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Fifth Column
Al-Guardian cheers Hamas victory
2006-01-27
Hamas's triumph in Wednesday's Palestinian elections is the best news from the Middle East for a long time. The poll was a more impressive display of democracy than any other in the region, outstripping last year's votes in Lebanon and Iraq both in turnout and the range of views that candidates represented.

Whereas in Iraq parties that opposed the occupation had to downplay or even obscure their views, Palestinian supporters of armed resistance to Israel's expansionist strategies were able to run openly. It is true that Hamas candidates did not make relations with Israel the centrepiece of their campaign. They focused on reform in the Palestinian Authority. But few voters were unaware of Hamas's uncompromising hostility to occupation and its record in fighting it.

Wednesday's election was remarkable also in owing nothing to Washington's (selective) efforts to promote democracy in the Arab world. Instead, it was further proof that civil society in Palestine is more vibrant than anywhere else in the region and that Palestinian politics has its own dynamics, dictated not by outside pressure but the social and economic demands of ordinary people in appalling conditions. Providing a forum to freely express hopes and fears, debate policy and seek agreed solutions is, after all, what democracy is about.

In Israel and Washington reaction to Hamas's victory has been predictably negative. European governments should take a more sensitive view. The first watchword is caution. Applaud the process but don't take issue with the result. While the dust settles and Hamas works out its own priorities for government, Europeans should calmly analyse why Hamas got so much support.

Among several Hamas leaders I met in Gaza last summer, Mahmoud Zahar, one of its last surviving founders, exuded the clearest sense of inner steel. Trained as a medical doctor in Cairo, and now a short middle-aged figure with combed-over grey hair, he left several impressions. This is no mosque-driven revolutionary or wealthy jihadi of the Osama bin Laden type, motivated by ideology or a desire for adventure. Like other Gazans, he has felt the occupation on his skin. His wife was paralysed and his eldest son killed by an Israeli F-16 attack on his house in 2003. Zahar was in the garden and lucky to survive. In spite of that, he took the lead last year in persuading colleagues that Hamas should declare a truce or period of "calm" with Israel. For 11 months no Hamas member has gone on a suicide bombing mission. That is no mean achievement, which foreign diplomats rarely credit.

Zahar's reasons were not just tactical - a desire to deny Sharon a pretext for abandoning his retreat from Gaza. His strategy is to de-escalate the confrontation with Israel for a long period so that Palestinian society can build a new sense of unity, revive its inner moral strength and clean up its institutions. He feels western governments give aid and use the issue of negotiations with Israel only as a device for conditionality and pressure, not in the interests of justice.

So he wants Palestinians to have a broad-based coalition government that will look to the Arab and Islamic worlds for economic partners and diplomatic support. It's a kind of "parallel unilateralism", matching the mood in Israel where the peace camp clearly has lost all real purchase. "Israeli attitudes show they don't intend to make any agreement. They're going to take many unilateral steps," Zahar told me. "In this bad unbalanced situation and with the interference of the west in the affairs of every Arab country, especially Syria and Lebanon, we can live without any agreement and have a 'calm' for a long time. We're in favour of a long-term truce without recognition of Israel, provided Sharon is also looking for a truce. Everything will change in 10 or 20 years."

Zahar also left me with no sense of embarrassment about the imminence of power. He pointed out that Mahmoud Abbas would remain president for three more years, as though implying he could be a convenient front for inevitably unproductive talks with Washington and Israel while Hamas acted as a watchdog on the main issues. "There will be no contradiction between the Palestine legislative council and the president," he said. "We will be the safeguard, and the safety valve, against any betrayal."

Along with caution in reacting to the Hamas victory, Europe's second priority should be to maintain continuity. Any cut-off in EU aid would only be a gift to Israel's hardliners. The EU is the largest international donor to the Palestinian Authority, and Javier Solana, the EU foreign policy chief, blundered last month when he told a Gaza press conference that "it would be very difficult for the help and the money that goes to the Palestinian Authority to continue to flow" if Hamas were in government.

Yesterday's EU statements were more measured. If Europe, weak though its power may currently be, wants to have an independent role in the Middle East, clearly different from the manipulative US approach, it is vital to go on funding the PA regardless of the Hamas presence in government. Nor should the EU fall back on the cynical hope that Hamas will be as corrupt as Fatah, and so lose support. You cannot use European taxpayers' money to strengthen Palestinian institutions while privately wanting reforms to fail. Hamas should be encouraged in aiming to be more honest than its predecessors.

Above all, Europe should not get hung up on the wrong issues, like armed resistance and the "war on terror". Murdering a Palestinian politician by a long-range attack that is bound also to kill innocent civilians is morally and legally no better than a suicide bomb on a bus. Hamas's refusal to give formal recognition of Israel's right to exist should also not be seen by Europe as an urgent problem. History and international politics do not march in tidy simultaneous steps. For decades Israel refused even to recognise the existence of the Palestinian people, just as Turkey did not recognise the Kurds. Until 15 years ago Palestinians had to be smuggled to international summits as part of Jordan's delegation. It is less than that since the Israeli government accepted the goal of a Palestinian state.

Hamas may eventually disarm itself and recognise Israel. That will be the end of the process of establishing a just modus vivendi for Israelis and Palestinians in the Middle East. It cannot be the first step. Today's priority is to accept that Palestinians have spoken freely. They deserve respect and support.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#14  Among several Hamas leaders I met in Gaza last summer, Mahmoud Zahar, one of its last surviving founders.

Israel's due diligence has always been rather impressive. Don't stop now.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-01-27 21:34  

#13  Murdering a Palestinian politician by a long-range attack that is bound also to kill innocent civilians is morally and legally no better than a suicide bomb on a bus.

It is is the Palestinian is a MURDERER and TERRORIST who TARGETS INNOCENT CIVILIANS. In that case it is targetting a MURDERER who is deliberately hiding among 'innocent' civilians.

So now if Hamas sponsors or engages in suicide bombing it is an act of war. And should be treated as such.

I dont think Ham-Ass can restrain itself -- the leadership is addicted to murdering innocents, ordering murder, and bloodshed as tightly as any crack-addict.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2006-01-27 20:58  

#12  Great post, 11A5S. Works for me.
Posted by: .com   2006-01-27 20:24  

#11  Whereas in Iraq parties that opposed the occupation had to downplay or even obscure their views, Palestinian supporters of armed resistance to Israel's expansionist strategies were able to run openly.

I'd comment, but 115AS is right, it's like fisking Baghdad Bob.
Posted by: 2b   2006-01-27 18:07  

#10  I vaguely remembe the cartoon, but you sure it wasn't a FILTHLY, UNWAASHED, UNSHAEN COMMIE BASTARD?

Seriously, it was a Trotskyite substitute.
Posted by: 6   2006-01-27 17:28  

#9  Popeye cartoon/Suicide Squad

Damn Redneck...that is one helluva obscure reference...but it works for me.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2006-01-27 17:14  

#8  Bus bombing was invented by the Paleos decades ago.

Suicide Bombers are much older than that, I have a very old black-and-white Popeye cartoon fron the 20's where the "Suicide Squad" (a very short muslim with an artillery shell strapped to his head) is sitting on a sideline bench like in a football game, cheering on the fighters and waiting for the "Coach" to call on him.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-01-27 14:40  

#7  I always wonder what the quid pro quo for these guys is .

They expect to be beheaded with sharp knives, not the dull ones the rest of us kaffir will get.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2006-01-27 12:08  

#6  Murdering a Palestinian politician by a long-range attack that is bound also to kill innocent civilians is morally and legally no better than a suicide bomb on a bus.

Bus bombing was invented by the Paleos decades ago. To equate such with the standard retaliation, long range beheading, is logically off the reservation. Sometimes, morally and legally depends on who started it. Morally, the retaliators have a free move. Legally, bus bombing is only legal in Islam.
Posted by: wxjames   2006-01-27 10:05  

#5  I always wonder what the quid pro quo for these guys is . At least during the cold war, you could read between the lines and in every pro-communist screed you could see a job application for minister of culture or head of the writers union in the future People's Republic of [fill in the blank]. These kafirs can't possibly hope for a position of influence in the caliphate, can they? Or are they like Galloway. Does a little bit of zakat end up in a bank account in the Caymans after each of these propaganda pieces?

Otherwise, I don't know what to say. Every line in Steele's blather is either a lie, a distortion, or a moral abomination. Fisking it makes about as much sense as debating Baghdad Bob about journalistic ethics.

Before the Internet, I really had no idea that most of the European press (and most Europeans, it seems) see Israel as a colonial enterprise. In a very real way, Israel has become the scapegoat for 450 years of European colonialist atrocities. The high priests of European culture heap their own sins upon Israel and very literally abandon it in the desert to die. And since the colonialist narrative won't work without a colonizing power, the US has been drafted to fill that role, regardless of how illogical that may be (given that the Europeans, then the Arabs, cast the Jews out in the first place).

On days like this, I feel like saying to Hell with the whole continent. May their granddaughters wear abayas and their grandsons sport beards. The only intervention we sould make is to secure their nukes before the fall.
Posted by: 11A5S   2006-01-27 08:09  

#4  Incredible. That piece of terror-worshiping drivel is just dripping with pure Jew-hate, yet somehow gets presented as journalism? The writer strikes me as evil, in it's purest form.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2006-01-27 06:48  

#3  Hamas may eventually disarm itself and recognise Israel.

Someone been a taken them black acids agin.
Posted by: Howard UK   2006-01-27 06:35  

#2  Whereas in Iraq parties that opposed the occupation had to downplay or even obscure their views, Palestinian supporters of armed resistance to Israel's expansionist strategies ....

Wow. Just ... wow.
Posted by: AzCat   2006-01-27 05:41  

#1  Yes, Israel please leave us alone so we can get on with building a decent army over the next 10 years. An army built on Russian weapons and EU finance. Until then we'll happily have a '2 state solution' where we don't recognise you and you don't recognise us. Abbas can be the front man to keep the EU smily and happy. So lets have a 'truce' so we can get on with building a new military state. Then after 10 years or so we'll be ready to have a war with you.
Posted by: Howard   2006-01-27 05:39  

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