WHO OR WHAT IS HAMAS
Stes de Necker
1. What are the origins of Hamas?
Hamas emerged as the Palestinian wing of Egypt's Muslim
Brotherhood after the outbreak of the first intifada in 1987 and is
the largest Palestinian militant organization and it is supported by a robust
social/political structure inside the Palestinian territories. Hamas is an
Arabic word that means zeal or enthusiasm. "Hamas" is also an acronym
for the group's official Arabic name, the Islamic Resistance Movement.
The group’s charter calls for establishing an Islamic
Palestinian state in place of Israel and rejects all agreements made between
the PLO and Israel. More recently, HAMAS has publicly expressed a willingness
to accept a long-term cessation of hostilities if Israel agrees to a
Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders with Jerusalem as its capital.
HAMAS’s strength is concentrated in the Gaza Strip and areas of the West Bank.
In early 2006 HAMAS won legislative elections in the
Palestinian territories, ending the secular Fatah party’s hold on the Palestinian
Authority and challenging Fatah’s leadership of the Palestinian national
movement. HAMAS continues its refusal to recognize Israel or renounce violence
against Israelis and, since early 2008, has conducted one suicide bombing,
which killed one civilian, and numerous mortar and rocket attacks that injured
civilians.
HAMAS has a paramilitary arm, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam
Brigades, which, beginning in the 1990s, has conducted many anti-Israeli
attacks in Israel and the Palestinian territories. These have included
large-scale terrorist bombings against Israeli civilian targets, as well as
small-arms attacks, improvised roadside explosives, and the launching of
rockets into Israel. While the group receives some support from foreign
countries and movements, it remains independent.
Its goal is to "liberate" Palestinian territories
from Israeli occupation. While the US, Israel,
and the European Union consider it a terrorist group, Hamas's military
wing is not its only operation. Hamas also runs a large social services network
and a political wing. It operates primarily in the Gaza Strip,
though it also maintains offices in Damascus, Syria.
In June 2008 HAMAS entered into a six-month agreement with
Israel that significantly reduced rocket attacks. Following the temporary calm,
HAMAS resumed its rocket attacks, which precipitated a major military operation
launched by Israel on 27 December 2008. After destroying much of HAMAS’s
infrastructure in the Gaza Strip, Israel declared a unilateral cease-fire on 18
January 2009. Since 2009, HAMAS has worked to rein in attacks from other groups
and enforce the cease-fire, though sporadic low-level attacks against Israeli
forces along the Gaza border have continued.
In May 2010, the Israel Defense Forces intercepted a
flotilla of humanitarian aid vessels bound for the Gaza Strip, which since 2007
has been under a strictly enforced Israeli blockade. The seizure of one ship
led to a violent confrontation and resulted in the death of nine passengers.
HAMAS publicly condemned the incident, which it characterized as a massacre,
and urged international activists to continue their attempts—with additional
flotillas if necessary—to break the blockade. In late August 2010, an Izz
al-Din al-Qassam Brigades spokesman claimed responsibility for the shooting
deaths of four Israeli settlers, an attack widely believed to be aimed at
scuttling peace talks between Palestinians and Israelis in Washington.
2. What does Hamas believe?
According to Hamas's founding
charter, the land of Palestine is
a God-given endowment to the Palestinians. The charter also states that Hamas's
long-term goal is the establishment of a Sunni Islamic state on all of
historical Palestine. This vision leaves no room for Israel.
But in recent years, some Hamas leaders have indicated they
would be amenable to a more moderate approach. The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
reported in mid-2010 that Hamas political chief Khaled Meshal told
American University Professor Robert Pastor that the charter is a piece of history and no longer relevant,
but cannot be changed for internal reasons.
Hamas has been a contentious rival to Fatah since
Hamas was founded in 1988. Fatah has tried to garner support on the
international stage by implicitly accepting Israel and
pushing toward a Palestinian state. But those policies have lessened its
stature among Palestinians, some of whom instead turned toward Hamas and its
absolute rejection of a two-state solution.
The two groups have alternately cooperated against Israel
and violently clashed with each other over the years. They also competed
in the political arena in 2006, when Hamas entered legislative elections for
the first time and topped Fatah, winning a majority of seats in the Palestinian Authority. International donors, which
provide much of the Palestinian Authority's budget, cut off aid when Hamas
refused to recognize Israel's right to exist.
In December of that year, the rivalry turned violent again
as sporadic battles broke out between the two factions' security forces.
In June 2007, Hamas gunmen drove Fatah's forces out of Gaza.
Fatah's security returned the favour days later, expelling Hamas from the West Bank.
The two groups remained at odds until May 2011, when they signed a reconciliation agreement to mend the split and
strengthen Palestinians' bid for statehood.
4. How big is Hamas’s power base?
Hamas's home turf is Gaza,
which is where its security forces lie. Haaretz reported in
December 2008, just before Israel attacked
Hamas in Gaza during Operation
Cast Lead, that Hamas had some 15,000 militants in its ranks. Hamas's forces
are made up in large part of members of the Al Qassam Brigades, who played a prominent role in both
Operation Cast Lead and in the 2007 conflict with Fatah.
As a result, they remain resistant to reconciliation efforts and could
undermine them, due to the influence they hold among Palestinians.
Hamas also draws support from other nations in the
region. Iran has supplied trainers and weapons to Hamas's
military wing, as has Lebanon's Hezbollah, a long time opponent of Israel. Syria is
another supporter of Hamas – Meshal's political office is in Damascus –
but the upheavals in Damascus has spurred Hamas to begin moving staff out of the country. Observers
believe that Hamas hopes to open a headquarters in Egypt,
and wants to signal that it has the potential to recast itself as more
moderate.
5. What could reconciliation mean for Hamas?
One of the primary motives for Fatah and Hamas's
reconciliation is to strengthen the Palestinians' bid for statehood. As
the Monitor reported in November, the UN Security Council committee that reviewed the
Palestinian application for statehood specifically mentioned the Gaza-West
Bank split as a problem.
But the Israeli-Palestinian peace process could be further
hobbled if Hamas and Fatah succeed in their current efforts to reconcile and
form a unity government. Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu argues that until Hamas forswears
violence and recognizes Israel, there can be no talks with a government of which they are
part. The US, which lists Hamas as a terrorist organization, is
similarly opposed to negotiations with the group.
Hamas also sees reconciliation as an opportunity to take advantage of change being promulgated in the Arab Spring. According
to Fawzi Barhoum,
a Hamas spokesperson in the Gaza Strip, "We believe that this result of
the democratic process might mean full support for Palestinian rights and
interest, now that [Arab governments’] hearts are with the people."
But some warn that Hamas is misreading the direction the change is
going. "It is an Islamic Spring, but it's not an Islamic Spring
Hamas thinks about," says Mohammed Dejani, a political science professor at Al Quds
University. "There has been a religious revival, but in a
sense of moderation and not in a sense of religious fundamentalism."
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