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OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 8/20/13

Will Palestine Retain Its Natural Gas Fields?

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For the moment, all is quiet on the Israeli-Palestinian peace front. Is it "too quiet," as they once asked in movie westerns?

That depends entirely on what kind of peace is being discussed. Does danger lurk, or does a just peace lie ahead?

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry could be working furiously behind the scenes for a just peace. If so, he would be demanding that the natural gas fields off the Gaza coast remain under Palestinian control.

An industry websiteoffshore technology.com, describes the potential of the Gaza coast gas fields:

"Gaza Marine gas field is located 30km off the coast of the Gaza Strip, in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. It lies at a water depth of 603m. The development of the Gaza field has been on hold for several years due to disputes between Israel and the Palestinians."

Not surprisingly, Israel has already treated the gas fields as its personal property. On June 16, 2011, Oil Price.com wrote:

"Earlier this week Israel's Ministry of National Infrastructure authorized Noble Energy, a crude oil and gas exploration U.S. based company based in New York, to begin developing a natural gas field off the Gaza Strip coastline, the Palestine News Network reported...

"British Gas has already established two offshore natural gas wells, Gaza Marine 1 and Gaza Marine 2. (above) According to British Gas, the natural reservoir off Gaza is estimated to contain 1.5 trillion cubic meters of natural gas with an estimated net worth of approximately $4 billion.

"At the time, Palestinian official Dmitry Dliani said 'that the Israeli Ministry of Infrastructure's decision was in fact a license to steal Gaza's natural gas reserves and demanded international protection for the Palestinian natural gas reservoir off Gaza.'"

Two years later, in the quietness of the peace talks, the U.S. is in a position to cancel Israel's illegal seizure by affirming that Palestine's natural gas fields belong to Palestine.

In addition to enabling Palestine's economic potential through its own natural resources, a just peace would end Israel's illegal occupation of Palestine. The end of the occupation would remove Israel's control over Palestine's borders and give Palestine responsibility for its own internal security.

A just peace would deliver an international airport that is a necessity for a new Palestine. A seaport large enough to handle Palestinian tourism and economic traffic will have to be developed.

A just peace would provide Palestine with access to the profitable tourism trade and the rich mineral deposits on the shore of the Dead Sea. That shore line area is shared by Israel and Palestine, according to the 1967 Green Line border.

On the other hand, and this is the bad news, the code of silence that currently hovers over the peace talks may also be harboring a darker vision of Palestine's future.

Secretary Kerry, acting as something less than an "honest broker," could be devising a token economic and freedom bucket list of promises that would be nothing less than a "carthaginian peace" imposed by the U.S. and Israel on Palestine, a "peace" which conquering armies impose on a defeated population.

The term, "carthaginian peace," entered history after Rome defeated Carthage in the Punic Wars, fought from 254 BC to 146 BC.

A carthaginian peace is the imposition of a very brutal peace that crushes an enemy. If such a disastrous conclusion is reached by the Kerry-run peace talks, we will face a modern version of the end of the Punic Wars, which were, according to Wikipedia:

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James Wall served as a Contributing Editor of The Christian Century magazine, based in Chicago, Illinois, from 1999 through 2017. From 1972 through 1999, he was editor and publisher of the Christian Century magazine. Many sources have influenced (more...)
 

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