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Hamas' Political Impasse:
Between Principal and Necessity
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, July 3, 2009
Much can be said to explain, or even justify Hamas’ recent
political concessions, where its top leaders in Gaza and Damascus agreed in
principle with a political settlement on the basis of the two-state
solution. On June 25, Damascus-based leader of the Islamic group’s
political bureau, Khaled Meshaal reiterated Hamas’ rejection of recognizing
Israel as a Jewish State, rightfully dubbing such a designation as “racist,
no different from Nazis and other calls denounced by the international
community.” However, he did endorse the idea of a two-state solution, which
envisages the creation of an independent Palestinian state on roughly 22
percent of the land of historic Palestine. The announcement was
hardly earth shattering, for other Hamas leaders have alluded, or
straightforwardly agreed to the same notion in the past. But what was in
fact altered is the language used by Hamas’ leaders to endorse the illusive
and increasingly unfeasible possibility of two states. Meshaal’s language
was largely secular, while past Hamas references to the same principle were
engulfed in religious idiom. For example, in past years Hamas agreed to a
Palestinian state in all of the occupied territories, conditioned on the
removal of Jewish settlements, under the provision of a long-term ‘hunda’,
or truce. The term ‘hudna’ is loaded with implicit religious inferences, and
was used to present Hamas’ political views as both pragmatic, but also based
on time-honored Islamic political tradition. Ahmed Yousef, chief
advisor to the deposed Hamas government in Gaza alluded to the concept of ‘hudna’
in various writings and media interviews. But his calls sounded more like an
attempt to find common space between the Islamic movement’s firm religious
beliefs and US-led international pressure aimed at forcing Hamas into the
same political camp which discredited rival Fatah. But Ahmed Yousef’s
variation in rhetoric cannot be understood as synonymous with Meshaal’s
recent political revelations. The boycott of the elected Hamas
government in 2006, and the orchestrated violence that led to a Hamas
takeover, and subsequent isolation and siege of the Gaza Strip, were all
meant to force Hamas to ‘moderate’ its position. Immense collective
suffering was endured throughout the Gaza Strip in order for Israel and its
backers, including the Palestinian leadership based in the West Bank to
force Hamas out of its ideological trenches to join the ‘pragmatic’ camp,
which saw little harm in fruitless political compromises. Hamas’
steadfastness was enough to further demonstrate its revolutionary credence
and patriotic credentials to most Palestinians and their supporters around
the Middle East and the world. Hamas impressed many, not because of its
theological references, but political resilience and refusal to be
intimidated. In some way, Hamas achieved the same revolutionary status and
recognition as that of Fatah in the 1960’s. It was not until the
Israeli war against largely defenseless Gaza starting December 2008, that
Hamas seemed politically self-assured, and for good reason. After all, it
was a democratically elected movement representing Palestinians in the
Occupied Territories. Their rivals’ failure to accommodate the new political
reality, and incessant Israeli attempts at destroying the movement and
imprisoning scores of its elected parliamentarians were not enough to
de-legitimize it. Then Israel unleashed one of its grizzliest campaigns
against Palestinians, aimed largely at civilians and civilian infrastructure
in Gaza. The Israeli war was meant to achieve more than the killing of 1,350
(including 437 children) and the wounding of 5,450 others. It was aimed at
disturbing the Palestinian psyche that began seeing a world of possibilities
beyond the confining and shallow promises of peace infused by the Oslo peace
process, which only served to ingrain occupation and entrench illegal
settlements. International solidarity was building up slowly prior
to the Israeli attack. As Israeli bombs began raining atop Gaza’s mostly
civilian infrastructure, international solidarity exploded throughout the
world. Israel’s brutal folly served to legitimize the very group it was
meant to crush. The voices that tirelessly demanded Hamas to live up to
fixed conditions, handed down by the so-called Middle East peace quartet,
were overshadowed by voices demanding the US and various Western powers to
recognize and engage Hamas. A lead voice amongst them is former US President
Jimmy Carter, one of the first influential Western personalities to engage
Hamas, and to break the news that Hamas “would accept a two-state peace
agreement with Israel as long as it was approved by a Palestinian referendum
or a newly elected government.” (Guardian, April 22, 2008) Carter’s
insistence on involving Hamas in any future peace arrangement took him from
Damascus, to Cairo to the West Bank, then, to Gaza. His recent visit to the
Strip on June 16 was more than that of solidarity, but it was aimed at
convincing Hamas to agree to the vision of two states and the Arab Peace
Initiative of 2002. The alternative conditions are meant to present a more
dignified exit than the belligerent and one-sided demands of the quartet.
It’s unclear whether Hamas would fully embrace his call. But what is clear
is that Hamas is sending various signals, such as its willingness to engage
in dialogue with the Obama administration, and, again, acceptance of the
two-state solution, which according to any reasonable estimation of the
Israeli ‘facts on the ground’ created in occupied Jerusalem and the West
Bank, is now a far-fetched possibility. Needless to say, Hamas as a
political movement, with an elected government with some jurisdiction over
nearly one-third of the Palestinian people has the right, and even more, the
obligation to politically maneuver, reposition and even re-brand itself.
Breaking the siege on Gaza requires steadfastness, true, but political
ingenuity as well. That said, Hamas must be wary of the political, and
historic price that will be paid if it fails to learn from the experience of
the discredited and corrupted Fatah. Palestinian rights are enshrined in
international law, and corroborated by the endless sacrifices of the
Palestinian people, in Gaza and elsewhere. Therefore, the price of
engagement, dialogue and political validation must not happen at the expense
of the Palestinian people wherever they are, as stipulated in numerous UN
resolutions including 194, pertaining to the right of return of Palestinian
refugees. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been
published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world. His
latest book is, "The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's
Struggle" (Pluto Press, London), and his forthcoming book is, “My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London)
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