Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Hamas’s Preview for Peace

Hamas’s Preview for Peace


http://frontpagemag.com/2010/09/07/the-hate-of-hamas/


Posted by Ryan Mauro on Sep 7th, 2010 and filed under FrontPage. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Ryan Mauro is the founder of WorldThreats.com, National Security Advisor to the Christian Action Network, and an intelligence analyst with the Asymmetric Warfare and Intelligence Center.

The Israelis and the Palestinian Authority have renewed peace negotiations, with Defense Minister Ehud Barak going so far as to state that the division of Jerusalem is on the table. Hamas has predictably reacted by shooting four Israeli civilians to death in the West Bank, followed by a second shooting that injured two. The attacks underscored that there can never be anything near peace until Hamas is dismantled and Palestinian public opinion comes to accept the reality of Israel’s existence.

Hamas openly declared responsibility for the attack. The Palestinian Authority subsequently arrested over 150 members of Hamas in the West Bank and President Mahmoud Abbas said that Hamas was trying to sabotage the peace process and the attack “can’t be regarded as an act of resistance.” However, Abbas was careful not to appear like he’s siding with Israel, saying he “condemns all acts that target Palestinian and Israeli civilians.”

The location of the two attacks is telling. Hamas utilized its operatives in the West Bank, which is governed by the Palestinian Authority. This was done to remind Fatah and the P.A. as a whole of their strength and force their rivals into a conundrum: Retaliate against Hamas, looking pro-Israel and potentially igniting an internal conflict they may not win or do nothing, probably causing the talks to collapse and Israeli retaliation in the West Bank.

Hamas also needs the conflict with Israel to take center stage again as its popularity has declined. In the Gaza Strip where the terrorist group governs, only 37 percent of the residents support Hamas and 52 percent view it negatively. Hamas is actually more popular in the West Bank where it doesn’t govern with a 47 percent approval rating. Nearly 80 percent of Palestinians feel it is “essential” that a final settlement result in a Palestinian state that paves

over Israel. It is therefore in Hamas’ political interest to position itself as the group most aggressively pursuing this, making Fatah look like the compromiser.

The P.A.’s arrest of Hamas operatives is just the latest in a series of escalations. Hamas has tortured and killed members of Fatah since taking power in Gaza, and Abbas subtlety blamed Hamas for the Israel’s launching of Operation Cast Lead. Violent clashes have occurred between the two for years. Both sides have refused to allow supporters of the other to work for their governments, often arresting and abusing them. Hamas has dissolved over 100 organizations controlled by Fatah members and bans those that were a part of the former government from serving. After the flotilla incident, the Palestinian Authority refused to let Hamas protests form in its territory.

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