Systematic scenario planning about Gaza’s alternative futures could help mediators and parties make better implementation decisions. By explicitly considering where different choices lead, decision makers might prioritize approaches offering better long-term prospects even if requiring greater short-term difficulty.
One scenario involves successful implementation producing stable transitional arrangements leading eventually to permanent resolution. This optimistic path requires sustained commitment, flexibility, and compromise from all parties. Understanding requirements for this scenario’s success helps identify critical decision points and necessary interventions.
Alternative scenarios include implementation breakdown returning parties to conflict, indefinite frozen conflict with neither war nor peace, or imposed solutions from external powers. Each scenario produces distinct consequences for Israeli and Palestinian populations. Explicitly considering these alternatives clarifies stakes and might motivate greater implementation cooperation.
Scenario planning helps identify early warning indicators suggesting movement toward particular outcomes. Monitoring these indicators allows mid-course corrections before situations become irretrievable. For example, increasing violation frequency might indicate approaching breakdown requiring urgent intervention rather than continued current approaches.
The scenario planning exercise itself provides value by forcing parties and mediators to articulate assumptions, identify decision points, and clarify priorities. Even without perfect foresight, structured thinking about alternative futures produces better implementation strategies than reactive approaches responding to immediate crises without considering long-term trajectories. Mediators might facilitate scenario discussions helping parties make implementation decisions with fuller understanding of potential consequences.
