (2014). Palestine, Israel and the Arab–Israeli Conflict. Middle East Research and Information Project.
B’Tselem. (2006). Fatalities in the Second Intifada.
Human Rights Watch. (2002). Israel, the West Bank and Gaza: Unlawful Killings and Collective Punishment.
Khalidi, R. (2007). The Iron Cage: The Story of the Palestinian Struggle for Statehood. Beacon Press.
Lustick, I. (2006). Trapped in the War on Terror. University of Pennsylvania Press.
Milton-Edwards, B. (2008). Hamas: The Islamic Resistance Movement. Polity Press.
Rabinovich, I. (2017). Yitzhak Rabin: Soldier, Leader, Statesman. Yale University Press.


About the Author

J. André Faust is a systems thinker and analyst whose work explores the structural entanglements of politics, economics, and society. Through The Connected Mind, he examines how historical patterns and feedback loops shape the present and constrain the future. His current research develops a 4D Dynamic Connectivity Model — a framework for tracing interactions across time, scale, and ideology to reveal where stability or collapse may emerge next.

Monday, October 20, 2025

Origins of Hamas: The First Intifada — The Uprising That Redefined Resistance

by J. André Faust (October 19, 2025)

In December 1987, an Israeli army truck struck and killed four Palestinian workers in Gaza. The protests that followed ignited the First Intifada — an uprising that redefined Palestinian resistance and gave birth to Hamas, the Islamic Resistance Movement (BBC News, 2002).

Arabic: الانتفاضة الأولى (al-Intifāḍa al-Ūlā — “the first uprising”)

Origins

The uprising spread rapidly across the West Bank and Gaza Strip, driven by anger over two decades of occupation, land seizures, and economic hardship (Smith, 1990).

Nature of the movement

The First Intifada was a grassroots civil resistance rather than a war between armies. Local networks coordinated:

  • General strikes and shop closures
  • Boycotts of Israeli goods
  • Refusal to pay certain taxes
  • Graffiti and mass demonstrations

The enduring image that reached global audiences was stone-throwing youths confronting armed soldiers (U.N. Chronicle, 1988; Smith, 1990).

Organisation

Coordinated by local committees in schools, unions, and mosques rather than the exiled PLO leadership, the Intifada relied on community networks that sustained civil disobedience (U.N. Chronicle, 1988; Smith, 1990).

Israeli response

Israel deployed large numbers of troops, imposed curfews, and conducted mass arrests. Use of force, including live ammunition, drew international criticism and intensified scrutiny of conditions under occupation (Amnesty International, 1989; Human Rights Watch, 1990).

Consequences

The uprising shifted global opinion, pushed the PLO toward negotiation, and paved the way for the Oslo peace process. Amid this turmoil, Hamas formally emerged in 1987, providing an Islamic, community-based alternative to the PLO’s secular nationalism (Quandt, 1993; Shlaim, 1994).

Casualties

Roughly 1 200 Palestinians and 160 Israelis were killed during the uprising, with thousands more injured or imprisoned (Smith, 1990).


Legacy

The First Intifada transformed the Palestinian struggle from a distant guerrilla campaign into a grassroots civil movement seen worldwide. Its legacy still shapes debates on recognition, resistance, and the quest for statehood.


References

  • Amnesty International. (1989). Israel and the Occupied Territories: The Military Justice System in the Occupied Territories.
  • BBC News. (2002). Timeline: The First Intifada. Retrieved from https://news.bbc.co.uk/
  • Human Rights Watch. (1990). A Nation Under Siege: Human Rights in the Occupied Territories.
  • Quandt, W. B. (1993). Peace Process: American Diplomacy and the Arab–Israeli Conflict Since 1967. Brookings Institution Press.
  • Shlaim, A. (1994). The Politics of Partition: King Abdullah, the Zionists, and Palestine 1921–1951. Oxford University Press.
  • Smith, C. D. (1990). Palestine and the Arab–Israeli Conflict. St. Martin’s Press.
  • United Nations Chronicle. (1988). Intifada: The Uprising Continues, Vol. 25(3).

About the author

J.  André Faust examines the structural entanglements of politics, economics and society. He explores how single moments, from a lone act of violence to a policy choice, can unfold into decades of social and cultural change.

His approach treats reality like a layered 3D model. Systems overlap, interact and sometimes obscure one another. Forecasts are provisional; hidden layers and feedback loops are often still at work.

Guiding idea: understand connections, trace feedback and revise beliefs as new layers come into view.