by Khaled Abu
Toameh 24.11. 2014
The only
option Hamas faces, therefore, is to attack Israel again as a way of ridding
itself of the severe crisis in the Gaza Strip and the growing frustration among
the Palestinians living there. Hamas's biggest fear is that this frustration
will be translated into disillusionment with its regime. That is why Hamas is
now seeking to direct the anger on the Palestinian street toward Israel.
Hamas is
also hoping that another war will further increase anti-Israel sentiment around
the world and earn the Palestinians even more sympathy.
Hamas's
threats should be taken seriously.
A destroyed building in Gaza.
(Image source: UNRWA/Shareef
Sarhan)
Hamas is also angry with the
Egyptians for closing the Rafah border crossing after a terror attack in Sinai
in which 32 Egyptian soldiers were killed.
Moreover, Hamas has
rejected the United Nations plan to reconstruct the Gaza Strip
on the pretext that it "sidelines" the Islamist movement and allows
Israel to decide who would benefit from the work. "The UN plan is
unacceptable and ineffective," said Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri.
Hamas is opposed to the UN plan
mainly because it denies the Islamist organization any role in the reconstruction
of the Gaza Strip. Hamas is also worried that the involvement of the
Palestinian Authority in the reconstruction effort would undermine Hamas's
control over the Gaza Strip, and allow Abbas and his Fatah faction to take
credit for helping the Palestinians living there.
Last month, a donor conference
in Cairo pledged $5.4 billion for the reconstruction of the
Gaza Strip.
However, Hamas maintains that since
then, the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have not seen any of the promised
funds. Hamas has also strongly denied claims by some PA officials that it had
asked for 20% of the funds for itself.
Rising tensions between Hamas and
Mahmoud Abbas's Palestinian Authority are the real reason why the
reconstruction of the Gaza Strip has still not started. These tensions reached their
peak with the recent bombings that
targeted the homes and vehicles of 15 senior Abbas loyalists in the Gaza Strip.
Abbas has held Hamas responsible for the attacks -- a charge that the Islamist
movement has strongly denied. Although Hamas has openly accused
the PA, UN and Egypt of obstructing the reconstruction scheme, it is now
threatening to resume its terror attacks on Israel.
Hamas cannot launch terror attacks
against the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank thanks to the presence of
the Israel Defense Forces [IDF] there. Hamas will also refrain from doing so to
avoid being accused by Palestinians of "destroying national unity."
Hamas does not want to be held responsible for Palestinian civil war.
Hamas is not going to initiate
a crisis with the UN out of fear that such a move would rally the world against
the movement and end the international organizations' services and relief work
in the Gaza Strip.
The only option Hamas faces,
therefore, is to attack Israel again as a way of ridding itself of the severe
crisis in the Gaza Strip and the growing frustration among Palestinians living
there.
Hamas's biggest fear is that this
frustration will be translated into disillusionment with its regime. That is
why Hamas is now seeking to direct the anger on the Palestinian street toward
Israel.
Hamas's threats against Israel
should be taken seriously, especially in light of reports that the movement is
continuing to prepare for another war. Hamas not only continues to dig tunnels
under the border with Israel; it has also been test-firing
rockets into the Mediterranean Sea.
Hamas does not have much left to
lose in another military confrontation with Israel.
The killing of a few hundred more
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip will allow Hamas to shift attention from its
failure to rebuild the Gaza Strip to blaming Israel for "waging another
war" on the Palestinians. Hamas is also hoping that another war will
further increase anti-Israel sentiment around the world and earn the
Palestinians even more sympathy.
Abbas also stands to benefit from
another war in the Gaza Strip. Renewed fighting would absolve him of his
responsibility toward the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. Additionally, of
course, there is always the possibility that Israel would "do the job for
him" and get rid of Hamas. And like Hamas, Abbas too would seek to take
advantage of the fighting to wage another campaign of incitement against Israel
in the international arena.
Abu Toameh's analyses are always incisive, as well.well researched and objective.
ReplyDeleteJesus said 'A house divided against itself shall not stand' besides 'A house built on shifting sand (as opposed to a rock) shall not stand'. This so-called show of unity between the PA and Hamas looks set to fail. The fact that Hamas rules through fear that its own people, the Gazans, could turn against it, speaks volumes. Hence its decision not to allow free and fair elections in the Gaza Strip since approx. 10 years ago.
ReplyDelete