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Entries in Gaza (117)

Thursday
Jan012009

Gaza: Hamas Strikes Back (Against the Palestinian Authority)

Latest Update: Israeli Manoeuvres in Paris

Looks like we were on to something yesterday as we suggested that Mahmoud Abbas, the President of Palestine (West Bank Branch) was walking a political tightrope when, 48 hours after he blamed Hamas for the bloodshed in Gaza, he turned around condemned the Israeli attacks as "barbaric".

Despite six days of bombing, despite targeted assassinations, Hamas has not been politically decimated. Indeed, it is feeling strong enough to fight back against Abbas' Palestinian Authority.



Hours after one of our readers noted, "Some in Hamas are saying that Fatah reaching out is a possible plot to reveal Hamas commanders’ locations," Griff Witte of The Washington Post wrote:

Hamas shot back Wednesday, accusing Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, from the rival Fatah party, of being an Israeli collaborator.



That, however, is only the tip of the political iceberg. Consider Witte's observation that "sympathy for Hamas appears to be rising" in the West Bank. Note his reference (which he doesn't fully appreciate when he says, "public reaction...to the Gaza strikes has been milder than many analysts predicted") to the following incident:

Hundreds of people rallied in Ramallah's central square, denouncing Israel and chanting slogans calling for Palestinian unity. But when a group of young Hamas supporters attempted to unfurl the movement's green-and-white banners, security forces loyal to Abbas quickly seized the men and hustled them away.

We may be witnessing political jujitsu here. One of the scenarios for those supporting the Israeli attack is that "moderate" Arab states (Saudi Arabia, Egypt) would back a bolstered Palestinian Authority, which has been propped up by millions in US security aid in recent months, as it reclaimed leadership in Gaza. If that didn't work, in the words of Palestinian analyst Khalil Shikaki, "Ultimately, Gaza would become Egypt's problem, not Israel's.The goal of a single Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank would be fully undermined."

(Ironically The Washington Post, even as it runs Witte's report, has become the pulpit for this political strategy, with former Israeli deputy defense minister Ephraim Sneh calling on Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and even Syria to back an Israeli-imposed solution and political scientist/Bush loyalist Robert Lieber envisaging "a seriously weakened and politically damaged Hamas".)

All this becomes wishful thinking, however, if Hamas builds its domestic support not only in Gaza but in the West Bank. The Palestinian Authority, to protect its own position, will have to pull back from its attempt to isolate its political rival, and Arab countries will be hesitant to press ahead in the face of local opposition (and, far from incidentally, demonstrations on their own streets). Indeed, there may already be signs that Islamic and Arab leaders are re-aligning their positions:

As diplomats struggled to keep up with events on the ground, the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, flew to Syria for talks with President Bashar al-Assad.


Erdogan denied planning to meet Khaled Mashal, the exiled Hamas leader, before flying to Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

Thursday
Jan012009

Gaza Update (6 p.m. Israel/Palestine; 4 p.m. Britain): Targeted Assassinations and a Lot of Spin

Later Post: Hamas Strikes Back (Against the Palestinian Authority)

Just back to the UK to learn that an Israeli airstrike on the home of a Hamas leader, Nizar Rayyan, has killed him, his wife, and his three children. The death toll in Gaza is now more than 400 with more than 2000 wounded.

Israel has expanded its attack options, adding drones and naval bombardment to manned bombing. Targets on Thursday included the Parliament building and the Justice Ministry.

In the public relations battle, former Prime Minister and current Prime Ministerial candidate Benyamin Netanyahu has given an interview to Al Jazeera. His prime objective was to counter the image of mounting civilian casualties with the claim, which he has pressed repeatedly since Saturday, that Hamas put its fighters amongst the urban population while the Israeli military fights in the open.



On another diplomatic front, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Lvini is arguing that there is no humanitarian crisis since Israel is allowing some aid into Gaza. (A bit of perspective: Israel did allow 150 truckloads of aid into Gaza on Wednesday. This compares to an average daily supply of 600 truckloads during the truce period.)

For the  moment the Israelis --- thanks  more to Washington and London than to the merits of their PR campaign --- retain a free hand for their operations. The UN Security Council failed Wednesday to agree on the wording of a draft resolution, as the US and Britain insisted on emphasis on Hamas rocket attacks against Israel.
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