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Alanna O鈥橫alley on Gaza peace agremeent at TRT Roundtable

Will Trump鈥檚 Gaza deal really bring peace to the Middle East?

The prospects for peace in the Middle East looks better than at any point since Israel鈥檚 war on Gaza started two years ago. But what would a lasting peace deal look like? Will the people of Gaza have any say on their future? And will Israel finally end its genocide? Professor Alanna O鈥橫alley, Professor of Global Governance and Wealth at Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication, joined a special episode of TRT World鈥檚 Roundtable from Istanbul.

Together with Hassan Ben Imran (Legal Advisor at Law for Palestine) and Sultan Barakat (Director of the Centre for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies), Professor O鈥橫alley discussed the issue in Gaza and the peace agreement between Israel and Hamas.

The unmaking of Palestine

Over the past two years, we have witnessed what Hassan Ben Imran refers to as the ultimate goal of Zionism: the 鈥渦nmaking of Palestine鈥. Professor O'Malley says that this has been going on for a lot longer than the last two years, pointing to how the Israeli state has persecuted Palestinians in Gaza and the Occupied Territories for decades. 

鈥淭his is extremely concerning, because this situation has largely arisen from the deprivation of the Palestinian people's rights to their homeland, their sovereignty and their right to self-determination. And the proposed peace agreement does not take their views or needs into account. What it does, in fact, is further exclude them from participating in a peace agreement and from being part of the solution.鈥

Historical irony

O'Malley also shares her thoughts on how history will look back on the past two years. 鈥楾here is a terrible historical irony here. The Jewish state was founded in response to the inhumanity that Jewish people endured during the Second World War. And now Israeli leaders are committing genocide in their name. 

From a broader perspective, other countries, such as South Africa, show solidarity with Palestine. They too have experienced genocide, betrayal and discrimination and have been abandoned by the international community in the past. They are taking the lead in the struggle to bring this issue to international attention. The historical irony lies not only in the contrast between the founding of Israel and what that same state is doing now, but also in the way that pressure on this issue is coming from countries (especially from the Global South) that have benefited little from the international system.

鈥榃e are at a historic turning point, and unfortunately, I think it鈥檚 going to be one of those moments that historians look back on and wonder: why wasn't more done? Have we not learned clear lessons from the past?鈥

The illegitimacy of Tony Blair 

Furthermore, O鈥橫alley discussed the rebuilding of Gaza and the controversial issue of Tony Blair鈥檚 involvement, who was recently proposed by Trump for position as 鈥楪overnor of Gaza鈥. Asked how the (Muslim) world views him given his role in the Iraq War, O'Malley said:  鈥楾ony Blair is regarded as somebody who led an illegal war. The very kind of terms of his proposed interaction are reminiscent of the mandate system of the League of Nations and the trusteeship system of the UN, which we know after a hundred years of dealing with the legacies of those institutions, actually bakes in the conflict in these kind of settlements. I think Tony Blair has little legitimacy in the Muslim world. What this represents is, again, the imposition of a Western statesman with a dubious record historically in that region, being imposed on people for whom he has never served a purpose.鈥

 

Watch the full interview here

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Alanna O'Malley on TRT World's Roundtable

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