Resource Wars: Land for Peace?
Land access and water rights are intertwined
Having settled the landscape, we had to secure access to freshwater. The level of access depended on our perceived security need.
Peace with Egypt focused minds. I
n 1978, Israel’s withdrawal from the Sinai had secured peace with Egypt. Israeli planners therefore needed to delimit the borders with Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and the Palestinians, and map the land that they country can afford to return without compromising security and water supply.
The key issue was peace with the Palestinians
Regarding the Palestinians, Israeli planners mapped the land their country could afford to return without compromising security and water supply. To Israeli strategic planners, “there can be no security arrangements”, unless Israel did “all it can to safeguard its existing water assets in the territories”. Those hydrostrategic concerns are “a more decisive reason for territorial claims than traditional military security issues” [73].
They soon established “maximum withdrawal lines”.
They were based on two plans: (1) a military-mobilization scheme, the “Allon Plan”, and (2) the “Schwarz-Zohar” report that mapped the West Bank’s hydrostrategic territory.
The result was a combination of both plans. .