Hamas signals post-war ambition in talks with Palestinian rival Fatah
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[June 05, 2024]
By Ali Sawafta and Nidal al-Mughrabi
RAMALLAH (Reuters) - Deep divisions will limit progress at
reconciliation talks between Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah this
month, conversations with five sources in the groups indicate, but the
meetings highlight that the Islamist group is likely to retain influence
after Israel's war in Gaza.
The talks between Hamas and the Fatah party of Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas will be held in China in mid-June, according to officials
from both sides. They follow two recent rounds of reconciliation talks,
one in China and one in Russia. China's foreign ministry declined to
comment.
The next meeting will be held amid attempts by international mediators
to reach a ceasefire deal for Gaza, with one of the key sticking points
being the "day-after" plan - how the enclave will be governed.
Considered a terrorist organization by many Western nations, Hamas was
shunned long before its Oct. 7 attacks killed 1,200 people in Israel,
with more than 250 hostages taken, triggering the war in Gaza.
But even as it is pummeled militarily, the meetings of Hamas politicians
with officials from the Fatah party that controls Palestinian politics
in the Israeli-occupied West Bank point to the group's aim of shaping
the post-war order in the Palestinian territories, according to a source
familiar with conversations within Hamas.
The person, like other unnamed officials in this story, declined to be
named because they weren't authorized to discuss sensitive matters with
the media.
Hamas, which ruled Gaza before the war, recognizes it cannot be part of
any internationally recognized new government of the Palestinian
territories when fighting in the enclave eventually ends, said the
source.
Nonetheless, it wants Fatah to agree to a new technocratic
administration for the West Bank and Gaza as part of a wider political
deal, the source and senior Hamas official Basim Naim said.
"We are speaking about political partnership and political unity to
restructure the Palestinian entity," Naim, who attended the previous
round of China talks, said in an interview.
"Whether Hamas is in the government or outside it, that is not a prime
demand of the movement and it doesn't see it a condition for any
reconciliation," he said. Naim, like much of Hamas' political
leadership, operates in exile outside of Gaza.
The prospect of Hamas surviving as an influential political player is a
thorny issue for Western states.
Despite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Gaza war goal of
destroying the Iran-backed group, most observers agree Hamas will exist
in some form after a ceasefire. An offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood,
the movement has deep reach and ideological roots in Palestinian
society.
The United States and EU oppose any role for Hamas in governing Gaza
after the war, during which Israel’s offensive has killed more than
36,000 Palestinians, according to the Gazan health ministry.
Still, some U.S. officials have privately expressed doubt Israel will
eradicate the group. A senior U.S. official said on May 14 Washington
thought it unlikely Israel could achieve “total victory”.
Killing every member of Hamas was unrealistic and was not the goal of
the Israeli army, but destroying Hamas as a governing authority was "an
achievable and attainable military objective," said Peter Lerner, a
spokesperson for Israel's military.
LOW ODDS
Western states support the idea of post-war Gaza being run by a revamped
Palestinian Authority (PA), the administration led by Abbas that has
limited self-rule over patches of the West Bank. Based in Ramallah, the
PA is broadly acknowledged globally as representing the Palestinians and
receives security assistance from the United States and the EU.
Led by Abbas, and before him Yasser Arafat, Fatah was the undisputed
leader of the Palestinian cause for decades until the rise of Hamas, an
Islamist movement.
The PA also ran Gaza until 2007, when Hamas drove Fatah from the
enclave, a year after defeating Fatah in parliamentary elections - the
last time Palestinians voted.
Despite the talks, the factions' enmity means odds remain low for a deal
to reunite the administration of the Palestinian territories, the
conversations with the five sources indicated, a view echoed by four
experts.
"My expectations of rapprochement are minimal or less," said Yezid
Sayigh, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center.
Palestinians aspire to a state on all territory occupied by Israel in
the 1967 war, when Israel seized the West Bank - including East
Jerusalem - and the Gaza Strip.
Despite 143 countries recognizing Palestine, including Ireland, Spain
and Norway last week, hopes for a sovereign nation have been diminishing
for years as Israel expands settlements in the West Bank and opposes
statehood.
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Palestinian supporters of Hamas celebrate their victory in the
Palestinian election in Khan Younis, south of Gaza Strip, January
27, 2006./File Photo
The Hamas-Fatah split further complicates the goal. The factions
hold deeply diverging views about strategy, with Fatah committed to
negotiations with Israel to bring about an independent nation while
Hamas backs armed struggle and does not recognize Israel.
The bitterness spilled into the open at an Arab summit in May, when
Abbas accused Hamas of giving Israel "more pretexts" to destroy Gaza
by launching the Oct. 7 attack.
Hamas said the remark was regrettable, calling Oct. 7 a crucial
moment in the Palestinian struggle.
Hamas' 1988 founding charter called for Israel's destruction. In
2017, Hamas said it agreed to a transitional Palestinian state
within frontiers pre-dating the 1967 war, though it still opposed
recognizing Israel's right to exist.
Hamas has restated this position since the eruption of the Gaza war.
NEW GOVERNMENT?
In March, Abbas swore in a new PA cabinet headed by Mohammed
Mustafa, a close Abbas aide who oversaw Gaza reconstruction during a
previous stint in government from 2013 to 2014. Though the cabinet
is made up of technocrats, Abbas' move angered Hamas, which accused
him of acting unilaterally.
Senior Fatah official Sabri Saidam told Reuters that forming a new
government would amount to wasting time.
A second senior official familiar with Fatah's terms for the China
talks said it wants Hamas to acknowledge the role of the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) as the Palestinians’ sole legitimate
representative, and to commit to the agreements the PLO has signed.
This would include the Oslo accords signed 30 years ago under which
the PLO recognized Israel and which Hamas violently opposed.
The official said Fatah would want the government to have full
security and administrative control in Gaza - a challenge to Hamas'
sway there.
Fundamentally at odds with the PLO over Israel, Hamas has never
joined the body but has long called for elections to its governing
institutions, including its legislative body known as the PNC.
Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh said on Friday that in
addition to a government of "national consensus", the group wants
elections for the PA presidency, parliament and the PNC.
Ghassan Khatib, a lecturer at Birzeit University in the West Bank,
said Hamas was interested in reconciliation only on its terms,
maintaining its politics, security apparatus and ideology, which he
said would risk plunging the PLO into international isolation.
"Abbas cannot accept them with their politics, because that would
jeopardize the only PLO achievement - international recognition," he
said.
PART OF THE FABRIC
Despite this, Fatah official Tayseer Nasrallah said Fatah viewed
Hamas as part of "the Palestinian national fabric and part of the
political fabric also".
Saidam said consensus was necessary to manage aid and reconstruction
in Gaza. Fatah had made clear it would not return to Gaza "on the
back of an (Israeli) tank, but rather we will come in agreement with
everyone", he added.
Israeli government spokesperson Tal Heinrich said the PA’s
willingness to work with Hamas was "unfortunate."
An opinion poll conducted in the West Bank and Gaza by the
Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research in March showed
Hamas enjoying more support than Fatah, with its popularity still
higher than before the war.
Being hosted by China has marked a diplomatic boost for the
Iran-backed Hamas.
Ashraf Abouelhoul, managing editor of the Egyptian state-owned paper
Al-Ahram and a specialist on Palestinian affairs, said Hamas was
more interested in a deal than Fatah, because reconciliation could
give the battle-weary organization cover to rebuild.
Mohanad Hage Ali of the Carnegie Middle East Center said it was
difficult to imagine Hamas embarking on any military action that
would prompt large-scale Israeli retaliation in the foreseeable
future.
But, he said, reconciliation would be a "transitional phase that
would allow Hamas to slowly rearm.".
(Additional reporting by Tom Perry in Beirut, Laurie Chen in
Beijing, James MacKenzie in Jerusalem, Matt Spetalnick in Washington
and John Irish in Paris; Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Frank Jack
Daniel)
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