Everything
You Know About Hamas is Wrong
By Tim Holmes
August 21, 2014 "ICH"
--
Alright, not everything. And no, not
you, smart-arse. Still, it’s been alarming to
be reminded over the past month just how delusory
much western public conversation on Hamas is. A
common perception is that Hamas are in essence
recalcitrant fundamentalist extremists, hell-bent on
destroying Israel by any means possible. Virulently
anti-semitic, misogynist and genocidal, they use
whatever weapons they acquire to murder Israeli
civilians and perhaps even attack Western targets
internationally, without compunction or restraint.
There is little awareness in this discourse that
Hamas differ in any significant way from the
Jihadists of ISIS or Al-Qaeda.
Probably the
most valuable basic text in dispelling these
delusions is Khaled Hroub’s Hamas: A Beginner’s
Guide, which takes on most of the major
confusions and misconceptions surrounding the
group’s seldom-explained ideology and modus
operandi. Hroub is a senior research fellow at
the University of Cambridge’s Centre of Islamic
Studies as well as Director of its Arab Media
Project, and his work on Hamas is held in very high
regard: Foreign Affairs deems it
“masterful”; Columbia’s Joseph Massad calls it “the
best-researched and most objective” work on the
topic, while Harvard’s Sara Roy, a leading expert on
the Israel-Palestine conflict, calls it “excellent”
and “required reading”.
Firstly,
are Hamas anti-Semitic? Hroub’s careful answer is
that, though there have been manifold confusions in
Hamas’s writings and rhetoric between Jews, Zionists
and Israelis, Jewishness is neither a necessary nor
a sufficient condition for Hamas’s opposition. The
group draw a sharp distinction, for instance,
between “Zionist and non-Zionist” Jews:
“The
non-Zionist Jew is one who belongs to the Jewish
culture, whether as a believer in the Jewish faith
or simply by accident of birth, but … [who] takes no
part in aggressive actions against our land and our
nation … Hamas will not adopt a hostile
position in practice against anyone because of his
ideas or his creed but will adopt such a
position if those ideas and creed are translated
into hostile or damaging actions against our
people.”
Rather, it
is the occupation and dispossession of the
Palestinians that evokes Hamas’s resistance. As one
of its leaders puts it:
“being Jewish,
Zionist or Israeli is irrelevant, what is relevant
for me is the notion of occupation and aggression.
Even if this occupation was imposed by an
Arab or Islamic state and the soldiers were Arabs or
Muslims I would resist and fight back.”
Are Hamas
committed to the destruction of Israel? In fact,
Hroub writes, this phrase is “never used or adopted
by Hamas, even in its most radical statements.”
Rather, Hamas seeks “the liberation of Palestine.”
While this initially meant historic Palestine in its
entirety, Hamas are a generally pragmatic
organisation rooted in, and responsive to, the needs
and wishes of Palestinian society, and in practice
back a two-state solution along the lines of the
international consensus: Israeli withdrawal from the
territories it occupied in 1967, and a Palestinian
state in Gaza and the West Bank. They frame this in
terms of a long-term hudna or “truce” – a
term rooted in Islamic tradition that Hamas draw on
to justify suspensions of its jihad, or
struggle. The group have floated the idea of a
Palestinian referendum as a path to a final
settlement, allowing the movement to reconcile its
initial, hard-line position with its present,
pragmatic stance. Hamas state that they would accept
whatever outcome the Palestinians themselves chose.
Most
commonly invoked to incite alarm about Hamas’s
supposed anti-Semitism is its (to cite Roy) “undeniably
racist and anti-Jewish” Charter. Yet this
document is a singularly unhelpful guide to the
modern movement. As Hroub points out:
“The Charter
was written in early 1988 by one individual and was
made public without appropriate general Hamas
consultation, revision or consensus … The author of
the Charter was one of the “old guard” of the Muslim
Brotherhood in the Gaza Strip, completely cut off
from the outside world”.
The
document is therefore regarded as an embarrassment,
rarely referenced or cited, and starkly divergent
from Hamas’s current thinking. As the organisation’s
chief, Khaled Meshal,
told the New York Times in 2009:
“The most
important thing is what Hamas is doing and the
policies it is adopting today. . . . Hamas has
accepted the national reconciliation document. It
has accepted a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders
including East Jerusalem, dismantling settlements,
and the right of return based on a long-term truce.
Hamas has represented a clear political program
through a unity government. This is Hamas’s
program regardless of the historic documents.
Hamas has offered a vision. Therefore, it’s not
logical for the international community to get stuck
on sentences written 20 years ago.”
As one
official US government agency
concluded the same year:
“Hamas has, in
practice, moved well beyond its charter. Indeed,
Hamas has been carefully and consciously adjusting
its political program for years and has sent
repeated signals that it may be ready to begin a
process of coexisting with Israel.”
Is Hamas an
utterly intransigent, implacably violent
organisation pursuing genocidal aims? In fact, its
leaders have repeatedly proposed a long-term truce
with Israel of 10, 20 or 30 years’ duration (with
the possibility of continual renewal thereafter),
and it has shown itself willing to accept and
carefully observe ceasefires. In the
words of Avi Shlaim, probably the best-respected
historian of the Israeli-Arab conflict:
“The
historical record shows that despite its terrible
Charter, Hamas is led by pragmatic political
leaders who have settled for a two-state solution
along the 1967 lines, and who have made every effort
to end the conflict by diplomatic means.”
Such
efforts, Shlaim notes, include offers to negotiate a
long-term truce following its election in 2006, a
reprisal of that offer after it formed a national
unity government in 2007 – which met with a
US-Israeli-Fatah coup attempt – and in the national
unity government of 2014, which saw Hamas
essentially cede power (gaining no ministerial
positions) while agreeing to recognise Israel,
renounce violence and respect past agreements. Over
the last month, the media have hyped Hamas’
rejection of a ceasefire deal stitched up between
its enemies Egypt and Israel without any Hamas
involvement – which, since it would see Hamas lose
ground from the previous ceasefire agreement Israel
was continually violating, was
impossible for Hamas to accept. Nonetheless,
Hamas quickly
responded with its own, long-term (10-year)
ceasefire offer – which Israel rebuffed.
2009’s
Operation Cast Lead, Shlaim
notes, a bloody massacre in which Israel killed
over 1,000 Palestinians – most of them civilians –
was likewise the result of Israeli provocation and
belligerence in the face of Hamas restraint:
“In June 2008,
Egypt had brokered a ceasefire between Israel and
Hamas, the Islamic resistance movement. Contrary to
Israeli propaganda, this was a success: the average
number of rockets fired monthly from Gaza dropped
from 179 to three. Yet on 4 November Israel violated
the ceasefire by launching a raid into Gaza, killing
six Hamas fighters. When Hamas retaliated, Israel
seized the renewed rocket attacks as the excuse for
launching its insane offensive. If all
Israel wanted was to protect its citizens from
Qassam rockets, it only needed to observe the
ceasefire.”
Further
back, Hamas sharply opposed the Oslo peace process
of the 1990s (though later participated in the
elections it established), but in the context of
sharp divisions of opinion and serious reservations
across Palestinian society. Many of its objections,
echoing those of the left, have been vindicated.
“One of the meanings of Oslo,”
notes Israeli ex-minister Shlomo Ben-Ami,
“was that the
PLO was … Israel’s collaborator in the task of
stifling the intifada and cutting short what was
clearly an authentically democratic struggle for
Palestinian independence.”
Moreover:
“As a matter
of fact, neither Rabin nor, especially, Peres
[1992-96 Labor Prime Ministers] wanted the autonomy
to usher in a Palestinian state. As late as 1997 –
that is, four years into the Oslo process when, as
the chairman of the Labour Party’s Foreign Affairs
Committee, I proposed for the first time that the
party endorse the idea of a Palestinian state – it
was Shimon Peres who most vehemently opposed the
idea. … A Palestinian state was clearly not within
Rabin’s priorities either.”
Hamas’
tactic of suicide bombings against Israeli civilians
– morally abhorrent and a
crime against humanity – did its international
reputation no favours, doubtless added credibility
to the allegation of genocidal intent, and may have
encouraged more extreme groups to adopt the tactic.
Nevertheless, this chequered history does not alter
Hamas’s real strategic aims. Its leaders declare
that “resistance is not an end in itself”; as the
movement’s spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yasin put
it in September 2003:
“If we
perceive that the atmosphere favours such a
decision, we stop. And when we perceive that the
atmosphere has changed, we carry on.”
Far from an
end in themselves, suicide bombings were a
tactic. Hamas first launched them in 1994,
following far-right settler Baruch Goldstein’s
vicious massacre of 29 Palestinian worshippers in
Hebron’s Abrahimic mosque – but, Hroub notes,
quickly realised they “provided the movement with an
aura of strength and popularity” amongst
Palestinians. Israel hinted that it was willing to
negotiate an end to these attacks, but Hamas’s
position – “stop killing Palestinian civilians and
we will stop killing Israeli civilians” – proved a
non-starter for the Israeli government. (During the
second intifada, the number of Palestinian
children killed was greater than the number of
Israeli civilians killed.) Between 2000 and 2005,
“tacit agreements” to halt attacks routinely expired
as “Israel would waste no opportunity to assassinate
one Hamas leader after another”. Indeed evidence
suggests Israel
overwhelmingly shoots first during a lull.
Hamas
differs starkly from Al-Qaeda-style jihadists, then,
in its aims, means, targets and fundamental nature.
Hamas began by seeking the liberation of historic
Palestine, ultimately narrowing that aim to ending
the occupation of Gaza and the West Bank. Al-Qaeda’s
focus, by contrast, is pan-Islamic: it seeks to kick
the West out of Arab and Muslim countries, tear down
corrupt puppet governments and instate hard-line
Taliban-style regimes across the Muslim world. Its
battleground is global: Al-Qaeda targets the US, the
western “Crusader states” that attack Muslim
countries, Muslim “apostates” (a category that
includes Hamas) and westerners anywhere, ruling out
democratic and peaceful means. Far from pursuing any
such “global jihad”, Hamas strictly limits its
operations to historic Palestine, and has never
targeted Westerners. In 2006, for instance, Cechen
rebels urged Hamas to break off relations with
Moscow over its horrific crimes in Chechnya; Hamas
declined, concluding that relations with Moscow were
of more value to the Palestinian struggle. It is
also a democratic organisation, in some ways to a
fault, Hroub suggests: electing senior figures one
by one can give it a chaotic leadership structure.
Overall, Hamas resemble a national liberation
movement far more than a transnational jihadist
network.
Early
rhetoric about creating an Islamic state is no
longer taken seriously – if it ever was – and Hamas
now expresses a pluralist outlook, deriving its
terminology from international law and mainstream
political theory. Again, this reflects its roots in
Palestinian society and need to maintain its base of
support. Hamas enjoys some electoral support among
Christians, backed two independent Christian
candidates in the 2006 elections, and appointed a
Christian to its ministerial team. Nevertheless,
Hroub writes, some research suggests its rule has
put pressure on Christian groups, increasing rates
of emigration, and moves to impose some conservative
Islamic moral codes on Palestinian society have
elicited anger and alarmed secularists. In the past,
Hroub notes, these have included “soft” forms of
influence – through provision of social services,
for instance – as well as occasionally “harder”,
more forceful forms from some members, though its
leadership generally kept them in check. (Human
rights groups have also
condemned its arrests of journalists and serious
abuses against alleged “collaborators”.)
Nevertheless, Roy
notes Hamas’s “progressive de-emphasis on
religion” in power, alongside “the emerging
Islamization of Palestinian society and politics”.
Reports of
Hamas employing “human shields” and diverting
humanitarian resources into fanatical militarism
depict a fundamentally despotic organisation –
malign toward and parasitic on ordinary
Palestinians. This idea has roots in both
Orientalist portrayals of Arab leaders and more
recent Israeli government propaganda, but largely
inverts reality. In fact, Hamas derives popularity
not only from concerted resistance to occupation but
also the widespread social assistance that forms the
bulk of its work, helping sustain Palestinians
through increasingly dire poverty. As Roy
puts it:
“During the
Oslo period especially, the strength of Hamas
increasingly lay in the work of Islamic social
institutions whose services, directly and
indirectly, reached tens if not hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians, helping them to survive.
They provided services that the Palestinian
Authority was unable to provide adequately, if at
all. This base supported Islamic institutions
largely because they met basic needs for economic
sustenance and community well-being with a focus on
health and education, community support, and service
delivery. Islamic institutions were increasingly
viewed as community actors in a context where few
such actors existed. … Islamic institutions did not
emphasize political violence or substate terrorism
but rather community well-being and civic
restoration, a role that was (and remains) vital in
a context of steady deterioration.”
In power,
Hamas’s smashed and vilified tunnels actually
provided a
lifeline for Gaza’s crippled economy. Hamas’s
conspicuous material modesty has also increased its
popularity in contrast to the corrupt Fatah
leadership. Equally,
journalists and
human rights monitors find no evidence that
Hamas uses “human shields”, but uncover extensive
evidence of the practice by Israel – which also,
of course,
sites military facilities near major populated
areas, subsidises the housing of civilians in a war
zone, and
deliberately risks the lives of captured IDF
soldiers.
As Roy
concludes:
“While there
can be no doubt that since its inception in 1987,
Hamas has engaged in violence, armed struggle, and
terrorism as the primary force behind the horrific
suicide bombings inside Israel, it is also a
broadbased movement that has evolved into an
increasingly complex, varied, and sophisticated
organization engaged in a variety of societal
activities vital to Palestinian life.”
To
westerners, this may come a surprise. But then,
since when has any of us received sane,
reasonable commentary from the nightly Two Minutes
Hate?
Tim blogs
at
http://timholmesblog.wordpress.com |