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Hamas
Risen
Graham
Usher
(Middle
East Report contributing editor Graham
Usher has written extensively on the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict for The Economist, The
Guardian and Le Monde Diplomatique,
among other publications. )

Hamas campaign rally in Gaza. (George Azar)
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On
January 27, 2006, Fatah activists and Palestinian
security personnel converged on the Palestinian
Authority’s parliament building in Gaza
City. Within minutes, cars were torched, tires
set aflame and stones thrown at election banners
displaying the visages of victorious Hamas
candidates. The cry was for vengeance, particularly
against a leadership that had just presided
over Palestine’s premier nationalist
movement’s worst political defeat in
its 47-year history.
From
one of the parliament’s doors, one of
Fatah’s successful candidates, former
Palestinian Authority (PA) security chief Mohammed
Dahlan, appeared. He seemed both determined
and pensive, his profile lit by the flare of
machine-gun fire. “Fatah is the first
movement, the only movement, and it will remain
the first and only movement despite all those
who conspired against it,” he told the
mob. “No!” he thundered against
a cascade of gunfire. “Fatah will not
join a government led by Hamas.”
Three
miles away, in Beit Lahia, another procession
was underway, this one led by children. Decked
by billowing green flags, they were marching
on the home of former Hamas spokesman Mushir
al-Masri. At 29, al-Masri is the youngest member
of the next Palestinian parliament, and also,
he insists, every legislature in “the
entire Middle East.”
Al-Masri
sat under a triumphant canvas arch, marking
a bridge from resistance to government. On
the one pole were pictures of nine Hamas “martyrs” against
a backdrop of exploding Israeli buses; on the
other were Hamas’ five successful candidates
for northern Gaza, attired in suit and tie
to a man. Al-Masri was similarly groomed.
No,
he was not worried by the fires raging in Gaza
City. “These reactions are the first
noises from Fatah. Let us wait for its final
decision”
about joining a national coalition headed by
Hamas. Nor did he seem concerned by Western ultimatums—set
by Israel, orchestrated by the United States—stipulating
what Hamas must do if it wants to join the comity
of acceptable governments.
“Hamas derives its legitimacy from the
Palestinian people, not from the international
community,” he rejoined. “One of
the reasons they voted for us was our fixed principles.
And one of these is that there will be no recognition
of Israel as long as it occupies our land. Another
is that it is the inalienable right of the occupied
to resist the occupier.”
Only
one question remained. Five thousand were storming
the parliament in Gaza, while 500 were
marching in Beit Lahia. Why were Hamas’ celebrations
so small when its victory was so big? “Because
Hamas’ positions are known and because
people know now is not the time for celebrations,” al-Masri
explained.
“It is the time for work.”
A
Victory Larger Than Itself
On
January 25, Hamas candidates won 74 seats
in the PA’s 132-member parliament, where
they will be joined by four Hamas-backed “independents.”
It was a win that exceeded their fantasies. Five
days before the poll, Khalid Jadu, a Hamas councilman
in Bethlehem, said “anything more than
55 seats would be an achievement—and probably
a headache.” Three days before, Hamas’ candidate
for Rafah, Ghazi Hamad, buoyed by internal polls
showing that “Hamas will do well in Gaza,” admitted
there was a real debate within the movement over
whether to accept ministerial positions. “I
think we should join the government. If we win
big, we should run ministries and improve people’s
lives.”
But
this was the minority view, he conceded. On
the eve of elections, the consensus in Hamas
was that the price of government—such
as PA President Mahmoud Abbas’ condition
that any minister would have to abide by all
agreements signed between Israel and the PLO—would
be too high, “at least for now.” There
were other considerations, too, said Jadu. “After
all, we don’t want to inherit an estate
rife with debts.”
On
January 26, Hamas had inherited the estate,
to the chronic indebtedness of which was now
added the prospect of international opprobrium.
Not only that: by virtue of its absolute majority,
Hamas was the only party constitutionally able
to form a government. The preference was not
to do so. Ostensibly, this was consistent with
pre-election pledges in favor of a “national
coalition” government comprising “all
the Palestinian forces,” especially Fatah.
In reality, unity was required to shield Hamas
partially from the enormous international duress
it knew would accrue if it achieved an unalloyed
triumph.
Three
reasons lay behind Hamas’ success: Palestinian
disillusionment that peace or even meaningful
political negotiations with Israel were anywhere
on the horizon; appreciation at Hamas’ civil
role as service provider during the lean years
of the intifada, as well as its vanguard
position in the armed Palestinian resistance,
widely seen among Palestinians as the catalyst
for Israel’s summer 2005 withdrawal from
the Gaza Strip; and revulsion at a decade of
Fatah misrule of the PA, capped by its failure
to bring law, order, economic recovery or political
progress in the wake of the withdrawal.
The
question before Hamas is how to deal with a
triumph that is
“larger that its expectations, capabilities
and support base,” says Nasir Aliwar, a
Palestinian political analyst in Gaza. Its aim
is clear, at least according to discussions with
victorious Hamas candidates. Hamas seeks to restore
the Israel-Palestinian conflict to its “proper
relationship,” away from the hegemony of
Israel’s security needs and Washington’s
regional designs and back to the paradigm of
an illegal occupation and an occupied people’s
unqualified right to resist it, “including
armed resistance.”
It
is the means to this end that are so difficult.
For Hamas to affect this shift, it must renegotiate
its historically adversarial relationship with
Fatah, navigate Israeli and other international
demands without abandoning core goals and principles,
and reconnect the Palestinian cause to its
Arab and Islamic hinterland in a way that brings
sustenance to the struggle as well as cover
for political accommodation. Much will rest
on these enormous wars of position, and not
only in Israel-Palestine.
Fatah

Election
posters adorn a billboard in East Jerusalem.
(Yoav Lemmer/AFP)
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Fatah,
the dominant faction in the PLO since 1967,
has so far met Hamas’ overtures for a
national coalition government with rejection.
Two reasons are given for this: one principled,
the other less so.
The
principled reason is that Fatah should use
the reprieve of a period in opposition to “complete
what we should have done before the [parliamentary]
elections,” says Usama al-Fara, a Fatah
official in Gaza. “And that is to make
Fatah a democratic party with a leadership
trusted and elected by its members.” The
loudest exponent of this view is Dahlan, probably
the single most powerful Fatah leader in Gaza.
As the demonstrations outside the parliament
building attest, he is also the most phobic
about any coalition with Hamas. His program
for reform has been aired more by his followers
than himself, but all are aware that it carries
his imprimatur.
Members
of Fatah’s Central Committee (FCC) and
Revolutionary Council (FRC)—the movement’s
supreme decision-making bodies—must stand
down. Then, an “interim emergency leadership” should
be established with the sole remit of democratizing
Fatah “from the smallest cell to the
largest region.” Finally, and only finally,
a general conference of the party should be
convened so that a new FCC and FRC can be elected.
“Only then will Fatah’s base be able
to influence its leadership—whether those
in the parliament or those on the FCC and FRC,” says
al-Fara.
The
need for internal reform within Fatah is incontestable.
Due to its repeated failure to hold primaries
for candidates prior to the elections, Abbas
was forced to appoint a list that satisfied
few and alienated many. A week before the elections
there were some 120 “independent” Fatah
candidates standing against 130 “official”
candidates, with most of the independents running
in protest at the way the official list was drawn
up. The number of rebels was gradually whittled
down to 74, less by organizational order than
by promises of jobs, money and land. But the
remaining candidates fragmented the nationalist
vote, particularly in swing constituencies like
Khan Yunis, Salfit, central Gaza, Ramallah and
East Jerusalem.
Post-election
surveys have revealed the price of this disunity,
magnified by an electoral system under which
half the seats were won in district races and
the other half—the
“national seats”—were allocated
according to the list’s proportion of the
national vote. While Hamas won 45 (or 68 percent)
of the 66 district seats in the parliament, it
did so with a 36.5 percent average vote per district.
Sixty-three percent voted for non-Hamas candidates
in the district races, the vast majority dispersed
between Fatah’s official and independent
candidates. Similarly, Hamas won 29 seats (against
Fatah’s 28) among the national seats, but
with 44.4 percent of the vote. The non-Hamas
vote (almost 56 percent) was split between Fatah
(at 42.4 percent) and the four other PLO or third-force
lists. On the basis of these figures, it is difficult
to refute the verdict of one Fatah leader: “Hamas
did not win the elections. Fatah lost them.”
But
the other reason for Fatah’s reluctance
to share power with Hamas in government is
its refusal to cede power within the PA, for
the last 12 years a main source of its
wealth, patronage and firepower. The demonstrations
in Gaza were not simply mounted to denounce
a failed and discredited leadership. They were
a warning to Hamas not to tamper with Fatah’s
hegemony over the PA, especially its 50,000–70,000
strong security forces, many of whom are Fatah
cadre, and 70 percent of whom voted for
Fatah in the elections. “We are here
to make sure no one cuts the lifeline to the
security forces,” said Jamal al-Durra,
a fighter in Fatah’s semi-official al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades militia. “This is not
a hope,” he added. “It’s
a guarantee.”
The
intimidation worked. On January 29, Abbas
declared that all of the PA security forces
as well as the Finance and Information Ministries
would ultimately be answerable to the president
rather than the prime minister. Hamas protested
the move, pointing out (accurately) that Finance,
Information and three of the security forces—the
police, civil defense and the intelligence
Preventive Security Force—constitutionally
fall under the remit of the prime minister.
The
Preventive Security Force is seen by Hamas
as Dahlan and Fatah’s most organized
base within the security forces, and potentially
the most explosive point of resistance to a
Hamas-led government. For this reason, Hamas
met Abbas’ “bloodless coup”
with patience, coming as it did after an “emergency” summit
between the president and Dahlan. “These
problems will be solved through dialogue when
we are in government. For now, all I will say
is that not a single police officer’s job
will be lost and not a single salary cut,” said
Ismail Haniyya, Hamas’
prime minister-designate.
For
Palestinians, a violent polarization between
Fatah as “the party of the Authority” and
Hamas as its newly elected government is the
worst future imaginable. The problem is that
it is entirely imaginable. Fatah leaders speak
openly of Hamas being unable to form a coalition
or collapsing under the weight of international
sanctions, so that new elections can return
them to their “old role” as leader
of the PA. Other Palestinians warn that Fatah’s
dependency on PA resources is now so great
that some cadre will be tempted to help engineer
a coup or sow domestic disorder, either in
concert with foreign forces or through stepped-up
violence against Israel. The political analyst
Aliwar warns of the “Algerian model” and
its allure.
Who
Wants “National Unity”?

The
wall cutting through Abu Dis. (AWAD
AWAD/AFP)
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This
is why the overwhelming sentiment among Palestinians
is for a national coalition government. Does
Abbas share it? After the elections, he tightened
his grip on the PA, by extending presidential
powers over its security, finance and media
institutions, and also promoted Fatah loyalists
to head the PA’s personnel, salaries
and comptroller departments. Via a last-minute
vote in the outgoing, Fatah-dominated parliament,
he was also given the authority to appoint
a nine-judge constitutional court with powers
to resolve any dispute between the presidency
and the parliament, including over the president’s
right “to cancel any law approved by
the parliament on the grounds that it is unconstitutional,” says
a PA legal adviser.
These
various moves hint at the likelihood of a constitutional
crisis between the two branches of government.
They effectively give “full power to
President Abbas to dissolve Parliament any
time he wishes,” says ‘Aziz al-Duwayk,
a professor whom Hamas has selected to be parliamentary
speaker. He has vowed that the next parliament
will work to overturn the legislation, as well
as the promotions of personnel. But what does
Abbas want to do with these accumulated powers?
In his February 18 address to the new
parliament, he said he expects the next Palestinian
government to: 1) abide by existing agreements
with Israel, including the 1993 and 1994
Oslo accords and the 2003
“road map” toward peace; 2)
accept negotiations as the “strategic and
credible”
way to resolve the conflict; and 3) espouse “peaceful” rather
than armed resistance.
Hamas
rejected the last two appeals as contrary to
its election program. But it had already gone
a long way toward acceding to the first. In
his first public address after the elections,
Hamas politburo head Khalid Mashaal met Abbas’ challenge
with submission: “The PA was founded
on the basis of the Oslo accords. We recognize
that this is a reality, and we will deal with
it with the utmost realism, but without neglecting
our fundamental principles.…
In other words, we will honor our commitments,
provided they serve our people and do not infringe
on our rights, but we will not accept dictates.
This, very clearly, is our position.”
The
price for this accommodation is for Abbas to
throw his weight behind Fatah joining a coalition
government. For now, all he is saying is that
Fatah’s participation in government “will
be for Fatah to decide.” Fatah is saying
that it will not join a national unity government
until Hamas “changes its program.” Negotiations
to square these circles are not expected to
reach a definite conclusion until after the
Israeli elections on March 28.
According
to aides close to him, one of the reasons Abbas
was so adamant about holding the elections
as scheduled was that he saw them as means
to neutralize his opponents within Fatah and
the PA. “Abu Mazen doesn’t want
to destroy Fatah; he wants to destroy those
parts of Fatah that have blocked his policies
of a ceasefire, reform and negotiations,” says
one confidante. Through the parliamentary elections
and then the convening of the Fatah General
Conference, the goal was to forge a new “Abbasian” Fatah
out of the debris of the old “Arafatist” one.
Fatah’s
election defeat clearly marks a setback to
that plan. The question is whether Abbas would
attempt to reach the same goal by leading Fatah—or
“his parts of Fatah”—into a
coalition government if Hamas were to accede
to his conditions. Even then, Abbas would face
sizable opposition from the usual quarters: the
FCC, FRC, elements within the security forces
and other parts of the PA bureaucracy, as well
as al-Aqsa brigades members in their pay. Still,
Hamas is convinced there is a silent constituency
within Fatah willing to take the “patriotic
stand.” This constituency requires only
that Abbas give it voice.
Nor
would Hamas be miserly with the largesse, says ‘Adwan.
Hamas would have “no problem” with
Fatah’s Nasir al-Qidwa, formerly the
Palestinian observer at the UN, returning to
the post of foreign minister. It has already
approached former World Bank technocrat Salam
Fayyad, who served as Abbas’ finance
minister, to retake that job. Most importantly,
Hamas believes that Fatah’s imprisoned
West Bank general secretary (and most popular
politician), Marwan Barghouti, would be supportive
due to his pre-election pledge that “the
aim of January 25 is not which party has
the most seats…. It is to form a broad
national reform government with the participation
of all.” The critical position is that
of interior minister, given its nominal control
of the security forces and responsibility for
security coordination with Israel. Following
the elections, Hamas reportedly approached
Dahlan. He refused, leading the charge on the
parliament building. Will this be a constant
obstruction?
The
position of interior minister would strengthen
Dahlan’s grip on the security forces
and neutralize his opponents within them. While
his acceptance of the job would be unpopular
among some in Fatah, it would be greatly esteemed
in Palestinian public opinion. It would probably
be welcomed by Egypt, the European Union and
the US, all of whom have enjoyed good relations
with Dahlan in the past. It would also enable
Dahlan to renew the tacit alliance he formed
with Hamas during his previous tenure at Interior
under Abbas’ 2003 premiership, when the
watchword was “inclusion” rather
than polarization.
Hamas’ view
of Dahlan—then as now—is that he
represents “the pro-Western stream within
Fatah.” For precisely this reason, his
cooptation would be a prize worth paying for.
But is a rapprochement between Abbas, Dahlan
and Hamas conceivable? “I think it very
unlikely,”
says one of Dahlan’s closest allies in
Gaza. On the other hand, “nothing is impossible
in politics.”
Israel
Israel
received Hamas’ victory with shock. Guided
by pre-election surveys, it expected Hamas
to be a formidable opposition in the next PA
parliament, perhaps with a ministry or two.
It never expected the Islamist party to be
the party of government. Once the new day dawned,
however, Israel was trenchant in its response.
Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, at the sixth
Israel-Europe conference in Jerusalem on February 6,
intoned: “There will be no recognition
of a Palestinian government with the participation
or under the control of Hamas unless three
conditions are met: the Hamas charter is changed
to recognise the state of Israel’s right
to exist as a Jewish state; total dismantling
of all weapons and a total cessation of all
terrorist activity; and acceptance of all agreements
signed between the PA and the state of Israel.”
These
conditions have more or less been adopted by
three members of the Quartet that sponsors
the road map—the US, the EU and the UN.
The very public exception was Russia, which,
spying an opportunity to increase its prestige
in the Middle East, immediately broke ranks
by inviting a Hamas delegation led by Mashaal
for talks in Moscow. It was a rupture for which
the Hamas leader expressed the
“deepest appreciation,” and it was
not the only crack in the coalition.
While
Israel put sanctions into effect “the
moment” Hamas deputies assumed their
seats—including a freeze on the transfer
of $55 million in monthly tax rebates to the
PA—the Quartet has said it will hold
its fire until the actual formation of the
next Palestinian government. One reason for
the patience was to delay the crunch—and
extend the relative calm in Israel—until
after the Israeli elections on March 28,
with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice particularly
concerned that a return to mayhem inside Israel
might “bolster the wrong elements” in
the poll, a reference to Binyamin Netanyahu’s
Likud Party. But the main reasons were to use
the interim to consolidate Abbas’ presidency
as a counterweight to the Hamas government
and to array such a large international coalition
against it that Hamas would be forced to accept “moderation” as
the price of its political existence. No Palestinian
believes the extortion will work.
“Hamas
has already said it recognizes the de facto
reality of the Oslo agreements and has clarified
that it is prepared to continue the ceasefire
with Israel. But it is not going to make political
concessions on its program, at least not until
Israel commits itself to ending the occupation,” says
Ziad Abu ‘Amr, a Hamas-backed independent
MP who is tipped to become a minister.
Hamas
has met the threat of political and economic
sanctions with hubris. But the threat is real.
The PA is already teetering near bankruptcy,
with a projected deficit for 2006 of at least
$600 million. In 2005, the Authority’s
$1.6 billion budget was supported by a $649
million subvention from the EU and $400 million
from the US, most of it disbursed through non-governmental
organizations. Its monthly payroll of $116
million to pay 135,000 public employees
is largely dependent on the rebates from Israel,
as well as grants from Arab countries and loans
from Palestinian banks (which, on news of Hamas’ victory,
refused to lend). The termination of aid from
all or any other one of these suppliers could
send the PA into freefall, with violence and/or
an international trusteeship filling the void.
There
are some in the Israeli political and military
establishment who would not be averse to this,
believing that the end of the PA would clear
the way to more regional, less nationalist
solutions. Some may already be acting to that
end. On February 4, the Israeli army launched
what the Israeli newspaper Haaretz called
an “assassination offensive,” murdering
12 Islamic Jihad and al-Aqsa Brigades fighters
in Gaza over the next five days. The action
was ostensibly a reprisal to mortar fire that
had injured a child and three civilians inside
Israel the day before. But it is difficult
to see the entirely Israeli-driven escalation
as anything other than a means of trying to
provoke Hamas’ military arm to tarnish
the Islamist party further in the eyes of the
West. So far, Hamas has not risen to the bait.
It has kept its fighters out of the fray, while
insisting that “the forces of Palestinian
struggle have the right to respond.”
The
Bush administration may also be disappointed
by the restraint, believing that a return to
violent resistance by Hamas would strengthen
the coalition against it, hasten the PA’s
collapse and return a new, reformed Fatah to
power on the back of new elections declared
by Abbas. But that gambit, too, is fraught
with risk. Domestically, regionally and internationally,
the collapse of the PA could only be seen as
another failure of US foreign policy, especially
after the pressure the US exerted on Israel
to allow the elections to happen. Nor would
Brussels be indifferent. Whatever misgivings
there may be about the next Palestinian government,
the EU still sees the PA’s existence
as the precondition for a return to political
negotiations and the basis of a future Palestinian
state.
Roads
to Perdition
The
more likely future—especially after a
new Israeli government is installed—is
containment, or what some have called
“coordinated unilateralism.” This
is where Israel and Hamas eschew “strategic”
issues to do with negotiations and mutual recognition
in favor of “practical arrangements” to
do with aid, services and violence, replicating
the détente that obtains between
Israel’s West Bank “civil administration” and
Hamas-run municipalities.
Whatever
his bluster now, Olmert may be among the adherents
of this approach. On February 7, he sketched
more clearly than ever before the strategic
direction of any government led by him. While
nodding brusquely to the road map, he said
Israel’s goal must be to “separate” from
the Palestinians while deepening its grip on
Jerusalem, the main West Bank settlement blocs
and the Jordan Valley. His defense minister,
Shaul Mofaz, said the final, unilateral determination
of Israel’s permanent borders could be
accomplished within “two years.” If
this is the goal, there are some Israelis who
believe that Hamas may prove the better “partner” than
Fatah, since the Islamists—no less than
Olmert and Mofaz—would prefer a long-term
truce to any tangible moves toward a permanent
agreement.
But “a
long-term arrangement of non-belligerency,” to
use Ariel Sharon’s phrase, is only a
longer road to perdition, especially for the
Palestinians. Even were Hamas passively to
trade governance for annexation, Islamic Jihad
and Fatah would not. Resistance would erupt,
with high-trajectory missiles fired over the
West Bank walls and tunnels dug under Gaza
barriers being the probable mode. A far more
likely scenario is that Hamas would head a
government that preserves its semi-autonomous
armed resistance, mimicking the so-called Hizballah
model that was the template of so much of Hamas’ activity
during the intifada. But, then as now,
the strategy will founder on one fundamental
contradiction. The PA is under military occupation
and subject to financial ransom. Lebanon and
Hizballah were not. Sooner or later the contradiction
would mean collapse and/or reconquest.
Hamas’ counter
to these pincers is the “strategic depth” it
enjoys in the Arab and Islamic world. This
is not only rhetoric. Hamas has sound relations
with Egypt, the Gulf states, Syria, Iran and
Hizballah. It has also earned enthusiastic
kudos in the wider Muslim world, and never
more so than now. But the coalition is anything
but united. Egypt has effectively joined the
Western chorus on the terms for Hamas’ entrée
to diplomacy. Jordan has been less strident,
but has less leverage due to the poisonous
relations that exist between the king and the
Hamas leadership and which Jordan is now trying
rapidly to repair. The Gulf states, including
Saudi Arabia, are unlikely to do anything that
runs too much afoul of US policy in the region.
Syria and Hizballah have their own problems.
That
leaves Iran, which, according to PA sources,
funds Hamas to the tune of $10 million
a month. Hamas will certainly ask for more.
But, despite threats to the contrary, it is
not clear whether Hamas would ask for anything
else. A too close association with Tehran—especially
under the new radical leadership of President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad—would not only strengthen
the Western coalition against the Islamist
party and fit Israel’s descriptions of
it like a glove, it would strain Hamas’
relations with Egypt and the Gulf states, as
well as with its “mother” Sunni Muslim
Brotherhood, which views Iran as a Shi‘i
regime as much as an Islamist one. Nor would
a close embrace with Iran go down well with Palestinians,
especially those who are nationalist, secularist
and/or Christian.
The
greater question is not whether Hamas can rally
the Arab and Muslim world to defend it against
Israel and Western subversion. It is whether
that world can be mobilized to fracture the
Western and Israeli-defined consensus on Hamas
and its amorphous yet clearly emerging terms
for a settlement.
Flexibility
in Spades
The
precondition is going to be flexibility on
Hamas’ part, and Hamas has been shoveling
out flexibility in spades. In the course of
its initial consultations with Arab League
members in Cairo in February, one or another
Hamas leader has said: 1) Hamas seeks a national
coalition government with Fatah and other Palestinian
factions having a fair share of the ministerial
portfolios; 2) Hamas would not be averse to
forming a technocratic government, with none
of the ministers having an explicit party affiliation;
3) Hamas reaffirms its support for the presidency
of Abbas and for eventually joining the PLO;
4) Hamas “does not see the US as an enemy
and is open to a US role” in the conflict
and therefore the region; 5) Hamas proposes
a “united Palestinian army” so
that all the Palestinian militias would come
under the PA’s authority, fulfilling
Abbas’ dictum of “one authority,
one law, one gun”; and 6) Hamas would
adhere to existing PLO-Israeli agreements as
long as these did not conflict “with
fundamental Palestinian national principles.”
Most
intriguingly of all, Hamas was agnostic in
response to Arab League General Secretary Amr
Moussa’s plea that it adopt the 2002
Arab League initiative for peace with Israel.
Rejected by Hamas and Israel at the time, the
initiative commits the 22 members of the Arab
League to a “full normalization”
with the Jewish state in return for Israel’s “full
withdrawal” from the territories it occupied
in the 1967 war as well as a “just and
agreed” resolution of the Palestinian refugees’ UN-sanctioned
right of return. This is how Mashaal answered
Moussa: “We do not oppose the Arab position.
The recognition of Israel is perhaps possible
in the future were Israel to recognize the [national]
rights of the Palestinian people. When that happens,
I am sure there will be Palestinian and Arab
cooperation to deal positively with such a step.
But it can only happen after Israel reaches this
stage.”
In
other words, Hamas could endorse the Arab initiative—either
directly or via a Palestinian referendum—on
the condition that Israel takes practical steps
to recognize the Palestinians’
right to self-determination by “ending
the occupation that began in 1967,”
as per the phrasing of the road map. Until that
commitment comes, Hamas will solicit Palestinian,
Arab and Islamic support behind its position
of not recognizing the Jewish state and preserving
the Palestinians’ right to resist the occupation “by
all means,” Mashaal said. The question,
said Moussa at the same press conference, “should
now be posed to Israel.”
It
is clear what the answer would be. Ariel Sharon,
who will remain Israeli prime minister, though
he is comatose, until the March 28 elections,
reoccupied the West Bank in 2002 and adopted
his unilateral separation plan in 2003 partly
to evade the road map and the “imposition” of
an international peace conference, one of whose
parameters would have been the Arab initiative.
His legatees, Olmert and Mofaz, are moving
swiftly to determine Israel’s final borders
to make sure this initiative can never be resurrected.
The
Choice
But
the main audience for Mashaal’s gun-and-olive
branch commentary is not yet Israel. It is
Washington, and Mashaal hopes to glean whether
Washington has understood the true significance
of the Palestinian elections. There are three
aspects to this significance.
The
first is that the Hamas victory has exploded
the myth at the heart of the Bush administration’s
so-called democratization project in the Middle
East. Democratization was a project that came
about by default. Its origins lay in Grand
Ayatollah ‘Ali al-Sistani’s edict
that Iraq’s Shi‘i majority would
only accommodate the US-led occupation as long
as there was a swift transfer to Iraqi sovereignty
and free and fair elections to consecrate it.
Democracy
was then sold to Washington’s skeptical
allies—Western, Arab and Israeli—as
the most pacific way to effect regime change,
as in Lebanon, or, in the PA, as the means
to bring forth a malleable leadership more
attentive to Israel’s security demands,
the US “war on terror”
and, eventually, a final agreement in line with
Israeli prerogatives. It has so far proved the
reverse. On the contrary, wherever Arabs have
had a free vote, they have used elections not
simply to improve governance, but to strengthen
their hand against authoritarian and corrupt
regimes and/or foreign occupations that control
their lives. Democracy here is not a substitute
for national liberation: it is an essential vehicle.
For now, the most authentic drivers of that desire
are the region’s Islamist movements.
This
is why the movement for democracy has so far
strengthened the Islamist opposition in Egypt
and Syria, enhanced Hizballah’s status
in Lebanon and brought Islamist governments
to power in Iraq and the PA. It was also a
contribution to Ahmedinejad’s ascendancy
in Iran. But what do these masses want, aside
from the right to change the bankruptcy, defeatism,
inertia and venality of their leaders? This
is the second significance of the elections.
Palestinians,
by and large, were not voting for political
Islam or the destruction of Israel. Rather,
admits Hamas political leader Musa Abu Marzuq, “alleviating
the debilitating conditions of occupation and
not an Islamic state is at the heart of our
mandate of change and reform.”
Abu Marzuq is right. According to polls carried
out since the elections, 75 percent of Palestinians
still support reconciliation with Israel based
on a genuine two-state solution, including 60 percent
of those who voted for Hamas. What Palestinians
voted against was not peace but Fatah’s
maladministration and a political process that
has consistently suborned their right to self-determination
to Israel’s colonial ambitions in the Occupied
Territories. “Hamas presented an alternative
to Oslo and the road map,” says Ghazi Hamad. “We
said negotiations alone are not enough to achieve
our rights. What is needed is a Palestinian-led
strategy, with a genuine consensus over aims
and a proper balance between political and military
struggle.”
It
is becoming increasingly clear what the aim
and the consensus are. As a hypothetical question, ‘Atif ‘Adwan
was asked what a Hamas-led government’s
response would be to an Israeli proposal to
resume negotiations from where they left off
at Taba in January 2001. His answer would
surprise everyone except those who voted for
him. “I think Hamas would have to respond
positively. We are aware that the two peoples
want a fair solution. But we would want to
see real Israeli gestures to strengthen the
negotiations—like releasing prisoners,
lifting the checkpoints and easing our lives.”
The
answer encapsulates the third significance
of the elections—the political choice
they unambiguously place before the US and
the Europeans. Does the fact of a Hamas victory
confirm the Sharonian thesis that the only “secure” future
for Israel is one that unilaterally walls itself
off from the region? Or does the Hamas victory
sear into the Western consciousness that the
greatest guarantor of Israel’s security
would be a peace agreement signed by a democratically
elected Palestinian government that is also
a constituent member of the regional Muslim
Brotherhood on the basis of an initiative endorsed
by every Arab state, including stereotypically
“rejectionist” Syria? The price of
that agreement will be Hamas’ recognition
of Israel as a state behind its 1967 borders.
The price for Israel will be to withdraw to those
borders, especially in Jerusalem.
Hamas’ political
strategy over the coming months and years will
be to try to get to that choice. It will strive
to build a coalition and a consensus first
with Fatah, then with the Arab and Islamic
world, and finally with Russia and other individual
European states. By the same token, and negotiating
with the same powers, Israel will lobby for
its unilateralist alternative as camouflaged
by the road map, based on conditions the PA
is now not only unable, but also expressly
unwilling to accept. It will be left to the
US to decide the issue. But at least the issue
is now clear. It is not about Israel’s
security, recognition or even democracy. It
is about Israel’s occupation of another
people’s country and that people’s
right—gun in one hand, ballot in the
other—to resist it.

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