Your proposal looks a lot like the pre-2005 security arrangement. If that framework failed then, why would it succeed now after twenty more years of conflict, after Oct 7th, after 2 years of bombing? Setting morality aside, your plan only works if Israel is willing to police Gaza, shape governance, oversee reconstruction, and revisit the relationship with the Palestinians, while remaining deeply involved for years to come. I don’t believe Israel is willing to do that, I mean, revisit the relationship with Palestinains? that is a hard no right ? which is why I don’t think the plan is viable.
Before 2005, Israel maintained permanent civilian settlements inside the Gaza Strip, requiring a massive, static military presence to protect specific enclaves. What I am describing is the post-ISIS Mosul or post-WWII model: no civilian settlements, no permanent military administration governing daily life, but complete security freedom of action to enter, neutralize a cell, and leave.
You ask why this would succeed now when containment failed before. The answer is simple: Containment is what failed. For twenty years, the international community forced Israel to accept a 'quiet for quiet' status quo, letting Hamas build a massive state sponsored military fortress on our border. October 7th proved that containment is a fatal delusion. The baseline has completely shifted; the Israeli public and military now understand that total security control is an absolute prerequisite for survival. It’s not about a lack of 'willingness' to police Gaza it is an existential necessity.
Furthermore, you claim Israel won't 'revisit the relationship with the Palestinians.' Israel has repeatedly shown it is willing to forge new regional realities, as it did with the Abraham Accords. The barrier to changing the relationship has never been Israeli willingness; it has been the absolute refusal of Palestinian leadership to accept a Jewish state in any borders.
Israel does not want to run Gaza's schools, pave its roads, or manage its hospitals. That is exactly why my plan relies on non Hamas civilian technocrats and regional Arab partners to handle governance and reconstruction. But Israel will absolutely maintain the keys to the security border. We tried outsourcing our security to international frameworks and walls; it led to the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. We are never doing it again