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The Hamas Government Should Be
Recognized
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By Tanya Reinhart
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Yediot Aharonot , May 31, 2006,
translated from Hebrew by Mark Marshall (quotes and
references added).
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06/01/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- The Hamas government must be
recognized, not only because recognition of Hamas would be
good for Israel, as the former Mossad head Ephraim Halevy
recently argued, (1) but
because this is the right move by any criterion of justice
and international law.
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The U.S. and Europe decided, despite
Israel’s opposition, to permit the Palestinian people to
hold democratic elections. According to Jimmy Carter’s
report in the “Herald Tribune”, the elections were “honest,
fair, strongly contested, without violence and with the
results accepted by winners and losers. Among the 62
elections that have been monitored by... the Carter Center,
these are among the best in portraying the will of the
people.” (2)
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In a just and well-ordered world, it would
be unthinkable for a government that was elected in this way
to be disqualified because Israel does not like the choice
of the electorate in question. But in a world in which the
U.S. rules, might is right, and might can define democracy
as it chooses. Thus it was announced that the outcome of the
Palestinian elections would not be recognized until the
three “mantras” were fulfilled: Hamas must renounce terror,
honour previous accords, and recognize the State of Israel.
Meanwhile the Palestinian people would be punished and
starved through an economic boycott, in the hope that this
will lead to the collapse of the elected government.
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In January 2005, Hamas announced its
resolution to replace armed struggle with political struggle
and agreed to a unilateral ceasefire (“calm”). In the 17
months since then, Hamas has not perpetrated a single
terrorist attack. According to security sources, since the
election, Hamas has not even participated in the launching
of Qassam rockets from Gaza, most of which are carried out
by Fatah. (3) What exactly
is the substance of the demand that Hamas renounce terror?
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Regarding previous accords, Hamas PM Haniyeh
explained that according to the Oslo Accords of 1993, after
an interim period of five years, a Palestinian state was to
have come into existence. But Israel violated every clause
of the Accords and continued to colonize and to dispossess
Palestinians of their lands. From now on, he says, his
government will only honour accords that are good for the
Palestinian people.
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Since the Oslo Accords, we Israelis have
become accustomed to the idea that negotiations with the
Palestinian Authority always revolve around the sole
question of what is good for Israel - the extent to which
the Palestinians are prepared to recognize its existence as
a Jewish state and to take care of its security. Suddenly
Israel is confronted with an elected Palestinian government
which is not willing to play that game any more. Haniyeh is
telling the government of Israel: From now on, you will
represent the position of Israel in the negotiations, and we
will represent the position of the Palestinians. At the
Algiers meeting of the Palestine National Council in 1988,
the Palestinian people undertook to recognize the partition
of the country and to be satisfied with a state within the
1967 borders. Israel has not done a thing since then to
prove that it is prepared to accept such a compromise. The
Palestinians will recognize the right of Israel to exist
only when Israel proves that it is prepared to recognize the
right of the Palestinian people to exist.
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But that is precisely what the governments
of Israel and the army have never accepted. No Palestinian
leadership has yet been found to be a suitable partner for
peace, but a leadership that announces that it represents
only the Palestinian people is in their eyes a real enemy
that must be destroyed.
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Olmert may have succeeded in garnering a
majority in the U.S. Congress for a boycott of the Hamas
government, but in Israeli society itself he does not have a
majority. According to a poll by the Truman Institute in
March of this year, 62% of Israelis are in favour of
negotiations with Hamas. (4)
But for quite some time now, the majority in
Israel has had no say. At the moment, what remains to be
hoped for is that Europe will come to its senses and also
influence the U.S. to accept the democratic choice of the
Palestinian people.
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Tanya Reinhart -
http://www.tau.ac.il/~reinhart/
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(1) Interview in Yediot Aharonot Saturday
Supplement, May 26, 2006. See also Associated Press, ‘Former
Mossad chief calls for long-term deal with Hamas’ May 27,
2006.
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(2) Jimmy Carter, ‘Punishing the innocent is
a crime’, International Herald Tribune
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May 7, 2006
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(3) Amos Harel, ‘IDF and Qassams / Zero
tolerance’, Ha’aretz, April 7, 2006; Amos Harel and Arnon
Regular, ‘IDF: Hamas about to rein in Qassams’, Ha’aretz
April 10, 2006.
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(4) Poll conducted March 16-21, 2006,
jointly by the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the
Advancement of Peace at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
and the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research in
Ramallah,
http://truman.huji.ac.il/upload/PressRelease-15-240306English.doc
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