DESPITE THE SWORD
(Analysis by Yossi Torpstein, 'Ha'aretz', 26.4.94, p. B2)
THE HAMAS' LEADERS HAVE RECENTLY BEGUN TO UNDERSTAND THAT ISRAEL'S
DESTRUCTION IS NOT A PRACTICAL [GOAL] FOR THE NEAR FUTURE, AND THAT IN
ORDER TO WIN [THE SUPPORT OF] THE PALESTINIAN STREET, THEY MUST CHANGE
THEIR TACTICS AND STATEMENTS.
The statements made by Hamas representatives recently, regarding their
readiness to come to an arrangement with Israel, are nothing new. Despite
the terrible attacks on Israeli targets committed by the Iz A-Din
al-Kassam squads the Hamas' attack apparatus over the past year
there has been a noticeable moderation of tone in the organization's
declared political positions.
This trend has been more pronounced since the signing of the Oslo
Agreement. After the signing, Sheikh Ahmad Yassin, the Hamas leader
imprisoned in Israel, sent a letter to organization leaders abroad, in
which he expressed readiness to agree to a cease-fire with Israel, as
well as Hamas' participation in elections for the Palestinian
Self-Governing Authority in the territories. At the same time, Sheikh
Ahmad Bahar, an Islamic Movement activist in the Gaza Strip, said that if
Israel, withdrew its army and settlements completely from the
territories, the reasons for continuing Hamas' campaign of attacks
against Israel would be removed.
Sheikh Bahar, who recently retracted his statements, said at the time:
'Israel must stop thinking that it can view Hamas only by way of
positions of fighting and struggle.' Another activist, Majdi Aqil, a
lecturer at the Islamic University in Gaza, said: 'The Islamic Movement
is characterized by the fact that it adjusts its tactics to all
situation, and what is currently required of it is to act in the
political sphere in order to achieve its objectives.'
Several days ago, an official declaration by the organization's leaders
added weight to this trend. Musa Abu Marzuq, the head of Hamas' political
wing, stated that his organization is prepared to reach an arrangement
with Israel, on the basis of the 1967 borders. In other words, he
indirectly recognized UN Security Council Resolution 242. Abu Marzuq also
noted that Hamas would participate in elections to the Palestinian
Self-Governing Authority.
Has Hamas changed its spots? An examination of these political positions,
in contrast with its basic principles, indeed reveals signs of
moderation, but these focus on the practical sphere, not on the
ideological. Hamas has still not retreated from its over-arching
ideological goal the establishment of a state based on Islamic
religious law in all of Palestine, which is considered to be a Muslim
trust ('which no mortal has the authority to give up any part of').
Recognition of the State of Israel's right to exist does not fit in with
this goal, which Hamas activists view as their organization's raison
d'etre, and therefore according to organization members they cannot
change it. This is also true regarding the other basic principles which
guide the organization, and which are anchored in Islamic faith, first
and foremost Jihad ('holy war').
Therefore, the recent change is, in effect, on the tactical level
Hamas is now prepared to reach a temporary arrangement with Israel, if
the latter agrees to the specific terms which Hamas is presenting: a halt
to the 'policy of killing, repression and exploitation', the release of
all Palestinian prisoners, withdrawal from all the territories, removal
of the settlements, and resolving the problem of the Palestinian
refugees.
Halting the attacks against Israeli targets, say Hamas leaders, is
conditional on [Israel] fulfilling these demands. Khaled Amira, a Hebron
journalist who is close to Islamic circles, believes that it is even now
possible to begin contacts between Hamas and Israel, in an effort to
achieve a cease-fire as a first stage towards a more comprehensive
arrangement.
Hamas' tactical flexibility is also being expressed in another sphere
the internal struggle to change the face of Palestinian-Muslim society,
which is a central tenet of the fundamentalist world view which Hamas
expresses. During the years of the intifada, Hamas activists clashed with
the secular [Palestinian] organizations, of the left and the right, in
order to achieve dominance in the Palestinian street, which Hamas
ultimately seeks to use to establish a rigid Muslim society. In this
sphere, too, Hamas has halted the violent struggle, but it still sees
itself as an alternative to the PLO in leading the Palestinian People.
Its leaders believe that they can currently realize their objective
through a non-violent political struggle with the PLO, which they believe
is destined to fail terribly in running the Self-Governing Authority in
the territories. The agreement signed in Gaza several days ago between
the Fatah Hawks and Iz A-Din al-Kassam illustrates this trend.
What stands, then, at the basis of the change in Hamas' positions? It
appears that the organization is undergoing processes similar to those
which the PLO underwent in its approach to the conflict with Israel:
moving from a total, armed struggle to destroy Israel, by way of the
'strategy of stages', up to finally including adopting a political path
to reach an arrangement. Hamas is currently at the beginning of a limited
process, which can be compared with the 'strategy of stages' which the
PLO adopted in 1974. Like the PLO then, Hamas is now trying to search for
a way out of the labyrinth of total conflict. This exit, for Hamas, is
found in the Islamic political tradition of responding to the constraints
of the hour, built up on the principle of 'sabar' (patience), which was
adopted by the Muslim Brothers organization the spiritual father of
Hamas. The meaning of this principle is that one must be patient until
the hour arrives to fulfill one's strategic goals.
Sheikh Hamad Bitawi of Nablus who was one of the Hamas deportees to
southern Lebanon, and who serves as head of the 'Association of Religious
Scholars in Palestine', a sort of Hamas council of religious lawmakers,
explained, several days ago, the change in the organization's approach.
'The Islamic stream has reached the conclusion,' he said, 'that it is not
yet possible to stop the negotiations, since the United States, which
rules our region, is pressing for their completion. However, the
negotiations with Israel must grant the Palestinians their minimum
rights, such as the 1967 borders, and for now they will be satisfied with
this. The continuation of the resolution of the Palestinian problem will
be in the hands of future generations.'
Hamas activists have therefore reached the conclusion that PLO leaders
reached previously, that statements about destroying Israel are not
practical for the foreseeable future, and that the weary Palestinian
public is incapable of living by the sword in the long term. From this,
it can be concluded that if Hamas is interested in preserving, and
perhaps even in strengthening its political power in the Palestinian
arena, it must take into account the prevailing preference in the
territories to end the occupation through negotiations. To this must be
added the emotional and organizational burnout of the activists, which
stems from the continuous and prolonged clash with Israeli rule. This
clash also damages the organization's political ability to organize,
before the establishment of the Self-Government Authority.
In recent years, there has also been an organizational coalescence of the
Hamas leadership abroad. Offices have been opened in Arab and other
countries, and more institutionalized methods have been adopted. Such a
process serves to moderate extremist revolutionary trends. Moreover,
Hamas seeks to shed its demonic image and present itself as a legitimate
organization in the Arab arena. Declarations adopting the Arab consensus
on the need for a regional political arrangement also appears to be a
good way to ease the American and Israeli pressure being brought to bear
on Arab countries, in which Hamas operates quite freely.
At the same time, it appears that the political leadership of Hamas is
signalling that it is interested in a dialogue with Israel, all the more
so since the negotiations between Israel and the PLO are, in any case,
about to realize a considerable part of Hamas' demands. However, Hamas is
not composed of a single group. It has a moderate wing made up of
people educated in the Muslim Brothers' doctrine, and a more radical wing
composed of young people who grew up in the atmosphere of the intifada
and of the Iz A-Din al-Kassam squads, who are interested in continuing
the attacks. If the pragmatic element sticks to its policy and begins
contacts with Israel, a severe disagreement could ensue within the
organization, and it is even possible that radical elements could leave
it. However, as long as Israel does not withdraw from all the
territories, and does not fulfill the other conditions, such an internal
crisis appears to be far away.