Israel is still responsible for Gaza. They tried to give up that responsibility and hand it over to Egypt in Jan 2008, when the Palestinians made their prison break:
http://haaretz.com/hasen/spages/947858.html
I see. The elections of 2006 was just a show, a farce that had no meaning other than to create a spectacle. Got it. Palestinians aren't real people, according to both FireGarden and haaretz.
I read you loud and clear.
As of 2005:
Israel continues to assert control over activities that rely on transit through Israel, as well as air space over and sea access to ports in Gaza. Israel approves all immigration to and emigration from Gaza via Israel, as well as entry by foreigners via Israel, imports and exports via Israel, and collection and reimbursement of value-added tax in Israel.
It is that last part that I'd offer you have a smattering of competence for your position. Ingress and egress via the ports, which is not via Israel, isn't controlled by Israel. What has happened is that the free access via those facilities has been restricted due to
you recall this, right
attacks on Israel.
Palestinians and others maintain that the Israeli occupation is not over because of this Israeli control
Translation:
We, the Pals of Gaza, are unable to do X, Y, and Z. Rather than work to get there, we will throw a tantrum.
There are other options. You are, IMO, clever enough to grasp that a way forward is difficult when a state of armed hostility between two parties in in play. It is. I wish it weren't, but it is.
It isn't 1994 anymore, and for that matter, it isn't 2005 anymore.
I fully appreciate that the Israeli divestment and transition to Pal autonomy wasn't as easy as flipping a switch. Of course not. You will note that
the Pals had a vote in screwing up the transition. I don't think the Israeli government's initial intention was to welch on any deal of the transition.
Time changes things, politically. I find distressing your position as calcified as positions of two decades ago. The game board has changed.
You are welcomed to point the finger elsewhere. The elected officials in Gaza had the opportunity to work, and to make the transition work, but it seems
they foched it up.
HOw the Pals manage to get control of their own energy policy is a good question. See where power plants are built. (You don't build a power plant overnight either.) Their's is to the problem the US has with it's sources of energy: someone else is involved, one must make deals and deal with the vagaries of someone else having influence on one's energy policy.
By the way, the article you linked was a report of obvious political posturing
over the issue of the Egyptian border with Gaza, and a short term official looking the other way. The Israelis called the Egyptian bluff. Egypt folded the hand.
As to the genocide charge,
you brought it up. If you don't want to talk about it, why bring it up?
The destruction of Israel is not genocide -- no more than the destruction of Apartheid South Africa was genocide.
Anyway, if you read my entire comment on that remark of yours, we are not that far apart on what
isn't genocice.
DR