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Fatah-led security forces wary after Hamas win
The big bowl of popcorn please, salt, extra butter, and lots of beverages.
Goddamn! $3.75 for Milk Duds?
ABBASSAN, Gaza Strip -The bomb only singed the wall of his home, but Fatah loyalist and former security heavyweight Suleiman Abu Mutleq says the message is crystal clear: Hamas wants a fight. The one-time senior officer in the preventive security force, one of those services created by the late Yasser Arafat and made up of Fatah members, was heavily defeated by the Islamic Resistance Movement in last week’s election. Abu Mutleq was rudely awakened from a peaceful night’s sleep on Wednesday by an explosion outside his front door in the central Gaza Strip. “Three kilos of explosives, detonated by a mobile phone. It broke the door, shattered the windows.”
Yup, sounds like an IED (Islamic explosive device) allright.
I don't think they really care about a "Paleostinian state." I think they just like bombs.
Around him, mope dozens of glum-looking men, some of them armed, most of them in civilian clothes.
Their moping around gives me a warm glow.
Mope Factor 9.8, is it?
Relatives, friends and political allies turned up to commiserate with the unfortunate Fatah candidate, swept aside like so many others by the tidal wave that accorded Hamas an absolute majority in the Palestinian parliament. “We are certain it was the Ezzedine Al Qassam Brigades (the armed wing of Hamas). They’re in a hurry to take our place. They think anything’s allowed after their victory.”
To the victor belong the spoils, or in the case of Gaza, spoiled.
In Gaza City, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri denied that the faction had anything to do with the blast, dismissing “baseless accusations”.
"Lies! All lies!"
"Nope. Nope. Wudn't us."
Instead, he charged that an Ezzedine Al Qassam leader was subject to a failed assassination attempt on the same morning.
"Yeah! It wudn't us! It wuz them!"
Yet to degenerate into serious clashes, friction between Fatah—all powerful in the Palestinian security forces—and Ezzedine Al Qassam has increased since the election, provoking fears that worse lies round the corner. In a string of gunfights, assassination attemps and the seizure of government and party offices, so far only a handful of people have been wounded.
Because Paleos have never learned to shoot straight.
At work in the neighbouring town of Khan Yunis, the local preventive security chief said Abu Mutleq’s attack was not the first. “The day before yesterday, they threw a grenade at my home in Rafah. My wife and children were inside,” saud Yussef Siam. “Hamas looks at us like enemies ... It’s true that in 1996 we made decisions against them, but we were on orders from Yasser Arafat.”
"It was just business, Michael!"
Under heavy international pressure, the late Palestinian Authority president at the time ordered hundreds of Hamas militants to be arrested. One senior Hamas leader, Mahmud Zahar, likes to recall how he was released with several broken ribs after a testing interrogation.
"Testing, testing, 1 .. 2 .. 3 broken ribs, testing, testing."
"Yer cockin' yer elbow, Mahmoud! Y'need a nice, straight swing, like this!"
"Ooooowwww!"
Aware of the sensitive nature of the subject and strained relations, Hamas top brass have recently stepped up assurances that they would not go ahead with any purge of the Fatah-dominated security apparatus. “We intend to reform these organisations, but nobody will lose his salary or his position ... Anyone who serves will remain in his job,” Ismail Haniya told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz in a recent interview.
Typical Arab world 'reform': everyone remains employed, just with a new layer of bosses.
Some officials suggest that Hamas be ultimately incorporated into a Palestinian army, although most believe any such merger and acquisition will figure low on the new government’s list of priorities.
Like Hamas wants to be saddled with the Paleo army.
The entire security apparatus, around 58,000 men, is directly answerable to Arafat’s successor and Fatah yes-man, Mahmud Abbas. For Siam, the mechanics are clear. “The future interior minister can propose things to the president, but he can refuse. We we are answerable to him.”
"At least until something unfortunate happens to him and we get our guy in."
Outside Abu Mutleq’s house in Abbassan, 33-year-old Ahmed Awadallah, pistol on hip, lets rip.
Shouldn't have had the chili...
“Hamas can certainly appoint officers ... but no one will obey their orders!”
Sure, Mr. Bigshot, until the day an IED goes off under your bed.

Posted by: Steve White 2006-02-02
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=141211