Now that the guns have fallen silent and the dust is settling over Gaza,
it is time to revisit the received wisdom in Israel, the United States and
some European quarters that Hamas is a monolithic, Al Qaeda-like terrorist
organization bent on Israel's destruction and that, therefore, Israel has
no choice but to isolate Hamas and use overwhelming force to overcome it.
In fact, there is substantial evidence to the contrary. Far from a
monolith, there are multiple clashing viewpoints and narratives within
Hamas. Over the years, I have interviewed more than a dozen Hamas leaders
inside and outside the Palestinian territories. Although, on the whole,
Hamas' public rhetoric calls for the liberation of all historic Palestine,
not only the territories occupied in 1967, a healthier debate occurs
within.
Nuanced differences exist among Hamas' leaders, some of whom have
repeatedly said they wanted a two-state solution.
In the last year, more and more Hamas moderates have called for tahdia (a
minor truce) or hudna (a longer-term truce), which obviously implies some
measure of recognition. Hamas moderates, in effect, are justifying their
policy shift by using Islamic terms. In Islamic history, hudnas sometimes
develop into permanent truces.
Considered a hard-liner, Khaled Meshaal, the top Hamas leader and head of
its political bureau based in Syria, acknowledged as much. "We are
realists," he said. And he acknowledged that there is "an entity called
Israel."
Another senior Hamas leader, Ghazi Hamad, went even further than Meshaal,
telling journalists last month that Hamas would be satisfied with ending
Israeli control over the areas occupied in the 1967 Six-Day War -- the
West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. In other words, the organization would
not hold out for the liberation of the land that currently includes
Israel.
My conversations with Hamas' rank and file suggest that the militant
organization has evolved considerably since the group unexpectedly won
power in Gaza in free elections in 2006. Before that, Hamas was known for
its suicide bombers, not its bureaucrats. But that had to change. "It is
much more difficult to run a government than to oppose and resist Israeli
occupation," a senior Hamas leader told me while on official business in
Egypt in 2007. "If we do not provide the goods to our people, they'll
disown us."
Despite its wooden and reactionary rhetoric, Hamas is a rational actor, a
conclusion reached by former Mossad chief Ephraim Halevy, who also served
as Ariel Sharon's national security advisor and who is certainly not an
Israeli peacenik. The Hamas leadership has undergone a transformation
"right under our very noses" by recognizing that "its ideological goal is
not attainable and will not be in the foreseeable future," Halevy wrote
recently in Yedioth Ahronoth. His verdict is that Hamas is now ready and
willing to accept the establishment of a Palestinian state within the
temporary borders of 1967.
Similarly, a U.S. Army Strategic Studies Institute analysis published just
weeks before the launch of the Israeli offensive concluded that Hamas was
considering a shift of its position. "Israel's stance toward [Hamas] ...
has been a major obstacle to substantive peacemaking," concluded the
study.
If Hamas is so eager to accept a two-state solution, why doesn't it simply
announce that it recognizes Israel's existence and promise to negotiate a
peace deal that allows the two countries to coexist? Apparently, Hamas'
leaders believe that accepting Israel's presence is the last card in their
arsenal. Why bargain it away before the talks even start?
So what happens now? President Obama, saying he wants to "get engaged
right away" in the issue, has already dispatched his special envoy, former
Sen. George J. Mitchell, to the Middle East to talk to "all the major
parties involved." But, although Mitchell will make a stop in the West
Bank, he will not venture into Gaza or meet with Hamas officials,
according to a State Department spokesman.
Is that wise? Isn't that just a prescription for more of the same? What
if, instead of ignoring Hamas or, worse yet, seeking its overthrow, the
United States and Europe engaged the militant organization, diplomatically
and politically, and encouraged it to continue moderating its views?
So far, the strategy of isolating and militarily confronting Hamas pursued
by Israel and the Bush administration has not appeared to weaken the
organization dramatically; if anything, it has strengthened hard-liners
within and reinforced the culture of extremism and martyrdom.
There is no doubt that Hamas' reckless rocketing of populated Israeli
towns, as well as its overheated rhetoric, have allowed Israeli leaders to
portray their assault on Gaza as an extension of the global war on
terrorism. But there are huge differences between Hamas and Al Qaeda, and
a lot of bad blood. Hamas is a broad-based religious/nationalist
resistance whose focus and violence is limited to Palestine/Israel, while
Al Qaeda is a small, transnational terrorist group that has carried out
attacks worldwide. Osama bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri, Al Qaeda's chiefs,
have vehemently criticized Hamas for its willingness to play politics and
negotiate a truce with Israel. Hamas' leaders have responded that they
know what is good for their people.
Unlike Al Qaeda, Hamas is not merely an armed militia but a viable social
movement with an extensive social network and a large popular base that
has been estimated at more than half a million supporters and
sympathizers.
If it won't engage Hamas, the U.S. and Europe will never know if it can
evolve into an open, tolerant and peaceful social movement.
But most important, there can be no durable resolution of the 100-year-old
conflict if Hamas is not consulted about peacemaking and if the
Palestinians remain divided. Like it or hate it, Hamas is the most
powerful organization in the Palestinian territories; it is deeply
entrenched in society. Israel cannot wish it away.
To break the deadly embrace, the new U.S. administration and its European
allies should support a unified Palestinian government that could
negotiate peace with Israel. Some of Obama's advisors are on record saying
that they favor dialogue with organizations such as Hamas, Hezbollah and
the Muslim Brotherhood. Some even believe that the president may feel the
same way, though he has not said so. If they are wrong, and Obama thinks
that a "durable peace" can be achieved without talking to Hamas, he will
be in for a rude awakening.
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Fawaz A. Gerges is as Fellow at the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU).
He is also a professor of Middle Eastern studies and international affairs at Sarah Lawrence College. His most recent
books are Journey of the Jihadist: Inside Muslim Militancy and The Far Enemy: Why Jihad Went Global.
This article appeared in the Los Angeles Times January 31, 2009.
(http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-gerges31-2009jan31,0,4432297.story)