As Israeli forces began making limited ground incursions into northern Gaza over the weekend, reports proliferated that Israel was readying plans to expel much or all of the enclaveâs population into the neighbouring Egyptian territory of Sinai.
In part, those fears were fuelled by a report last week, published in the Israeli outlet Calcalist, of a leaked policy draft from the intelligence ministry outlining just such an ethnic cleansing plan for Gaza.
Further concerns were raised by a report in the Financial Times on Monday that Israelâs prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, had lobbied the European Union on the idea of driving the stripâs Palestinians into Sinai under cover of war.
Some EU members, including the Czech Republic and Austria, were said to have been receptive and floated the idea at a meeting of member states last week. An unnamed European diplomat told the FT:
Now is the time to put increased pressure on the Egyptians to agree.
According to the leaked Israeli intelligence ministry document, after their expulsion, Gazaâs 2.3 million Palestinians would initially be housed in tent cities, before permanent communities could be built in the peninsulaâs north.
A military âsterile zoneâ, several kilometres wide, would prevent any return to Gaza. Longer term, Israel would encourage other statesâespecially Canada, European countries such as Greece and Spain, and North African countriesâto absorb the Palestinian population in Sinai.
The ministry reportedly believes the expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza into Sinai would be âliable to provide positive and long-lasting strategic resultsâ.
For Palestinians, on the other hand, it has traumatic echoes of Israelâs mass expulsion of Palestinians from their homeland at Israelâs creation in 1948âwhat Palestinians call their Nakba, or Catastrophe.
Ethnic cleansing plan
The leaked document was quickly dismissed as speculative. But, in fact, Israel has had just such an ethnic cleansing plan for Gaza on the drawing board, approved by the United States, since at least 2007. That was shortly after Hamas won Palestinian elections and took control of the enclave.
After a series of failed, secret diplomatic efforts over the past 16 years to arm-twist Egypt into accepting this so-called âpeace planââknown officially as the Greater Gaza PlanâIsrael may be tempted to exploit the current moment to implement a much crueller version of it by force.
That would certainly explain Israelâs current devastating bombing campaign in Gazaâwhich officials are positively comparing to the horrifying firebombing of civilians in the German city of Dresden in the Second World Warâas well as Israelâs order to one million Palestinians to ethnically cleanse themselves from northern Gaza.
On Sunday, Israel bombed buildings all around al-Quds hospital in northern Gaza, filling wards with clouds of toxic dust. Administrators received repeated warnings that the hospital had to be evacuated immediately. Staff said that was impossible because too many patients were far too sick to be moved.
The concentration of Palestinians into southern Gazaâwhere they are also being bombed and deprived of power, food, water and communications, with hospitals and aid compounds unable to functionâhas created an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.
The pressure is building day by day on Egyptâs military ruler Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to open the Rafah crossing on humanitarian grounds and let Palestinians flood into Sinai.
Hamasâ attack on Israeli communities next to Gaza on 7 October may have provided precisely the pretext Israel needs to dust off its ethnic cleansing plan.
With Washington and Europe on board, and the western media still focused primarily on Israelâs trauma rather than Gazaâs, Netanyahu cannot wait too long before his window for action closes.
Pressure on Egypt
The Greater Gaza Plan first came to light in 2014, after leaks to Israeli and Egyptian mediaâapparently part of a pressure campaign on Sisi, then recently installed with U.S. backing. The Egyptian military had overthrown an elected Muslim Brotherhood government the previous year.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas confirmed the planâs existence at that time by insisting he had quashed it. He told an interviewer that it had been âunfortunately accepted by some here [in Egypt]. Donât ask me more about that. We abolished it, because it canât be.â
Middle East Eye was one of the very few western media outlets to report on these developments at the time.
As concern grew among Egyptians and Palestinians, a former aide to Hosni Mubarak, who ruled Egypt until 2011, came forward to state that the administration of George W Bush had pressured Mubarak to accept the plan as far back as 2007.
The next president, Mohamed Morsi, of the Muslim Brotherhood, was also reportedly leaned on in a similar manner in 2012.
The source quoted Mubarak as saying in response to the plan:
We are fighting both the U.S. and Israel. There is pressure on us to open the Rafah crossing for the Palestinians and grant them freedom of residence, particularly in Sinai. In a year or two, the issue of Palestinian refugee camps in Sinai will be internationalised.
At that time, pushing Palestinians into Sinai was dressed up as a âpeace planâ. Now, should Israel succeed, it will be the endgame in a violent ethnic cleansing operation.
As MEE noted back in 2014, the Greater Gaza Plan envisioned transferring 1,600 sq km of Sinaiâfive times the size of Gazaâto the Palestinian leadership in the West Bank, headed by Abbas.
The territory in Sinai would become a demilitarised Palestinian stateâdubbed âGreater Gazaââto which returning Palestinian refugees would be assigned⊠In return, Abbas would have to give up the right to a state in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
The hope was that Abbas would agree to rule a mini Palestinian state in Sinai, where most Palestinian refugees in the region could be settled, stripping them of their right of return under international law.
Most Palestinians in Gaza are refugees, or descended from refugees, from Israelâs ethnic cleansing operations of 1948.
Israeli rightâs dream
The idea of creating a Palestinian state outside historic Palestineâin either Jordan or Sinaiâhas a long pedigree in Zionist thinking. âJordan is Palestineâ has been a rallying cry on the Israeli right for decades. There have been parallel suggestions for Sinai.
The scheme became the centrepiece of the 2004 Herzliya conference, an annual meeting of Israelâs political, academic and security elites to exchange and develop policy ideas. It was enthusiastically adopted by Uzi Arad, the conferenceâs founder and long-time adviser to Netanyahu.
A variation of the âSinai is Palestineâ option was revived by the right during Operation Protective Edge, Israelâs 50-day attack on Gaza in the summer of 2014.
Moshe Feiglin, the speaker of the Israeli Knesset and then a member of Netanyahuâs Likud party, called for Gazaâs inhabitants to be expelled from their homes under cover of the operation and moved into Sinai, in what he termed a âsolution for Gazaâ.
The Greater Gaza Plan received a further shot in the arm in 2018 from the Trump administration, when reports suggested it was considered for inclusion in the U.S. presidentâs âdeal of the centuryâ plan to bring about normalisation between Israel and the Arab world.
Israelâs rationale for the Sinai option between 2007 and 2018 was that it undermined Abbasâ campaign at the United Nations to seek recognition of Palestinian statehood.
Notably, Israelâs large-scale military attacks on Gazaâin the winter of 2008, 2012 and again in 2014âcoincided with reported Israeli and U.S. efforts to turn the screws on successive Egyptian leaders to concede parts of Sinai.
Destruction of Gaza, intensifying the humanitarian catastrophe there, seems to have been part of that pressure campaign.
âNo human can existâ
All of that is the context for interpreting Israelâs unprecedented current rampage through Gaza, as well as the similarly unprecedented fallout from political and military crises in Israel caused by Hamasâ 7 October attack.
The Greater Gaza Plan was originally intended to provide the Palestinian leadership with a sweetener, offering some kind of stateâthough not in historic Palestine. Sinai would host new Palestinian cities, a free-trade zone, a power plant, and a seaport and airport.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas meeting with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in New York on 24 September 2014 (AFP)
The main sticking point for Egyptâapart from being seen to collude with Israel in erasing the Palestinian national causeâwas concern that Hamas would gain a base inside Egypt, and strengthen Egyptâs home-grown Islamist movements.
There are plenty of indications that Israelâs determination to drive Palestinians into Egypt has intensified since the 7 October attack, and that the Hamas breakout has provided an opportunity to achieve by force what could not be achieved through diplomacy.
Israeli leaders now sound in no mood to take account of Egyptian concerns.
A week into its military operations, a spokesman for the Israeli military, Amir Avivi, told the BBC that Israel could not ensure the safety of civilians in Gaza. He added:
They need to move south, out to the Sinai Peninsula.
The next day, a former Israeli ambassador to the U.S., Danny Ayalon, a Netanyahu confidant, amplified the point:
There is almost endless space in the Sinai Desert⊠This is not the first time it has been done⊠We and the international community will prepare the infrastructure for tent cities.
He concluded:
Egypt will have to play ball.
These officials have presented this as a temporary move during Israelâs bombing campaign and ground invasion. But all the signs are that Israel has far larger ambitions.
Benny Gantz, a former general who now sits in a unity government with Netanyahu, has said Israel has a plan to âchange the security and strategic reality in the regionâ.
Giora Eiland, a former national security adviser, has said the goal is to âcreate conditions where life in Gaza becomes unsustainableâ. As a result,
Gaza will become a place where no human being can exist.
Spiralling out of control
Sisi is more than aware of the pressure Israel is bringing to bear on Egypt. At a press conference on 18 October, he warned that Israelâs bombing of Gaza was creating a humanitarian crisis that âcould spiral out of controlâ.
He added:
What is happening now in Gaza is an attempt to force civilian residents to take refuge and migrate to Egypt, which should not be accepted.
The scenario Sisi fears is a repeat of events in 2008 when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians broke through the barrier between Gaza and Sinai to get food and fuel because of Israelâs siege of the enclave. To prevent a recurrence, Egypt has repeatedly bolstered security measures along its short border with Gaza.
Nonetheless, Cairo reportedly has made preparations for just such a development. Its plans include the rapid setting up of tent cities next to the Sinai towns of Sheikh Zuwayed and Rafah.
Sisi said that, if Palestinians were driven into Sinai, Egyptians would âgo out and protest in their millionsâ.
Cairoâs concerns about Israeli intentions are shared by United Nationsâ official Francesca Albanese, a special rapporteur on the occupied territories.
Referring to Israelâs two main historic ethnic cleansing operations, she observed:
There is a grave danger that what we are witnessing may be a repeat of the 1948 Nakba, and the 1967 Naksa, yet on a larger scale. The international community must do everything to stop this from happening again.
The U.S., which has long backed the Greater Gaza Plan, has its own forms of leverageâincluding financial pressureâto encourage Sisi to comply.
Egypt is mired in an unprecedented debt crisis of more than $160bn, plus spiralling inflation, as Sisi heads into a presidential election.
Egyptian officials reportedly believe Washington will try to use a debt write-off as an incentive to accept refugees from a renewed Israeli ethnic cleansing operation.
Only three days after the Hamas attack, Biden administration officials publicly declared that they had made arrangements with unnamed third countries to offer safe passage out of Gaza for Palestinian civilians.
All the signs are in place that Israel is once again seriously considering a massive ethnic cleansing operation, conducted at lightning speed and with U.S. assistance, to override international objections.
The question is, is anyone ready, or able, to stop them?
Source: Mronline.org