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Oslo II Accord
Oslo II Accord
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Official map of the first phase of the "Israeli-Palestinian interim agreement", Areas A and B (with C being defined as the rest of the West Bank)

The Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, commonly known as Oslo II or Oslo 2, was a key and complex agreement in the Israeli–Palestinian peace process. Because it was signed in Taba, Egypt, it is sometimes called the Taba Agreement. The Oslo Accords envisioned the establishment of a Palestinian interim self-government in the Palestinian territories. Oslo II created the Areas A, B and C in the West Bank. The Palestinian Authority was given some limited powers and responsibilities in the Areas A and B and a prospect of negotiations on a final settlement based on Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338. The Accord was officially signed on 28 September 1995.

Historical context

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The Oslo II Accord was first signed in Taba (in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt) by Israel and the PLO on 24 September 1995 and then four days later on 28 September 1995 by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat and witnessed by US President Bill Clinton as well as by representatives of Russia, Egypt, Jordan, Norway, and the European Union in Washington, D.C.

The agreement is built on the foundations of the initial Oslo I Accord, formally called the Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements, which had been formally signed on 13 September 1993 by Israel and the PLO, with Prime Minister Rabin and Chairman Arafat in Washington, D.C. shaking hands, and officially witnessed by the United States and Russia.

It supersedes three earlier agreements:

The Oslo II Accord is called an interim agreement because it was supposed to be the basis for subsequent negotiations and the preliminary of an eventual comprehensive peace agreement. Several additional agreements were concluded following Oslo II, but negotiations did not produce a final peace agreement. The 2002 Road map for peace abandoned the Oslo Accords and envisioned a rather loose scheme of withdrawal.

Aim of the agreement

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Signature page of the accord

The preamble of the agreement speaks of peaceful coexistence, mutual dignity, and security, while recognizing the mutual legitimate and political rights of the parties. The aim of the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations is, among other things, to establish a Palestinian Interim Self-Government Authority for the Palestinian people in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, for a transitional period not exceeding five years, leading to a permanent settlement based on Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338.

As soon as possible but not later than 4 May 1996, negotiations on the permanent status would be started, leading to the implementation of Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338, and settling all the main issues.[1]

The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs declared the main object of the Interim Agreement

to broaden Palestinian self-government in the West Bank by means of an elected self-governing authority [to] allow the Palestinians to conduct their own internal affairs, reduce points of friction between Israelis and Palestinians, and open a new era of cooperation and co-existence based on common interest, dignity and mutual respect. At the same time it protects Israel's vital interests, and in particular its security interests, both with regard to external security as well as the personal security of its citizens in the West Bank.[2]

Content of the agreement

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Map of the Areas. Red line: a projection of the route of the West Bank Barrier as approved on 20 February 2005.

The Interim Agreement comprises over 300 pages containing 5 "chapters" with 31 "articles", plus 7 "annexes" and 9 attached "maps". The agreement has a "preamble" acknowledging its roots in earlier diplomatic efforts of UN Security Council Resolution 242 (1967) and UN Security Council Resolution 338 (1973) the Madrid Conference of 1991 and the other prior agreements that came before it. Most significantly the agreement recognizes the establishment of a "Palestinian Interim Self-Government Authority," that is an elected Council, called "the Council" or "the Palestinian Council".

Chapter 1: The Palestinian Council

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Consisting of Articles I–IX: The role and powers of a governing Palestinian "council" and committee dealing with civil affairs and the transfer of power from Israel to the Palestinian Council. The holding of elections, the structure of the Palestinian Council, and that it should contain 82 representatives, the executive authority of the Council, various other committees, that meetings of the council should be open to the public, and outlining the powers and responsibilities of the Council.

Chapter 2: Redeployment and security arrangements

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Consisting of Articles X–XVI: Phases of the redeployment of the Israel Defense Forces, roles of the Israeli Security Forces and the Israeli police, perspectives on the land of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, definition of the Areas A, B and C dividing the West Bank, arrangements for security and public order, prevention of hostile acts, confidence-building measures, and the role of the Palestinian police:

The Palestinian police force established under the Gaza-Jericho Agreement will be fully integrated into the Palestinian Police and will be subject to the provisions of this Agreement. Except for the Palestinian Police and the Israeli military forces, no other armed forces shall be established or operate in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

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Consisting of Articles XVII–XXI: The scope of the Palestinian Council's authority and jurisdiction and the resolution of conflicts, the legislative powers of the Council, that "Israel and the Council shall exercise their powers and responsibilities ... with due regard to internationally-accepted norms and principles of human rights and the rule of law", the various rights, liabilities and obligations with the transfer of powers and responsibilities from the Israeli military government and its civil administration to the Palestinian Council, dealing with financial claims, and the settlement of differences and disputes.

Chapter 4: Cooperation

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Consisting of Articles XXII–XXVIII: Relations between Israel and the Council:

... shall accordingly abstain from incitement, including hostile propaganda, against each other ... that their respective educational systems contribute to the peace between the Israeli and Palestinian peoples and to peace in the entire region, and will refrain from the introduction of any motifs that could adversely affect the process of reconciliation ... cooperate in combating criminal activity which may affect both sides, including offenses related to trafficking in illegal drugs and psychotropic substances, smuggling, and offenses against property ...

The rules for economic relations as set out in the Protocol on Economic Relations, signed in Paris on April 29, 1994, cooperation programs that will hopefully be developed, the role and functioning of the Joint Israeli-Palestinian Liaison Committee set up as part of the Declaration of Principles (Oslo Accords 1993 and the setting up of a Monitoring and Steering Committee, liaison and cooperation with Jordan and Egypt, and locating and returning missing persons and soldiers missing in action.

Chapter 5: Miscellaneous provisions

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Consisting of Articles XXIX–XXXI: Arrangements for safe passage of persons and transportation between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, coordination between Israel and the Council regarding passage to and from Egypt and Jordan as well as any other agreed international crossings, and then the final clauses dealing with the signing of the agreement, its implementation, that the Gaza–Jericho Agreement (May 1994), the Preparatory Transfer Agreement (August 1994), and the Further Transfer Protocol (August 1995) will be superseded by this agreement, the need and timing of permanent status negotiations, and that:

The PLO undertakes that, within two months of the date of the inauguration of the Council, the Palestinian National Council will convene and formally approve the necessary changes in regard to the Palestinian Covenant, as undertaken in the letters signed by the Chairman of the PLO and addressed to the Prime Minister of Israel, dated September 9, 1993 and May 4, 1994.

Discussion about the release of Palestinian prisoners, agreement about the attached annexes and maps, and commencement of Israel's redeployment.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Israeli–Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, commonly known as the Oslo II Accord, was an interim framework signed on 28 September 1995 in Washington, D.C., by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yasser Arafat, under the auspices of U.S. President Bill Clinton, establishing limited Palestinian self-government in parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a step toward final-status negotiations. The agreement divided the West Bank into three administrative zones—Areas A, B, and C—to facilitate phased Israeli redeployments and transfers of civil authority to a newly elected Palestinian Council, while deferring core issues like borders, settlements, Jerusalem, and refugees to future talks not exceeding five years from the prior Gaza-Jericho Agreement. Key provisions included full Palestinian civil and security control in Area A (encompassing major urban centers like Ramallah and Nablus, comprising about 3% of West Bank territory), Palestinian civil administration with shared or Israeli security responsibility in Area B (rural villages, about 24% of the territory), and retained Israeli civil and security authority in Area C (the remaining 73%, including settlements, military zones, and state lands). It mandated Palestinian elections for an 82-member legislative council and a ra'ees (president), held in January 1996, alongside protocols for economic cooperation, water rights, and joint security mechanisms to prevent terrorism. Israel committed to three phased redeployments of its forces from populated areas within 18 months of the Council's inauguration, dissolving its Civil Administration in transferred zones, though permanent-status matters like Israeli settlements remained under Israeli control. While Oslo II enabled the creation of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and initial territorial withdrawals, its implementation faltered amid Palestinian non-compliance, including persistent incitement against by Arafat and failure to amend the PLO charter calling for Israel's destruction, leading to a surge in suicide bombings and the Second Intifada after 2000. The accord's structural optimism—rooted in unverified assumptions of mutual goodwill—ignored Arafat's rejectionist strategy, transforming ceded territories into bases for rather than peace-building, with over 1,600 Israelis killed in Oslo-era violence and no progress on final-status talks. Critics argue it empowered radical elements like , entrenched PA corruption, and perpetuated a fragmented Palestinian entity incapable of statehood, underscoring causal flaws in prioritizing territorial concessions over behavioral preconditions like ending violence.

Background and Prelude

Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Context Prior to Oslo I

The 1948 Arab-Israeli War, triggered by Arab states' invasion following Israel's on May 14, 1948, ended with armistice agreements in 1949 that left the under Jordanian control, which formally annexed the territory in 1950. In 1964, the established the (PLO) to unify Palestinian factions and pursue the "liberation of Palestine" through armed struggle against . The 1967 , initiated by preemptive Israeli strikes against Egyptian, Syrian, and Jordanian forces amid mobilization threats, resulted in Israel's capture of the (including ) from Jordan, the from , the , and the . The 1973 saw and launch a coordinated surprise attack on Israeli positions in the Sinai and on October 6, but Israeli counteroffensives repelled the invaders, leading to a with minimal net territorial shifts beyond temporary advances. Palestinian militant groups affiliated with the PLO escalated in the 1970s, including high-profile airplane hijackings by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), such as the September 1970 Dawson's Field operation where four Western airliners were seized and three destroyed after passengers were held hostage to demand the release of imprisoned militants. These acts, part of a broader campaign targeting civilians and infrastructure, aimed to internationalize the conflict but provoked global condemnation and strengthened Israeli resolve against negotiations involving unreformed PLO elements. The , erupting in December 1987 in the and spreading to the , consisted of widespread Palestinian riots, stone-throwing, Molotov cocktails, and stabbings against Israeli civilians and security forces, culminating in approximately 160 Israeli deaths over six years amid over 1,000 total fatalities. This uprising highlighted the volatility of Israeli-administered territories but also exposed PLO incitement from exile and the limitations of without political resolution. Diplomatic initiatives prior to direct Israeli-PLO talks largely faltered due to Arab rejection of Israel's existence and insistence on maximalist demands. The 1978 , mediated by U.S. President between Egypt's and Israel's , secured Egyptian-Israeli peace via the 1979 treaty and Israeli withdrawal from Sinai but sidelined direct Palestinian representation, offering only a vague framework for West Bank-Gaza autonomy that Egypt ultimately declined to administer. The 1991 Madrid Conference, convened by the U.S. post-Gulf War, marked the first multilateral Arab-Israeli talks with a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation but stalled over Palestinian refusal to renounce violence or recognize Israel, yielding no binding agreements despite procedural breakthroughs. The impetus for bilateral Oslo negotiations stemmed from structural shifts: the Soviet Union's 1991 collapse eroded superpower patronage for radical Arab rejectionism, weakening PLO financial and diplomatic backing from Moscow-aligned states. Israel's economic resilience and strategic restraint—absorbing Iraqi attacks during the 1991 without retaliating, thus preserving the anti-Saddam coalition—bolstered its negotiating leverage amid reduced external threats. A discreet Norwegian-facilitated back-channel, initiated in 1992 by academics and officials bypassing the rigid multilateral frameworks of and Washington, enabled clandestine Israeli-PLO contacts insulated from Arab state interference and U.S. bureaucratic oversight. These factors underscored the rationale for direct, pragmatic talks over ideologically laden multilateral efforts prone to veto by hardline actors.

Oslo I Agreement and Interim Developments

The , officially the Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements, was signed on September 13, 1993, in , by Israeli Prime Minister and Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Chairman , with U.S. President presiding. The agreement outlined a framework for Palestinian interim self-governance in the and area, aiming for a five-year transitional period toward negotiations on permanent status issues, while deferring final resolutions on borders, settlements, , and refugees. Accompanying letters of mutual recognition marked a breakthrough: Israel acknowledged the PLO as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, while the PLO explicitly recognized Israel's right to exist in peace and security, renounced , and committed to assuming responsibility for all PLO factions to prevent violent acts. Implementation began with the establishment of joint Israeli-Palestinian committees to address economic cooperation, , and security coordination, alongside initial international donor pledges that funneled over $2 billion in aid commitments by late 1993 to support Palestinian economic stabilization and institution-building. The Gaza- Agreement, signed on May 4, 1994, in , operationalized the first phase by stipulating Israeli military withdrawal from major Gaza population centers and the Jericho enclave, completed on May 25, 1994, followed by Arafat's arrival in Gaza on July 1, 1994, to assume leadership of the nascent Palestinian Authority (PA). This transfer enabled limited PA policing powers and administrative control in those areas, with provisions for a 9,000-member Palestinian police force to maintain order. Despite these steps, interim progress stalled amid persistent violence that undermined trust. Delays in full redeployments and expanded autonomy stemmed from a surge in terrorist attacks, including Hamas's October 19, 1994, suicide bombing on a Dizengoff Street bus in , which killed 22 Israeli civilians and injured over 50, prompting to withhold further concessions until security improved. Between 1994 and 1995, Palestinian militants, primarily from and Islamic Jihad, carried out dozens of bombings and shootings, resulting in over 100 terror incidents and approximately 70 Israeli deaths, as PA efforts to dismantle militant infrastructures proved ineffective or incomplete. This pattern exposed Oslo I's structural ambiguities, particularly its vague mechanisms for enforcing Palestinian security obligations against non-state actors, which incentivized partial compliance by the PLO—public condemnations without robust suppression—while eroding Israeli public support and highlighting the need for more detailed interim arrangements to enforce and curb violence.

Negotiation Process and Signing

Key Parties and Negotiations in 1995

The negotiations for the Oslo II Accord, conducted primarily in secretive bilateral sessions at , from May to September 1995, built on the framework of the 1993 Oslo I Agreement by addressing the implementation of Palestinian interim self-government through expanded autonomy in the and . The Israeli delegation was led by Uri Savir, director general of the Foreign Ministry, with significant legal and drafting contributions from Joel Singer, a former deputy legal adviser to Israel's who emphasized enforceable security mechanisms. On the Palestinian side, , also known as Abu Ala and a senior PLO official, headed the team, focusing on territorial and economic concessions while navigating internal PLO pressures for maximal gains. Norwegian facilitators, including figures like who had been instrumental in Oslo I, provided logistical and informal support, though the talks remained predominantly direct between the parties without substantial early U.S. involvement; this shifted in late stages when U.S. Secretary of State intervened to resolve deadlocks over withdrawal timelines and security protocols. Central to the Taba discussions were Israeli proposals for phased redeployments of forces from populated areas, contingent on robust Palestinian guarantees to combat terrorism and maintain internal security, reflecting empirical assessments of ongoing threats from groups like that had intensified since Oslo I. These concessions—envisaging initial withdrawals from seven major cities and villages—were traded for Palestinian vows to establish preventive security measures, including joint patrols and intelligence sharing, amid data showing persistent attacks that undermined Israeli public support for the process. Structural flaws emerged from the talks' incrementalist design, which deferred core issues like borders and refugees, potentially incentivizing non-compliance; for instance, Palestinian negotiators secured expansions without immediate revocation of the PLO Charter's clauses endorsing armed struggle against , a document unchanged until its partial amendment in 1996. Israeli Prime Minister drove the negotiations forward, motivated by a pragmatic calculus that limited territorial withdrawals could neutralize security risks and isolate rejectionist factions, despite vehement internal opposition from the party, which decried the accords as risking without reciprocal finality. Rabin's Labor-led faced protests and challenges from leaders like , who argued the phased approach enabled Palestinian entrenchment rather than genuine peace. On the Palestinian side, employed tactical ambiguities aligned with the PLO's longstanding "phased peace" strategy—interpreting interim gains as steps toward full liberation rather than mutual recognition—allowing him to commit to anti-terror pledges while preserving doctrinal flexibility, as evidenced by the absence of revisions during the talks themselves. This asymmetry in commitments highlighted causal risks in the process, where Israeli concessions preceded verifiable Palestinian behavioral changes.

Formal Signing and Immediate Reactions

The Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, commonly known as the Oslo II Accord, was formally signed on September 28, 1995, in , by Israeli Prime Minister and Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman , under the auspices of U.S. President . The agreement followed intensive final negotiations in , earlier that week, where key terms on territorial divisions and interim were finalized. This signing marked a continuation of the Oslo process initiated in 1993, aiming to implement phased Israeli redeployments and Palestinian administrative control in specified areas. In , the accord faced immediate and intense domestic opposition, culminating in its ratification by the on October 6, 1995, via a of 61 votes in favor to 59 against. Right-wing parties, including , and settler groups protested vehemently, decrying the agreement as a existential threat to Israeli security and , with critics labeling it a potential "Oslo suicide" due to perceived concessions without reciprocal guarantees. polls in late 1995 reflected cautious optimism, with approximately 50-60% of Israelis initially supporting the accord's framework for negotiations, though this support eroded sharply following Rabin's on November 4, 1995, by a Jewish extremist opposed to the process. Among Palestinians, reactions were polarized: Fatah and the PLO leadership endorsed the accord as a step toward self-rule, while and other Islamist factions rejected it outright, issuing religious edicts (fatwas) denouncing it as a betrayal of and collaboration with . Early polls indicated strong initial backing, with over 70% of expressing support for the Taba/Oslo II terms, viewing them as advancing despite reservations over final status issues. This divide underscored underlying tensions, as vowed continued resistance, foreshadowing challenges to implementation.

Core Provisions

Establishment of Palestinian Interim Self-Government

The Oslo II Accord, formally the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the and the signed on September 28, 1995, established the Palestinian Interim Self-Government Authority through Chapter 1, which outlined the transfer of specified civil powers and responsibilities from to a Palestinian Council. The Council was structured as a single body exercising both legislative and executive functions, comprising 82 elected members with the option to expand to 88, and including a directly elected Ra'ees (head) to oversee its operations. These powers encompassed internal , , , , social welfare, direct taxation, and , but excluded foreign relations, overall security, and certain . The framework was explicitly temporary, intended as a five-year transitional arrangement to facilitate Palestinian self-rule while testing commitments to prior to final-status negotiations. Elections for the Council and Ra'ees occurred on January 20, 1996, under international observation, with approximately 71.7% among registered in the , , and select areas. , representing , secured 88.1% of the presidential vote, while Fatah-affiliated candidates won 54 of the 88 Council seats, establishing dominant control by the faction within the (PLO). The elected Council, inaugurated shortly thereafter, assumed jurisdiction over civil administration for in the designated territories, affecting daily governance for a population exceeding 2 million at the time. Administrative and fiscal mechanisms supported the Council's operations, including Israel's commitment to transfer tax revenues it collected on behalf of , such as customs duties and value-added taxes, with initial handovers commencing post-elections to fund PA activities. This transfer was calibrated monthly, adjusted for clearances and other deductions, enabling the PA to manage budgetary responsibilities in civil spheres. However, the Accord's design for interim governance included no mandatory enforcement provisions to compel revocation of incompatible PLO charter articles—such as those denying Israel's right to exist—or the full eradication of terrorist networks, relying instead on mutual pledges that proved insufficient for sustained compliance. This structural gap prioritized procedural establishment over verifiable behavioral preconditions, contributing to subsequent implementation shortfalls.

Territorial Divisions into Areas A, B, and C

The Oslo II Accord, formally the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the and the signed on September 28, 1995, divided the into three administrative zones—Areas A, B, and C—as an interim measure to facilitate phased Israeli redeployments while preserving security necessities. Area A, comprising major Palestinian urban centers such as , , , and parts of , granted the Palestinian Council full civil and security authority over these densely populated locales, initially encompassing about 3% of territory to enable immediate Palestinian policing in population hubs. In Area B, covering approximately 23% of the territory including rural Palestinian villages and their environs, the Palestinian Council assumed civil administration for Palestinians alongside responsibility for public order among them, while retained overriding security control to counter and protect , reflecting a joint patrolling mechanism via coordinated units. Area C, the largest zone at roughly 74% of the , remained under full Israeli civil and security jurisdiction, incorporating Jewish settlements, military installations, state lands, and unpopulated regions such as the and strategic highlands. This allocation pragmatically prioritized Israeli retention of topographical advantages and buffer zones critical for defense against eastern incursions and internal threats, as evidenced by the exclusion of permanent-status issues like settlements from interim transfers. The structure countered fragmentation critiques by design as a temporary, voluntary framework contingent on Palestinian compliance with security obligations, allowing empirical testing of in controlled segments before broader . Delineated via attached maps rather than fixed percentages, the zones underscored causal security logic: Palestinian control in demographically concentrated low-threat areas facilitated local order, while Israeli oversight in expansive, strategically vital terrains mitigated risks from ungoverned spaces.

Security Arrangements and Redeployments

The Oslo II Accord, formally the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip signed on September 28, 1995, delineated security arrangements in Chapter 2 and Annex I, emphasizing phased Israeli military redeployments from parts of the tied to reciprocal Palestinian commitments to internal security and counter-terrorism. These provisions aimed to transfer responsibility for public order in designated areas to the Palestinian Authority (PA) while preserving Israel's overarching authority for external threats, , , and . Article X specified three sequential redeployment phases for the (IDF), commencing with the initial withdrawal from populated Palestinian areas—including cities, towns, villages, refugee camps, and hamlets—scheduled for completion upon the Palestinian Council's inauguration in May 1996. Subsequent phases, to unfold over 18 months thereafter (extending into 1999 if fully implemented), would reduce IDF presence from additional territories, with the precise scope negotiated bilaterally and conditioned on the PA's demonstrated effectiveness in maintaining and preventing hostile acts. This performance-based framework underscored that further pullbacks depended on verifiable Palestinian compliance, including suppression of and . Under Article XI and Annex I, the PA assumed primary responsibility for public order and internal security in Area A (full Palestinian control) and public order in Area B (joint civil control), obligating it to establish a unified Palestinian Police force capped at 12,000 personnel in the and 18,000 in Gaza, explicitly prohibited from acquiring heavy weapons or functioning as a beyond light policing roles. The PA was required to confiscate illegal arms, arrest and prosecute suspects, extradite requested individuals to , and actively dismantle groups such as and through coordinated preventive measures. Both parties committed to joint efforts against , with the PA barred from using security forces against or for non-internal purposes. Coordination mechanisms included the Joint Security Coordination and Cooperation Committee for ongoing liaison and the Joint Mobile Forces (JMF), comprising integrated Israeli and Palestinian units for rapid response, joint patrols on key roads, and anti-terror operations in sensitive zones. retained veto power over PA actions threatening its and exclusive control over preventing weapon inflows, ensuring redeployments did not compromise Israeli defenses against external aggression. These clauses reflected a causal linkage: Palestinian performance directly gated Israeli territorial concessions, prioritizing empirical verification of reduced threats over fixed timelines.

Implementation and Compliance Challenges

Initial Phases of Withdrawal and Palestinian Elections

The first phase of Israeli redeployments under the Oslo II Accord commenced shortly after its signing on September 28, 1995, focusing on populated areas in the . This initial withdrawal, completed by December 1995, transferred civil and security control to the Palestinian Authority in six major cities—, , , , , and —along with surrounding villages and refugee camps, encompassing about 7% of the territory designated as Area A. These redeployments enabled the Palestinian Authority to assume responsibilities in urban centers prior to the scheduled elections, though faced minor delays following the November 4, 1995, assassination of Israeli Prime Minister . Palestinian elections for the presidency and 88-seat occurred on January 20, 1996, marking the first democratic vote in the territories. won the presidency with 88.1% of the vote against challenger Sadeq Hamami, who received 9.2%. reached approximately 79%, with over 710,000 valid votes cast from about 1.1 million registered voters, though opposition figures alleged irregularities including voter intimidation and ballot stuffing by supporters. International observers, including the Carter Center, assessed the elections as generally free and fair despite noted flaws in campaign equity and media access. Following the elections, the Palestinian Council was inaugurated on March 12, 1996, facilitating the deployment of a Palestinian police force capped at 30,000 officers under Oslo II provisions to secure redeployed areas. By mid-1996, the had trained and fielded around 18,000-20,000 personnel initially, exceeding early limits in Gaza-Jericho but aligning with expanded authorizations. Concurrently, began phased prisoner releases per Annex VII, prioritizing females, minors, and non- offenders, with initial batches totaling several hundred by early 1996, prompting Israeli concerns over risks among released individuals. Infrastructure handovers included agreements for Palestinian control over the Gaza Strip's existing airport facilities and planning for a new international airport, with construction starting in 1996 and completion in 1998. Initial steps toward a Gaza seaport were outlined, alongside extensions of economic cooperation through the 1994 Paris Protocol, which facilitated joint customs and monetary frameworks to support transitional governance. These measures demonstrated partial adherence to the Accord's timelines amid emerging frictions over security coordination and economic dependencies.

Palestinian Authority's Security Obligations and Failures

Under the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement (Oslo II), signed on September 28, 1995, the Palestinian Authority (PA) assumed responsibility for internal security in designated Areas A and B of the and , including the prevention of , the dismantling of terrorist organizations' infrastructure, the confiscation of illegal weapons, and the cessation of incitement against or . Article II explicitly required the PA to adopt a security policy aimed at combating violence and , with joint coordination mechanisms established to facilitate Israeli-PA cooperation on intelligence sharing and arrests. These obligations extended to establishing Palestinian police forces trained to maintain public order while refraining from actions that could undermine Israel's overall security responsibilities for external threats and Israeli citizens. Despite these commitments, the PA failed to effectively dismantle militant networks, as evidenced by the persistence of attacks by groups like and operating from PA-controlled territories. For instance, on February 25, 1996, carried out twin suicide bombings on Jerusalem's buses, killing 26 Israelis and injuring over 80, with perpetrators originating from areas under emerging PA jurisdiction. Although the PA arrested hundreds of suspects in temporary crackdowns following such incidents, it routinely released key figures without prosecution, allowing terror infrastructures to reform and enabling further operations. Yasser Arafat, as PA chairman, pursued a dual-track approach of diplomatic negotiation alongside tolerance of "armed struggle," as later acknowledged by his close aides, which undermined enforcement against militants and prioritized political maneuvering over security compliance. This selective policy contributed to a surge in lethality: between the Oslo I signing in September 1993 and September 2000, Palestinian terrorist attacks claimed the lives of at least 269 Israelis, with the majority—over 200—occurring after Oslo II and involving suicide bombings and shootings that the PA proved unable or unwilling to preempt despite its territorial control and obligations. The PA also contravened its anti-terrorism pledges through systemic in official media, , and payments to s and their families, which began upon the PA's establishment in 1994-1995 and incentivized participation in attacks by providing monthly stipends scaled to sentence length and attack severity. United Nations reports and resolutions have repeatedly highlighted the persistence of such , including glorification of in PA-controlled curricula and broadcasts, despite accords mandating its elimination. These practices, documented in PA decrees requiring allowances for "every without discrimination," directly contradicted the accords' requirement to prevent , fostering a culture that sustained recruitment into unreformed terror groups.

Israeli Actions and Settlement Continuations

Israel completed the initial redeployment phase under Oslo II by December 1995, withdrawing military forces from designated parts of , , , , , and , prior to the Palestinian Authority's in January 1996. This transferred civil and partial security responsibilities to the PA in those areas, covering portions inhabited by over 90% of the West Bank's Palestinian population. A separate Hebron Protocol in January 1997 facilitated further redeployment from 80% of city, completing phases I and II of the overall process by mid-1997 and resulting in Israeli evacuation from approximately 80% of populated Palestinian areas while retaining strategic security zones. Area C, comprising about 60% of West Bank territory including settlements, military zones, and buffers such as the Jordan Valley, remained under full Israeli civil and security control as stipulated in Oslo II, with no mandated transfer during the interim period except through permanent status negotiations. This retention was justified by Israeli security requirements, aligning with Rabin's concept of territorial separation to isolate Palestinian demographics from Israeli population centers. Israeli settlement policy permitted natural population growth without a formal construction freeze, as Oslo II contained no explicit prohibition on such activity and designated settlements as a permanent status issue. The settler population, excluding , grew from approximately 110,000 in 1993 to around 133,000 by 1995 and approximately 200,000 by 2000, reflecting familial expansion in existing communities rather than establishment of major new blocs during the accord's early implementation. Following Benjamin Netanyahu's election in May 1996, suspended the third redeployment phase, originally scheduled within 18 months of the PA's inauguration, citing insufficient Palestinian compliance with security and other obligations. This halt deferred further withdrawals pending verification of PA performance, though limited interim redeployments resumed under the 1998 . Settlement expansions during this period were linked to security rationales, including buffer zones against potential threats, despite criticisms that they complicated territorial contiguity for a future Palestinian entity.

Controversies and Criticisms

Israeli Right-Wing Opposition and Security Concerns

Prominent Israeli right-wing leaders, including chairman Binyamin Netanyahu, denounced the Oslo II Accord as a strategic capitulation that transferred control over significant territories to the (PLO) without verifiable commitments to end hostilities or dismantle terror infrastructures. Netanyahu, who rose to prominence as a vocal critic of the broader Oslo process, warned that redeployments from cities would create uncontested zones for launching attacks on Israeli population centers, effectively rewarding aggression rather than incentivizing genuine peace. This perspective framed the accord as prioritizing Palestinian autonomy over Israel's existential security needs, echoing longstanding assertions that territorial withdrawals must be conditioned on ironclad defensive arrangements. Critics from the right argued that Oslo II implicitly eroded the framework of UN Security Council Resolution 242 by advancing phased land transfers without reciprocal Palestinian recognition of Israel's right to secure, defensible borders or acknowledgment of Jewish historical ties to and . Unlike Resolution 242's emphasis on negotiated adjustments for peace, the accord's provisions for Palestinian civil control in Areas A and joint patrols in Area B were seen as preemptively conceding strategic highlands overlooking Israel's coastal plain, heightening vulnerability to rocket fire or infiltration without addressing the PLO's charter-mandated rejection of Jewish sovereignty. Such concessions, opponents contended, inverted causal security logic by granting administrative power to an entity unproven in curbing militancy, thereby inviting escalation rather than deterrence. The fervor of right-wing opposition culminated in the November 4, 1995, assassination of by , a law student and ultranationalist who explicitly cited Rabin's role in implementing Oslo's territorial handovers as justification for the act, viewing it as a mortal threat to Israel's biblical heartland and defensive integrity. decried the accords as enabling Arab dominance in areas essential to Jewish continuity, a sentiment that, while rejected by mainstream conservatives like Netanyahu—who condemned the murder as counterproductive—the underscored profound anxieties over diminished military oversight in demilitarized zones. Isolated acts of settler violence, such as the February 25, 1994, Cave of the Patriarchs shooting by Baruch Goldstein—a follower of the banned Kach movement who killed 29 Palestinians—were universally repudiated by right-wing establishment figures as deviant fanaticism, not emblematic of principled critique. Goldstein's aberration contrasted sharply with the systemic security arguments advanced by opponents, who prioritized empirical risks from empowered Palestinian forces over fringe vigilantism, insisting that true safeguards demanded retention of full Israeli operational freedom in contested territories until hostility ceased.

Palestinian Non-Compliance and Incitement Issues

The Palestinian Liberation Organization's (PLO) National Charter, which explicitly called for the destruction of in articles such as 6 and 19, was not amended following the despite commitments in the 1993 Declaration of Principles to revise provisions incompatible with peace. This delay persisted until 1998, when amendments were made only after sustained Israeli and U.S. pressure during the negotiations, removing 26 of 33 articles deemed offensive to Israel's existence; however, core rejectionist elements remained in practice, as subsequent PLO actions demonstrated non-adherence to the spirit of recognition. Article XXII of the Oslo II Accord required the Palestinian Authority (PA) to abstain from , including hostile , and adopt measures to prevent it, yet PA-controlled education systems perpetuated rejectionism. Palestinian textbooks issued post-1995 erased Israel's existence from maps, labeling the entire territory as "" without borders or recognition of Israeli cities, and promoted narratives delegitimizing Jewish historical ties to the . European Union-funded studies confirmed this as systematic against coexistence, with curricula glorifying violence and omitting clauses from Oslo. Yasser Arafat, as PA chairman, repeatedly violated anti-incitement pledges through public endorsements of jihad. In a 1994 Johannesburg mosque speech, Arafat declared the Oslo process a tactical phase, calling for "jihad, jihad, jihad" to liberate Jerusalem and all of Palestine, framing the accords as a means to continue armed struggle rather than genuine peace. Similar rhetoric in 1996 addresses reinforced this, with Arafat stating post-intifada cessation did not end the jihad for Palestinian statehood including Israeli territory, directly contravening Oslo's mutual recognition and non-violence commitments. The PA further breached incitement prohibitions by establishing a "martyrs' fund" that provided monthly stipends to families of killed during attacks on , effectively rewarding and glorifying perpetrators as national heroes. This policy, formalized in the 2000s but rooted in post-Oslo practices, allocated millions annually—up to $3 million monthly by 2010—to over 30,000 beneficiaries, incentivizing violence in violation of Oslo's and anti-terror clauses. U.S. congressional reports documented this as state-sponsored , undermining PA claims of compliance. Such non-compliance eroded PA legitimacy, fostering internal weakness that enabled Hamas's ascent as a rival enforcing stricter rejectionism. Hamas capitalized on PA failures in governance and security, rejecting Oslo outright and gaining popular support; by 2006, it won parliamentary elections with 44% of the vote, exploiting perceptions of Fatah's concessions as capitulation, culminating in its violent 2007 Gaza takeover from weakened PA forces. This outcome illustrated how unaddressed and partial compliance indirectly empowered Islamist alternatives committed to Israel's elimination.

Escalation of Violence Post-Accord

Following the signing of the Oslo II Accord in 1995, suicide bombings in surged from a pre-Oslo baseline of virtually none to a pattern of multiple attacks annually by the late 1990s. Between 1993 and 2000, Palestinian terrorist groups, primarily and Islamic Jihad, conducted over 40 suicide bombings, killing hundreds of Israeli civilians and shifting tactics toward targeting centers during the purported . This escalation correlated with the Accord's territorial divisions, as Area A—under exclusive Palestinian Authority (PA) security control—served as operational safe havens where bombers planned and launched attacks without effective PA intervention, despite Oslo-mandated obligations to dismantle terror networks. A emblematic incident occurred on July 30, 1997, when two suicide bombers detonated explosives in Jerusalem's , killing 16 Israeli civilians and wounding over 170 others in a crowded shopping area. Such attacks intensified amid PA non-compliance, with often glorifying or failing to perpetrators, fostering an environment where terror thrived under partial self-rule. The July 2000 Camp David summit failure further catalyzed violence, as PA Chairman rejected Israeli offers encompassing over 90% of the and Gaza, equivalent land swaps, and shared arrangements, prioritizing maximalist claims like full sovereignty over the that exceeded prior negotiations. This rejection, absent a counter-proposal, signaled to extremists that concessions yielded no finality, precipitating the September 2000 outbreak of widespread attacks. From 2000 to 2005, over 1,000 Israeli civilians were killed in Palestinian-initiated terror operations, including bombings, shootings, and stabbings, with data indicating these as primary aggressors before Israeli counter-responses inflicted Palestinian casualties. The Accord's framework, by empowering PA governance without enforcing anti-terror efficacy, thus enabled unchecked militant infrastructure, undermining security gains from Israeli redeployments.

Long-Term Impact and Legacy

Breakdown Leading to Second Intifada

The final phase of redeployments outlined in the Oslo II Accord, known as Phase III, which was to transfer additional territory to Palestinian control ahead of permanent-status talks, remained unimplemented under Prime Minister from to 1999. Netanyahu suspended further withdrawals following a series of bombings in and 1997, citing inadequate Palestinian security measures against terrorism as justification for halting the process. His successor, , elected in May 1999, similarly did not execute Phase III, opting instead to bypass interim steps in favor of direct final-status negotiations, amid ongoing Palestinian Authority (PA) failures to dismantle militant infrastructure as required by the accords. These delays culminated in the Camp David Summit of July 11–25, 2000, where Barak proposed establishing a Palestinian state on roughly 91% of the West Bank, with additional land swaps to reach equivalent territorial value and custodianship arrangements for holy sites, according to accounts from U.S. Middle East envoy Dennis Ross. Yasser Arafat rejected the offer outright, providing no substantive counterproposal and insisting on full sovereignty over East Jerusalem and the Temple Mount, leading President Bill Clinton to fault Arafat for the impasse and warn of its dire consequences. The failure at Camp David exposed irreconcilable gaps, with Arafat's stance reflecting broader PA reluctance to conclude a compromise peace, further eroding trust in the Oslo framework. Tensions boiled over in late September 2000, igniting the Second Intifada after Ariel Sharon's visit to the on September 28, which drew thousands of Palestinian protesters and initial clashes. PA officials, however, had prepared for escalation prior to the visit; Communications Minister Imad Faluji publicly stated in 2001 that the uprising was planned immediately following Camp David's collapse in July, framing Sharon's tour merely as a trigger to mobilize support. Intercepted PA communications and the swift deployment of armed units to transform demonstrations into coordinated attacks underscored this premeditation, with over 100 Israeli deaths in the first month alone amid widespread shooting from Palestinian positions. The accords' optimistic premises overlooked entrenched Palestinian rejectionism, as evidenced by PCPSR polls from 1999–2000 showing 36–45% support for armed attacks on Israeli targets inside the Green Line, with broader backing for violence against soldiers and settlers exceeding 70% and trending upward amid perceived negotiation failures. This societal preference for confrontation over accommodation—rooted in ideological opposition to Israel's existence rather than interim compliance issues—sequentially undermined mutual obligations, rendering the process unsustainable and paving the way for the Intifada's full militarization.

Structural Consequences for Governance and Conflict

The Oslo II Accord's division of the West Bank into Areas A, B, and C established administrative fragmentation that persists, with Areas A and B comprising 165-166 non-contiguous Palestinian enclaves surrounded by Israeli-controlled Area C, which constitutes 60% of the territory and includes most natural resources and settlement lands. This patchwork structure undermined Palestinian territorial contiguity and effective governance, as the Palestinian Authority (PA) lacks unified control over land, water, and infrastructure planning, fostering dependency and administrative inefficiencies. The PA's fiscal reliance on Israel exacerbates these governance pathologies, with clearance revenues—primarily customs duties and taxes on imports collected by —accounting for approximately 64% of the PA's total revenue, totaling around $188 million monthly as of early 2024. This dependency, rooted in Oslo's interim economic arrangements, limits PA and incentivizes , exemplified by Arafat's diversion of $900 million in public funds to a special account, as documented in a 2003 International Monetary Fund (IMF) report. Such systemic siphoning, estimated by the IMF at up to 40% of the PA's budget through mismanagement, created power vacuums that weakened PA legitimacy and security control. These structural weaknesses facilitated Hamas's ascent, culminating in its violent takeover of Gaza in June 2007 following the PA's electoral loss in 2006 and internal divisions, which Hamas framed as a preemptive strike against a Fatah coup but effectively split Palestinian governance between the West Bank and Gaza. The resulting duality entrenched conflict dynamics, as the absence of a final-status agreement under Oslo allowed Israeli settlements to expand to over 700,000 residents in the and by 2024, rendering negotiated territorial compromises increasingly untenable. In response to Oslo's stalled progress and Palestinian non-compliance, Israel pursued unilateral disengagement from Gaza in August-September 2005, evacuating all settlements and military presence without reciprocal PA commitments, highlighting the accords' failure to enforce mutual obligations and shifting toward independent security measures amid rising violence. This move, while removing direct Israeli administration, amplified governance voids in Gaza, perpetuating a cycle of militancy and blockade without resolving underlying divisions.

Assessments of Failure and Contemporary Relevance

The Oslo II Accord, implemented from 1995 onward, faced assessments of failure primarily due to mutual non-compliance with security and behavioral obligations, absent robust enforcement, and unresolved core disputes deferred to indefinite final-status negotiations. The Palestinian Authority (PA) was required to prevent and , yet post-accord violence surged: Israeli fatalities from Palestinian attacks averaged 50-70 annually in the late 1990s, compared to far lower pre-Oslo levels during the , with suicide bombings—unprecedented before 1994—accounting for hundreds of deaths by 2000. PA leader Yasser Arafat's refusal to amend the PLO charter's calls for Israel's destruction, alongside public veneration of attackers as martyrs, violated anti-incitement pledges and eroded Israeli confidence, as evidenced by Arafat's equivocal responses to U.S. pressure for compliance. On the Israeli side, settlement population in the grew from about 110,000 in 1993 to roughly 200,000 by , including new outposts, which critics like the PA argued contravened the accord's interim goodwill ethos despite no explicit freeze stipulation. The November 1995 assassination of by a Jewish opponent of territorial concessions further destabilized the process, leading to the 1996 election of , who conditioned further redeployments on verifiable PA security reforms. Analysts, including those from the BESA Center, contend the accord's inherent flaws—such as vague compliance metrics and power imbalances—doomed it, with Arafat's rejection of expansive territorial offers at the (encompassing 91-95% of the ) marking a causal turning point toward collapse. In contemporary assessments, particularly after Hamas's , 2023, attacks killing 1,200 , the Oslo II framework is deemed obsolete, having institutionalized a fragmented PA unable to monopolize or deliver , while enabling terror infrastructure in Areas A and B (18% and 22% of land, respectively). The accord's territorial divisions persist, controlling Palestinian demographics but fostering dependency and , with no progression to statehood amid eroded mutual trust—polls show support below 30% among both populations by 2023. Its relevance lies in cautionary lessons: empirical data links unilateral Israeli withdrawals (e.g., Gaza 2005) to heightened attacks, validating security-first paradigms over phased concessions, as settlement expansions and barriers post-Intifada reduced terror by over 90% from 2002 peaks. Proposals to formally abrogate Oslo, voiced by Israeli strategists in 2025, argue it masked Palestinian rejectionism, prioritizing recognition of irreconcilable aims over illusory diplomacy.

References

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