By Noah Rothman
Wednesday,
October 23, 2024
The
United Nations has some bad news. The Gaza Strip’s fragile economy has been so
catastrophically disrupted by the war its governing authority started on
October 7 that it will take no fewer than 350 years for this tiny plot of land
to recover. An editor of the Guardian reproduced the accusation, and his colleagues published his
thoughts on the matter apparently without evincing any skepticism toward the
claim.
The
assessment is a pristine example of why straight-line projections are
inherently fallacious. The U.N. report that produced this dubious conclusion
notes that almost all economic activity in sectors including agriculture,
manufacturing, and services has ground nearly to a halt — as one might expect
amid ongoing counterinsurgency operations. That won’t last forever, and those
sectors will start to rebuild and resume their previously profitable operations
when Israel’s battlefield objectives are achieved.
The
notion that it will take a century longer than the United States has been a
country for this 139-square-mile strip of desirable land along the
Mediterranean coast to put itself back together — with or without foreign
support (and it will very much be with) — is fanciful. To justify that
assumption, let’s look back at what the world looked like 350 years ago.
In
that year, 1674, the Netherlands formally settled the third Anglo-Dutch trade
war and handed over control of what would become New York to the British. The
Royal Society’s Robert Hooke wrote that year of the existence of “attractive
powers” that would influence his rival, Isaac Newton, in his work toward a
concept of a “law of universal gravitation.” John Graunt, a demographist widely
considered to be the father of modern census-taking methods and an influential
epidemiologist, died.
The
stage for the Second English Civil War was set when Charles II, a fugitive from
parliamentary justice, attempted to cajole the Scottish to invade England,
which they subsequently did. The Ottoman Empire retained functional possession
through its vassals of the Ukrainian Black Sea Coast — a history Vladimir Putin
resents to this day. John Lawson, the English explorer who chronicled the flora
and fauna in the American Carolinas and founded the cities of New Bern and
Bath, N.C., was born.
The
artist Jan De Bray completed “Adoration of the Magi,” which hangs today in
Bamberg, Germany’s historical museum. The Dutch scientist Antonie van
Leeuwenhoek observed microorganisms such as yeast and protozoa for the first
time. The English well-being enthusiast Thomas Willis revolutionized medicine
when he pioneered a foolproof method for distinguishing diabetes from other
causes of polyuria: tasting the blood and urine for its relative sweetness.
The
point here is that a lot can change in 350 years. Not, apparently, in Gaza. The
U.N. and its chroniclers at the Guardian have either such a low
estimation of the talents of average Gazans or a pathological mistrust of their
Israeli neighbors (or both) that they assume a mid-conflict status quo will
pertain well into the indefinite future. That says a lot more about them than
the subjects on which they are opining.
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