ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 23 Mar 2024 5:08 pm - Jerusalem Time

US Senator: It is clear that Netanyahu stands in the way of a two-state solution

US Senator Chris Van Hollen said that occupation Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stands in the way of a two-state solution.


Holin pointed out that Tel Aviv's restriction and obstruction of the entry of aid into Gaza contradicts Washington's policy, according to what the American Al-Monitor newspaper published.


He also condemned the obstruction of the delivery of aid and relief supplies to the Palestinians, saying: “The facts indicate that the Netanyahu government continues to restrict aid arbitrarily.”


While the Israeli forces continue their aggression against the stricken Gaza Strip for the 169th day in a row, the toll of the aggression reached 32,142 killed, in addition to the injury of 74,412 people since the seventh of last October.



ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 23 Mar 2024 3:13 pm - Jerusalem Time

Foreign Policy: Israel is a strategic burden on the United States

In a long analytical article published by the American magazine Foreign Policy on Saturday, John Hoffman, a foreign policy analyst at the Cato Institute and an assistant professor at George Mason University, says that the special relationship does not benefit Washington and exposes American interests around the world to danger.


The researcher begins by referring to US President Joe Biden’s recent announcement that “there will be no return to the status quo in [the Middle East] as it was on October 6.” But the truth is that Biden refuses to abandon the status quo, especially regarding Washington's so-called special relationship with Israel.


Unwavering American support for Israel has been a constant element of US Middle East policy since the country's creation in 1948. President John Kennedy coined the phrase "special relationship" in 1962, explaining that Washington's relations with the country were "truly comparable only to the American-British relationship" on a wide range of global affairs,” and by 2013, Biden, then Vice President Obama, claimed, “This is not just a long-term moral commitment; it is a strategic commitment.”


According to Biden, “If there was no Israel, we would have to invent one.” In 2020, President Donald Trump cut through some of the fog, admitting that “we don't have to be in the Middle East, other than we want to protect Israel.”


The core of the relationship between the United States and Israel is the unprecedented aid support that Washington gives to its ally, as Israel is the largest recipient of US military aid, having received more than $300 billion (adjusted for inflation) from the United States since World War II.

Washington continues to provide Israel with approximately $3.8 billion annually, in addition to other arms deals and security benefits. (Some other major recipients of US aid, such as Egypt and Jordan, receive large sums in exchange for maintaining normal relations with Israel.) Israel and its supporters have great influence in Washington, commanding attention on both sides of the political aisle (Democrat and Republican) through various forms of direct and indirect pressure and influence.


When wondering what exactly the United States will get in exchange for this one-way relationship, the questioner discovers that there is no clarity at all on this issue. Supporters claim that consistent support is critical to advancing American interests in the Middle East. For example, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-NC) once referred to Israel as “America’s eyes and ears” in the region. While intelligence sharing may have some strategic value, the past five months of the war in Gaza have demonstrated the many negative effects of this relationship, specifically how Washington's unconditional embrace of Israel has undermined its strategic position in the Middle East while damaging its global image.  The war has starkly highlighted the fundamental failures of US policy in the Middle East.


“It is time for a fundamental reassessment of the relationship between the United States and Israel,” says researcher John Hoffman.


“Israel’s campaign of collective punishment in Gaza was historic in scale,” Hoffman explains. “According to Gaza health authorities, the official death toll across the Strip now stands at approximately 32,000 people, the vast majority of whom are women and children.” The US Secretary of Defense has claimed Lloyd Austin recently estimated that only 25,000 women and children were killed as a result of the war in Gaza. And while some, including Biden himself, have expressed concern about whether the casualty figures coming out of Gaza are exaggerated, others believe that the death toll is likely to be higher. “Because the ongoing hostilities prevent researchers from determining the fate of thousands of people whose fate or whereabouts are unknown.”


It is noteworthy that throughout the besieged Gaza Strip, civilian infrastructure has been systematically destroyed, and famine and disease are spreading rapidly. The situation inside Gaza is so bad that the US government - along with other countries, such as France, Jordan and Egypt - is now airlifting aid into the Strip, and the United States is deploying 1,000 soldiers to build a pier off the coast of Gaza in order to break the siege that its supposed ally - using American weapons - refuses to lift.


Despite this, the Biden administration has continued to supply Israel with advanced weapons — including smart and “dumb” bombs as well as tank and artillery munitions — and has approved more than 100 foreign military sales to Israel since October 7, 2023, and has used the state of emergency on two different occasions to circumvent On Congress. The United States recently issued its veto for the third time in the United Nations Security Council since the start of the conflict, being the only country to prevent the issuance of a resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire on humanitarian grounds. This is in addition to another $14 billion in military aid to Israel recently approved by the Senate.


Hoffman says: “It is difficult to understand that this war could escalate to the worst, but all indicators point in this direction, as Israel insists that it will continue its incursion into the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, despite the objections of the United States, where more than 1.5 million people reside. 


It is noteworthy that the Biden administration has been saying that it opposes the invasion of Rafah “without a reliable and implementable plan to ensure the safety and support of civilians.” In an interview with MSNBC on March 8, Biden spoke of a “red line” in response to a question about a possible military operation in Gaza, saying: “[We cannot] kill another 30,000 Palestinians,” but he stated that “the defense of Israel remains crucial, so there is no red line.” This contradiction not only negates Biden's influence, but also binds Washington to whatever policies Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's far-right government ultimately adopts.


Unsurprisingly, Netanyahu remains adamant that he will not yield to Biden's ethereal red line by canceling his plan for a ground invasion of Rafah. Netanyahu recently stated that he made it “very clear” to Biden that he is “determined to complete the elimination of these brigades in Rafah, and the only way to do that is by landing on the ground.”


Israel has not demonstrated any long-term political strategy in Gaza beyond the systematic destruction of the Strip and the killing of its residents. Netanyahu - whose support is at an all-time low and who faces growing protests calling for early elections - appears to know that once these elections are over, his time in power is over.


However, Biden has been either unable or unwilling to take advantage of the special relationship with Israel or influence Netanyahu, who has previously boasted of his ability to manipulate the United States.


The White House has begun strategically leaking reports of Biden's growing "frustration" with Netanyahu, and the administration has become more vocal in its support for a temporary halt to the fighting. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer made an unprecedented public condemnation of Netanyahu on March 14, saying he had "lost his way" while also calling for new elections in Israel.


But empty rhetoric without policy change will achieve nothing.


Symbolic actions - such as the recent US executive order imposing sanctions on two Israeli settlement outposts in the West Bank or Biden's decision to re-establish the position that Israeli settlement expansion is “contrary to international law” - will not stop the carnage in Gaza, and exonerate Washington. Complicity or contribution to future stability.


Most likely, in direct response to these actions, Israel has just permitted the construction of 3,400 new housing units in West Bank settlements amid historic levels of violence against Palestinians; the United States did little to punish or stop the move.


Netanyahu's recently unveiled post-war plan contains only a plan for a prolonged military occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, which would guarantee future instability. Since October 7, Netanyahu has repeatedly boasted that he is “proud” to have prevented the establishment of a Palestinian state, and promised that he alone can continue to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state.


In contrast to Netanyahu's plan, the Biden administration's plan for the next day includes a vision of a "path" toward establishing a Palestinian state. However, it is worth noting that it does not contain concrete plans, let alone the intention of implementation by the United States or Israel.


“The war in Gaza should demonstrate that trying to ignore the future of the Palestinian people is a foolish strategy,” Hoffman says. “But for Netanyahu — and therefore for Biden — it has deepened commitment to this status quo.”


He adds, "Washington's steadfast support for Israel amid the war in Gaza has had disastrous regional repercussions. From the eastern Mediterranean to the Red Sea, there are a series of various points of tension that threaten to drag the region - and the United States - into a full-scale war. In addition, Washington's support the continuing brutal Israeli campaign in Gaza has tarnished Washington's image as a star of liberal values, making claims about the US-led "liberal international order" a mockery.


“A regional war would be disastrous for the Middle East and US interests. Nor would such a war be a matter of Israel’s survival. No country – including Iran – is about to push Israel into the sea. Israel’s military superiority, nuclear arsenal, and strategic alliance "With the majority of governments in the region, their security is guaranteed in the face of existential challenges."


Washington's position allows Israel to act with impunity while distorting US foreign policy in the Middle East in pursuit of goals that go beyond Washington's interests. US interests in the region include protecting the safety and prosperity of the American people and preventing the emergence of a regional hegemon while preserving the values the country claims to stand for. Knee-jerk support for Israel advances none of these things.


The imbalance in the special relationship with Israel has hampered Washington's ability to strategically maneuver in the Middle East and hampered the ability of American leaders even to think clearly about the region. In late 2023, for example, Biden denigrated his country when he declared that “if there were no Israel, no Jew in the world would be safe.”


“This kind of thinking makes it impossible to manage the relationship properly and productively,” Hoffman says.


For example, according to Hoffman, the asymmetric US relationship with Israel has hampered Washington's ability to engage diplomatically with Iran while pushing the United States toward the use of military force there.


Over the past five months, Israel has repeatedly tried to pressure the United States into a direct confrontation with Iran, even though this constitutes anathema to American interests and regional stability. High-level military exercises between Israel and the United States, the recent Israeli attack on major gas pipelines in Iran, and ongoing escalation between Iranian- and US-backed groups across the Middle East threaten to ignite a region-wide catastrophe.


The researcher explains that Washington's engagement with Israel - like any other country - must be driven by the pursuit of tangible American interests. Even U.S. relations with treaty allies, such as France or South Korea, are characterized by the debates, disagreements, and natural push-and-pull of diplomacy. By contrast, the special relationship with Israel has fueled some of the worst actors in Israeli politics, encouraged destructive policies, and generally caused violence to the long-term benefit of both countries.


He explains, “Washington’s support for Israeli policies has insulated Israel from the costs of those policies. What incentive does Israel face to change its course when the most powerful country in the world refuses to impose conditions on its deep levels of political, economic, and military support? If Israel is forced to bear the full costs of its policies in the West Bank.” Western powers, for example, will become more difficult to support their pro-settler agenda.


He asserts, “The special relationship with Israel does almost nothing for the United States while effectively undermining American strategic interests and often leading to violence against the values that Washington claims to defend...It is time to ‘normalize’ the US relationship with Israel. This does not It means making Israel an enemy of the United States, but it means dealing with Israel in the same way that Washington should deal with any other foreign country: from a distance.”


The researcher concludes by concluding, “Decisions regarding military aid, arms sales, or diplomatic cover are no longer rooted in path dependence or muscle memory, but rather in officials’ perceptions of the American interests at stake. Instead of enabling, protecting, and supporting Israeli policy, the United States must redirect its relationship.” With Israel on the basis of tangible American interests, this requires Washington to end its willingness to turn a blind eye to Israeli insults to American interests, by providing massive amounts of aid, and by pressing for a quick end to this disastrous war and reaching a lasting political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”


In his last statement, he says: “The Biden administration faces a choice: either continue to follow the Netanyahu government into the abyss, or put strong pressure on it to change its course.”

PALESTINE

Sat 23 Mar 2024 3:11 pm - Jerusalem Time

At the Kuwait roundabout...an Israeli massacre of civilians waiting for aid

Local sources reported that dozens of killed and wounded were transferred to Al-Baptist Hospital after Israeli army targeted a gathering of citizens at the Kuwait-Gaza junction.


The Israeli forces bombed columns of Palestinians waiting for relief aid near the roundabout, which led to a number of killed and wounded.


While the Israeli authorities continue to prevent and obstruct the arrival of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip, especially to the northern regions, they target civilians who are trying to obtain the scarce aid that arrives.


This is not the first time that the occupation has committed massacres against Palestinians waiting for aid in Gaza and specifically at the Kuwait roundabout, which has led to the death and injury of hundreds since the start of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip.


On March 15, the Gaza Ministry of Health indicated that at least 21 people were killed and more than 150 others were injured when Israeli forces opened fire on a crowd waiting for aid trucks at the Kuwait roundabout.


PALESTINE

Sat 23 Mar 2024 3:07 pm - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: The death toll in the Gaza Strip rose to 32,142

Medical sources announced today, Saturday, that the death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen to 32,142, most of whom are children and women, since the start of the Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip on the 7th of last October.


The same sources added that the death toll rose to 74,412, while thousands of victims remained under the rubble.


It indicated that the occupation forces committed 7 massacres in the Gaza Strip during the past 24 hours, claiming 72 killed and 114 wounded.


ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 23 Mar 2024 1:33 pm - Jerusalem Time

Guterres arrives at Al-Arish Airport to visit the Rafah crossing in solidarity with the Gaza Strip

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, António Guterres, arrived at Al-Arish International Airport in the Egyptian North Sinai Governorate, with the Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), Philippe Lazzarini, and the Egyptian Minister of Health, Khaled Abdel Ghaffar, at the beginning of a solidarity visit with the Gaza Strip.


Guterres's visit to Egypt includes inspecting the Rafah land crossing, and renewing the call for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, which has been subjected to Israeli aggression for more than 5 months, leaving tens of thousands martyred and wounded, and causing massive destruction to the Strip.


Upon his arrival, Guterres headed to Al-Arish General Hospital to inspect the health condition of the wounded in the Gaza Strip, who are receiving treatment in Egyptian hospitals.


Guterres is scheduled to hold a press conference in front of the Rafah crossing, and will speak to the whole world about the necessity of a ceasefire and increasing the flow of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip.


PALESTINE

Sat 23 Mar 2024 11:41 am - Jerusalem Time

An exciting editorial for The Economist magazine... “Israel is alone”

The Economist magazine published an exciting editorial entitled “Israel Alone,” and placed a picture of an Israeli flag exposed to strong winds on its cover, in reference to the international isolation that threatens Tel Aviv as a result of its policy in the brutal war on the Gaza Strip.


The magazine saw that all the pillars of Israeli security: deterrence, quick warning, and decisive victory, collapsed in the current war, and that whatever the outcome, the clear scenario is that Israel entered the quagmire of Gaza and permanent occupation.


It stated in its main article that the failure of the negotiations in the Qatari capital, Doha, to reach a ceasefire agreement in Gaza, may leave Israel trapped on the bleakest path in its 75-year existence.


It continued: "Many Israelis deny this fact, but the political reckoning will come eventually."

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 23 Mar 2024 9:24 am - Jerusalem Time

Postponing the vote in the Security Council on a draft resolution on a ceasefire in Gaza

A vote scheduled for Saturday in the UN Security Council on a new draft resolution calling for an “immediate” ceasefire in Gaza was postponed until Monday, according to what diplomatic sources told Agence France-Presse.


The sources explained that this postponement was decided to allow further discussions on this alternative draft resolution, which was prepared by a number of non-permanent members of the Council.


The draft resolution, which is sponsored by eight non-permanent members of the Council (Algeria, Malta, Mozambique, Guyana, Slovenia, Sierra Leone, Switzerland and Ecuador), was scheduled to be put to a vote today.


This project “urges an immediate humanitarian ceasefire for the month of Ramadan leading to a permanent ceasefire,” the “unconditional” release of hostages, and the removal of “all obstacles” to humanitarian aid.


PALESTINE

Sat 23 Mar 2024 8:49 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: Israel kills 100 Palestinians and executes medical personnel at Al-Shifa Complex

The Director General of the Government Media Office in Gaza, Ismail Al-Thawabta, said that the Israeli occupation forces killed more than 100 people inside the Al-Shifa Medical Complex.


Al-Thawabta added in statements to Al-Jazeera early on Saturday that the occupation forces executed some medical personnel inside the complex.


He continued that 4 patients died inside the largest health facility in the Gaza Strip as a result of the Israeli army preventing their treatment, and described the situation inside the complex as tragic.


The Israeli army continues its storming and siege of the Al-Shifa Complex for the sixth day, and earlier the storming forces arrested hundreds of displaced people and a number of medical staff members inside the complex.


The Ministry of Health in Gaza said that yesterday, Friday, the occupation forces detained about 240 patients, their companions, and 10 health personnel inside the hospital.


The ministry also said that the occupation bombed several buildings and burned the arterial department in the Shifa Medical Complex.


Eyewitnesses reported that the occupation army was asking those trapped in the hospital to surrender themselves amid heavy gunfire and the sound of explosions.


Source: Al Jazeera


ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 22 Mar 2024 10:16 pm - Jerusalem Time

The White House: We believe that we are close to reaching a ceasefire agreement in Gaza

US National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said, “We believe that we are close to reaching a ceasefire agreement and that talks on it are continuing.”


Kirby added during a press conference on Friday that there must be a ceasefire until the detainees are restored and more aid is brought in, stressing that the talks on the detainees agreement are progressing.


He pointed out that 11 countries voted for a draft resolution related to Gaza in the Security Council. But Russia and China opposed the draft resolution.

Kirby stated that the Israeli occupation government will send a delegation within days to talk about alternatives to a ground operation in Rafah.


He explained that Secretary of State Anthony Blinken stressed again that launching a ground operation in Rafah would be a mistake.

He stressed that there is still time to talk with "Israel" about Rafah.


Kirby stressed that the United States wants to provide Tel Aviv with some alternatives and options to pursue Hamas without sacrificing the safety of civilians.


He pointed out that the White House has not yet seen any credible "Israeli" plan to transfer civilians from Rafah.


The aggression is on its 168th day


While the occupation forces continue their aggression against the stricken Gaza Strip for the 168th day in a row, the toll of the aggression reached 32,070 killed, in addition to the injury of 74,298 people since the seventh of last October.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 4:55 pm - Jerusalem Time

Netanyahu to Blinken: I hope to invade Rafah with American support, “otherwise we will do it alone.”

An Israeli political official said that the goal of US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken's visit to Israel today, Friday, is to convince Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a safe passage for displaced Palestinians to return to their homes in the northern Gaza Strip, according to what was reported by the Ynet website. .


According to Ynet, it is not a coincidence that Blinken arrived in Israel before the head of the Mossad, David Barnea, traveled to Qatar in order to continue negotiations on a ceasefire and the Israel exchange deal between Israel and the Hamas movement.


Barnea attended the Israeli war cabinet meeting in which Blinken participated. Shin Bet head Ronen Bar will accompany Barnea to Doha, after Bar had missed the previous Doha meeting, last Monday.


Blinken met with Netanyahu alone at the Defense Ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv for about an hour, before the war cabinet meeting. Ynet reported that Blinken put pressure on Netanyahu regarding a plan to invade Rafah, but Netanyahu repeated the talk about the “importance” of invading Rafah “on the way to eliminating Hamas.”



Netanyahu told Blinken, according to a statement issued by his office, that “I value the fact that we stand together in the war against Hamas. I also told him that we know the necessity of evacuating the civilian population from war zones and of course taking care of humanitarian needs, and that is how we work there.”


Netanyahu added: “But I also said that we have no way to defeat Hamas without entering Rafah and eliminating the remnants of the Phalange there. I told him that I hope we will implement this with the support of the United States, but if we have to, we will implement it alone.”


During his current visit, the seventh to Israel since the beginning of the war on Gaza, Blinken discussed with officials in Israel a prisoner exchange deal and the normalization of relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia, and he said that this normalization is still on the table.


Blinken will meet with the families of hostages being held in Gaza before leaving Israel.


Blinken's visit to Israel comes at the height of tension in relations between the Biden administration and the Netanyahu government, as well as between them personally. Blinken's visit also comes hours before the UN Security Council votes on a draft US resolution, the wording of which has been tightened and calls for an immediate end to the war on Gaza.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 4:46 pm - Jerusalem Time

Newspaper: Israel is more and more isolated internationally... and the “flour massacre” in Gaza represented a turning point in Biden’s position

Under the headline: “Israel is isolated on the international scene...it sees that its American ally has abandoned it.” The French newspaper Le Figaro said that Israel, surrounded by somewhat hostile forces and engaged in the longest war in its history, is increasingly exposed. To the risk of isolation on the international scene. As if by a snowball effect, the signals intensify and multiply, to the point of sowing anger at the highest levels of the state, and spreading a feeling of incomprehension in Israeli society, where support for the war remains steadfast.


The blame comes mainly from Western allies, starting with the unwavering American friend, whose voice has become more strident, Le Figaro explains. In this context, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken visits the region as part of a new tour in the Middle East, his sixth since the beginning of the war, where he continues to work to reach a ceasefire agreement and release the 134 Israeli hostages who are still in the hands of “Hamas.” .


The US Secretary of State visits the region, including Israel, while his country is in the process of changing its position towards the Hebrew state. Initially, US President Joe Biden showed a lot of sympathy for the Israelis, who still suffer from deep scars from the October 7 attack. While Israel was fighting the war, the United States provided vital military support. But gradually, the US President's words became hardened, which led to a distinction between unconditional support for the State of Israel and criticism directed at its Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, of whom the Democratic US President was not a strong supporter at all, Le Figaro says.


Le Figaro considered that the “flour massacre,” which occurred at the end of last February, after Israeli soldiers opened fire on a crowd gathered around a humanitarian convoy that arrived in Gaza City, which led to the killing of about a hundred people, constituted a turning point. Transformation.


Although the American protests against Benjamin Netanyahu have not yet prevented the delivery of American weapons to Israel, the matter may change, as the American president is now demanding that countries that receive military support from his country commit to respecting international law and allowing humanitarian aid. Israel must comply with this condition by Sunday. This is a very clear way for the United States to force its partner to change the equation in the Gaza Strip.


Food aid is arriving only in small quantities, while the risk of famine is gradually increasing. At the same time, the United States announced a second wave of financial sanctions against Israeli settlers and settlements in the West Bank.


Le Figaro continued to clarify that an increasing number of Western countries are following in the footsteps of the United States of America, at the diplomatic, military and judicial levels. Great Britain, which has already taken action against the settlers, is now threatening Israel with a military embargo imposed by Canada - mainly as a symbolic measure - along with a threat also coming from Italy and the Netherlands.


After France, the entire European Union decided last Monday to impose sanctions on violent settlers, including banning their entry into the Schengen area and freezing their financial assets. Although Hungary, led by Viktor Orban, a close ally of Israel, stood in the way, it ultimately complied with European and American orders.


“Le Figaro” asked, “Is Israel at risk of being ostracized among the nations?” considering that Benjamin Netanyahu, who remains loyal to his image as a captain firmly positioned at the helm of the ship, wants to be reassured. Earlier this week, he made a phone call with Joe Biden, their first in a month, after which his (Netanyahu) office issued a statement explaining: “At the beginning of the conversation, we agreed on the need to eliminate Hamas.” But during the war, it is no secret, there were disagreements between us about the best way to achieve this. The last military target in the Gaza Strip, the city of Rafah, is the subject of controversy. Sometimes we agreed with our friends, sometimes we didn't. But at the end of the day, we have always done what is vital for our safety, and this time we will do that too.”


In the Netanyahu government, voices are rising from all sides against the international community, such as Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, who is close to the Prime Minister, who expressed, in a tweet on “X”, his anger against “all these countries that are turning away from Israel.” .


For his part, Foreign Minister Israel Katz believes that any action taken against Israel is tantamount to encouraging Hamas. The leader of the small Jewish Supremacy Party, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, also believes that in the face of sanctions against settlers, the only necessary response is the Zionist response, which is to intensify settlement in the West Bank.


Le Figaro continued to say that the Israelis, while convinced that they are fighting a vital battle, feel that the West has misunderstood them. In this small country, everyone is very greatly affected by war, but on the contrary; Few of its citizens measure the depth of the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, Le Figaro explains, referring to what journalist Amos Harel wrote in the columns of the progressive newspaper Haaretz: “The Israeli public hardly realizes the depth of the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip.” The gap of lack of understanding is widening more and more. Former military intelligence chief Amos Yadlin expressed his regret that Israel took upon itself “the role of the Russians” instead of the Ukrainians. About six months after the start of the war, Israel risks defeating an essential front: the communication front. “Le Figaro” concludes.




ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 22 Mar 2024 4:28 pm - Jerusalem Time

Prime Ministers of Ireland, Malta, Slovenia and Spain discuss willingness to recognize a Palestinian state

The Prime Ministers of Ireland, Malta, Slovenia and Spain confirmed their discussion of readiness to recognize a Palestinian state.


They said in a statement today, Friday, “We will do so when conditions are appropriate,” stressing “the urgent need for an immediate ceasefire and a rapid and sustainable increase of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip.”

The Prime Ministers stressed that the only way to achieve lasting peace and stability in the region is through implementing the two-state solution, welcoming the results adopted by the European Council, at a summit in Brussels, where the leaders of the 27 European Union countries called for an “immediate humanitarian truce” in Gaza. In a joint statement, they urged Israel not to launch a military operation in Rafah, south of the devastated Strip.


The joint statement said, "The European Council calls for an immediate humanitarian truce that should lead to a permanent ceasefire and the provision of humanitarian assistance."


European leaders noted that more than a million Palestinians are "currently searching for safety and humanitarian aid there."


The leaders called for “full, rapid, safe and unhindered access of humanitarian aid to” Gaza, expressing “deep concern about the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza and its disproportionate impact on civilians, especially children, as well as the imminent risk of famine resulting from the failure to enter enough aid to Gaza.”

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 3:44 pm - Jerusalem Time

Russia and China use their veto against a draft American resolution on Gaza

Russia and China used their veto power over a draft US resolution in the UN Security Council regarding Gaza.


11 members voted in favor of the American draft resolution, Russia, China and Algeria opposed it, and Guyana abstained from voting.


Russia's permanent representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Vasily Nebenzia, said before the vote that the United States had repeatedly promised to reach an agreement to stop the fighting.


Now the United States finally realizes the need for a ceasefire, after more than thirty thousand Gazans have already died.


He pointed out that the United States is trying to "sell a product" to the Council by using the word "necessary" in its resolution, noting that "this is not enough" and the Council must "demand a ceasefire."


He added that the text did not include any call for a ceasefire, accusing the US administration of "deliberately misleading the international community."


He added that the draft is merely a manipulation of American voters through a false call for a ceasefire.


He pointed out that an alternative draft resolution, which is a “balanced and non-political document,” is being circulated by some other members of the Council.


The American draft resolution did not include any direct call for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, but rather indicated its support for the ongoing international efforts to secure a ceasefire.


This is the ninth time that the Security Council has met to vote on a draft resolution regarding the Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip since October 7.


The Council adopted two resolutions regarding the situation, Resolution No. 2712 and Resolution No. 2720.


Washington used its veto power against three draft resolutions, two of which called for an immediate ceasefire.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 3:11 pm - Jerusalem Time

Australia and Britain call for an "immediate cessation of fighting" in the Gaza Strip

On Friday, the Foreign and Defense Ministers of Australia and the United Kingdom called for an "immediate cessation of fighting" in the Gaza Strip at the end of a meeting in Adelaide, South Australia.


In a joint statement, the ministers stressed the “necessity” of an immediate end to the fighting in the Gaza Strip “to allow the transfer of (humanitarian) assistance.”


The United Kingdom is a member of the UN Security Council, which will vote on Friday on a draft American resolution that includes an “immediate ceasefire” in the Gaza Strip as part of an agreement on prisoners.


The text stresses "the need for an immediate and permanent ceasefire to protect civilians on both sides and allow the delivery of essential humanitarian aid."


The United States has previously used its veto power against several Security Council resolutions calling for a ceasefire. But in the face of heavy human losses and the threat of famine, Washington is now redoubling its efforts to reach a truce and thus avoid a ground attack on Rafah.


The United States has been pressuring Israel for weeks to refrain from launching a large-scale ground attack on Rafah, the results of which would be disastrous in the crowded city, whose population has risen to one and a half million people, most of whom are displaced.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 1:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

WHO: Israel destroyed 410 health facilities and killed 700 health personnel in Gaza

Israeli strikes hit more than 400 healthcare facilities in Gaza, killing nearly 700 medical personnel, and destroying or rendering inoperable most of the Strip's medical infrastructure, according to a World Health Organization report.


According to the report issued by the organization regarding statistics on the impact on medical facilities in Gaza during the first five months of the barbaric Israeli war on the Strip.


The World Health Organization recorded 410 attacks that killed 685 people and injured 900 others.


Almost all hospitals in Gaza were damaged. 24 out of 36 hospitals in the Strip are not operational.


A panel of doctors who spoke to the United Nations on Tuesday explained that Palestinian medical staff had to re-establish many hospitals after Israeli raids or strikes.


In addition, 60 out of 74 primary health care centers are not functioning. Israel also targeted ambulances, resulting in 50 vehicles being damaged.


It is noteworthy that paramedics are not the only first responders targeted by the Israeli occupation army.


A number of members of the police force were also killed in Gaza, and before the police members were targeted by the occupation army, the police forces escorted aid throughout the Strip.


The Director-General of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, explained on Thursday that Israel must allow more aid to enter Gaza through land crossings to prevent famine. He added: "The future of an entire generation is in serious danger."


“Recent efforts to deliver food by air and sea are welcome, but only expanding land crossings will enable large-scale aid delivery to prevent famine,” Tedros said.


He added: "Once again, we ask Israel to open more crossings and accelerate the entry and delivery of water, food, medical supplies and other humanitarian aid into and inside Gaza."


However, several doctors in Gaza recently said that aid cannot be distributed in the Strip without a ceasefire.


Tedros expressed his regret that the World Health Organization faced this reality this week when an aid convoy scheduled for a hospital in Gaza City was cancelled.


He said: “A planned mission to Al-Shifa had to be canceled today due to insecurity... Once again, we call for the protection of health care and not to militarize it.”

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 1:15 pm - Jerusalem Time

About the new poll on Palestinian public opinion

Ahmad Khatib

I stand by what I said about the impossibility of accurately assessing Gazans’ beliefs through face-to-face polls and surveys, particularly during a ferocious and destructive war. Though I can appreciate the efforts of the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research to capture Palestinian public sentiments, polling 750 people in Gaza will never truly reveal what the coastal enclave’s displaced and battered population thinks about Hamas, October 7, and critical issues. Nevertheless, here are the key findings as described by the PCPSR (pcpsr.org/en/node/969) – the most obvious thing to me, based on this survey and numerous threads I’ve been piecing together for weeks based on conversations with people on the ground, is that Gazans no longer believe Israel will win the war and increasingly think that Hamas will survive, curtailing peoples’ willingness to speak out against the group and challenge its authority:

1— According to the poll, two findings are worth noting: support for the two-state solution has increased significantly, and support for armed struggle has dropped considerably. However, while dramatic, the increased support for the two-state solution came only from the Gaza Strip, a 27-point increase, while remaining stable in the West Bank. Given three choices for ending the Israeli occupation, the current findings indicate a 17-point decrease in support for armed struggle, a 5-point rise in support for negotiations, and a 5-point increase in support for non-violence. The three-month drop in support for armed struggle comes equally from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

2— With humanitarian conditions in the Gaza Strip worsening, support for Hamas declines in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as support for armed struggle drops in both places.

3— The sample size of this poll is 1580 adults, of whom 830 were interviewed face to face in the West Bank (in 83 locations) and 750 in the Gaza Strip (in 75 locations).

4— 80% of Gazans report that at least one of their family members has been killed or injured in the war.

5— Support for October 7th remains high, with most believing that it brought the Palestinian-Israeli issue to the center of international attention after years of neglect. The endorsement for the offensive has less to do with support for Hamas and more with the outcomes forcing the Palestinian issue upon the international community.

6— More than 90% believe that Hamas did not commit any atrocities against Israeli civilians during its October 7 offensive. Only one in five Palestinians have seen videos showing atrocities committed by Hamas. Only one-fifth of those who did not see the videos had access to such videos but decided not to see them; the rest reported that the media they watched did not show these videos. The findings show that those who have seen the videos are almost 10 times more likely to think that Hamas fighters committed atrocities on October 7.

7— Most in Rafah (70%) would not seek shelter in Egypt during a Rafah invasion, with most believing that the Egyptian military & police would shoot at them.

8— Less Gazans believe that Israel will win the war, and more believe that Hamas will win - as in, survive the war.

9— More Gazans (60%) believe that Hamas will remain in control of Gaza, and more have expressed support for Hamas's continued rule - both of these points rose together in Gaza.

10— Satisfaction with Sinwar and Hamas remains high in Gaza, with support for Yemen and Qatar increasing, while support for Iran, Jordan, and Egypt remains low.

11— Overall, and in total, only one-third of the Palestinians support Hamas today, an 11-point drop that's equal in Gaza and the West Bank.

12— Support for Marwan Barghouti is high. Abbas continues to poll low, even compared with Hamas's Haniyeh.

13— The resignation of the Shtayyeh Palestinian Authority government is not seen as a sign of reform, and the vast majority reject Mohammad Mustafa's appointment as prime minister and any control Abbas has over a new government.

14— Palestinians’ sense of safety and security in the West Bank keeps dropping, with 9 out of 10 saying they do not feel safe or secure.

15— The majority of Gazans are unable to find adequate food. There are also significant complaints of discrimination in the distribution of humanitarian aid based on political affiliations (mainly that Hamas members and affiliates receive more assistance than the general public).


ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 22 Mar 2024 11:15 am - Jerusalem Time

Finland will resume funding for UNRWA

The Finnish Minister of Foreign Trade and Development confirmed on Friday that his country will resume providing funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).


“UNRWA improving its risk management, which means preventing misconduct and starting to monitor it more closely, provides sufficient guarantees for us at this stage to continue our support,” said Finnish Minister of Foreign Trade and Development Welle Tavio.


He continued by saying during a press conference that some of the Finnish funds will be allocated to risk management.


Countries including Canada, Australia and Sweden have resumed funding for UNRWA, while several other countries have increased funding for the agency after the recent Israeli campaign.


PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 10:50 am - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israel confiscates 8,000 dunams in the Jordan Valley for a settlement construction plan

Israel confiscated 8,000 dunams in the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank, with the aim of expanding the “Pavit” settlement, near the Palestinian village of Fasayel, with hundreds of new housing units and establishing an “industrial and commercial zone,” according to what the Israeli public radio “Kan” reported today, Friday.


"Kan" reported that the Settlement Directorate in the Ministry of Security, which operates within the "Civil Administration" of the occupation, which is under the responsibility of the Minister in the Ministry of Security, Bezalel Smotrich, planned to confiscate these lands and expand settlement there over the past year.


The Settlement Directorate declared the confiscated lands “Israeli lands,” claiming that they would thus become lands for implementing settlement projects.


Kan quoted an Israeli official involved in this settlement plan as saying that planning and legitimizing the construction of housing units in the confiscated lands in the Jordan Valley would continue for approximately a year, and that these measures would require approval by the political level.


The "Peace Now" movement, which monitors settlement in the West Bank and occupied Jerusalem, reported that a record number of approvals for settlement construction plans in the West Bank was recorded during the past year.


Three weeks ago, the Settlement Directorate announced the confiscation of 2,500 dunums and their conversion to “state land” in the “Maale Adumim” settlement area, east of occupied Jerusalem, claiming that the confiscation came in response to a shooting attack at the Al-Za’im checkpoint.


Smotrich considered that "paying declarations for state lands is an important and strategic issue," Kan quoted him as saying. He claimed that the announcement of the confiscation of an area of 8,000 dunams “will allow construction to continue and the Jordan Valley to be strengthened.”


Smotrich claimed, "At a time when the country and the world are seeking to undermine our right to our Jews, Samaria, and the country in general, we are pushing forward settlement work hard, and strategically, in all parts of the country."

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 10:09 am - Jerusalem Time

On the second Friday of Ramadan.. Israel obstructs worshipers from reaching Al-Aqsa Mosque

The Israeli forces obstructed the arrival of hundreds of worshipers since this morning to the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque to perform the second Friday prayer of the holy month of Ramadan.


Eyewitnesses reported that the Israeli forces greatly intensified their military presence in the vicinity of the Qalandiya checkpoints north of Jerusalem, Zaytouna to the east, and Bethlehem to the south, and returned hundreds of worshipers and did not allow them to enter under the pretext of not obtaining the necessary permits.


The Israeli forces deployed thousands of police officers in the alleys of Old Yalda and Al-Aqsa Mosque, which have been under strict siege for nearly six months.


The Qalandiya checkpoint and other checkpoints witnessed light movement compared to previous years due to the restrictions imposed by Israel.


On the second Friday of Ramadan, the Israeli forces imposed a circular cordon around the city of Jerusalem, checkpoints at all entrances leading to the Old City and Al-Aqsa Mosque, and strict measures imposed by the Israeli police, which sent about three thousand of its members to the city of Jerusalem.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 8:42 am - Jerusalem Time

EU President: Gaza is on the brink of famine and the humanitarian situation is catastrophic

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said: “Gaza is on the brink of famine, and is suffering from a catastrophic humanitarian situation.


In a joint press conference with European Council President Charles Michel, after the first day of the European Council in Brussels, she stressed the urgent need for a humanitarian truce that leads to a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.


She announced that the European Council had unanimously approved the measures necessary for full, rapid, safe and unhindered access of humanitarian aid to Gaza.


“We urge the Israeli government not to carry out a ground operation in Rafah,” von der Leyen said.


For his part, the President of the European Council warned against any Israeli ground operation in the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip, and said, “Imagine the consequences if such an operation were launched,” stressing the potentially dire humanitarian repercussions of such a step.


He reiterated the European Union's position on international law, in particular condemning illegal Israeli settlements and calling for the resumption of the political process.


The leaders called for the provision of basic humanitarian aid to alleviate the harsh conditions faced by the people of Gaza, and stressed the need for 500 trucks or their equivalent to enter Gaza daily via all available routes, land, air and sea.


They reaffirmed the European Union's firm commitment to lasting and sustainable peace, firmly rooted in the two-state solution.


The leaders of the 27 European Union countries, meeting at a summit in Brussels, called for an “immediate humanitarian truce” in Gaza, and in a joint statement they urged Israel not to launch a ground operation in Rafah in the far south of the devastated Strip.


The joint statement said, "The European Council calls for an immediate humanitarian truce that should lead to a permanent ceasefire and the provision of humanitarian assistance."


European leaders noted that more than a million Palestinians are "currently searching for safety and humanitarian aid there."


The leaders called for “full, rapid, safe and unhindered humanitarian access to Gaza," and expressed “deep concern about the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza and its disproportionate impact on civilians, especially children, as well as the imminent risk of famine resulting from not enough aid entering to Gaza.”

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 8:39 am - Jerusalem Time

UN rapporteur: There is no moral argument justifying the continued sale of weapons to Israel

UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, Mary Lawlor, said that there are no moral arguments that can justify the continued sale of arms to Israel by states that respect the principle of the universality of human rights.


Lawlor added that providing weapons to Israel, which kills more Palestinian civilians, is a “war on human rights” and nothing justifies continued arms sales to it.


She pointed out that Israel has proven over time that it will use such weapons “indiscriminately against the Palestinians,” and that any claims by Israel of self-defense will be “useless.”


Lawlor pointed to the human rights defenders, journalists and healthcare workers who have been killed in the besieged Gaza Strip over the past few months, noting that this is a “war on women and children”, who constitute approximately 72% of the victims of the current war.


Regarding the journalist victims, Lawlor said that more than 122 journalists and media professionals were martyred in the Gaza Strip at the hands of Israel.


Referring to the killing of 162 employees of the United Nations Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), Lawlor stressed that this is also a “war against humanitarian workers.”


She stressed that the international human rights structure is "suffering under the weight of the hypocrisy" of countries that have expressed their support for a rules-based system, but at the same time continue to send weapons to Israel that kill more Palestinian civilians, noting "above all else." "It is a war on human rights."


The death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen since October 7, to about 32,000 killed and 74,188 injured, the majority of whom are women and children, in addition to thousands of victims who are still under the rubble.


The aggression against the Gaza Strip, which entered its 168th day, pushed more than 85% of Gaza’s citizens into internal displacement amid a stifling siege of most food supplies, clean water and medicines, while 60% of the Strip’s infrastructure was damaged or destroyed, according to a United Nations report.


Israel faces charges of genocide before the International Court of Justice, which in January issued interim rulings ordering it to stop acts of genocide and take the necessary measures to ensure the provision of humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 8:29 am - Jerusalem Time

UN Security Council votes today on a draft US resolution on Gaza

Today, Friday, the UN Security Council will vote on a draft US resolution regarding the Gaza Strip.


The American draft resolution, according to Anadolu Agency, calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the protection of civilians from all parties, allowing the delivery of basic humanitarian aid, alleviating human suffering, and concluding an agreement on prisoners.


The draft resolution, which the United States has been negotiating for some time, indicates that Gaza is part of the territories occupied in 1967 and expresses its support for the two-state solution.


The draft resolution supports ongoing international diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire, and also calls on all parties to adhere to international law and international humanitarian law, protect civilians, preserve civilian infrastructure, and ensure humanitarian access.


The draft resolution opposes the forced displacement of civilians in Gaza, noting that this violates international law, international humanitarian law, and international human rights law.


In addition to the American draft resolution, the ten elected members of the Security Council are also preparing a draft resolution on the situation in Gaza.


The draft resolution, known as “E-10,” calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza during the holy month of Ramadan.


France, which held closed Security Council sessions over the past two weeks regarding Gaza, is also preparing a draft resolution. It is expected that he will focus on a permanent ceasefire later.


To be adopted, the draft resolution requires the approval of at least nine votes and the non-use of the veto by any of the five permanent members: the United States, France, Britain, Russia, and China.


Since the start of the aggression on Gaza, on the seventh of last October, Washington has used its veto power against three draft resolutions, two of which called for an immediate ceasefire.


The death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen since October 7, to about 32,000 and 74,188 injured, the majority of whom are women and children, in addition to thousands of victims who are still under the rubble.

PALESTINE

Fri 22 Mar 2024 8:28 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: Bombing and burning buildings in Al-Shifa Hospital and arresting dozens of medical personnel

The Ministry of Health in the Gaza Strip said on Friday, “The Israeli army bombed several buildings and burned the arterial department in the Shifa Medical Complex, while dozens of medical personnel were arrested and about 240 patients, their companions, and 10 health personnel were detained.”


A number of citizens were killed and others were injured as a result of the ongoing Israeli war on the Gaza Strip.


Here are the latest developments: A dead body arrived at the Kuwait Hospital as a result of the targeting of a group of citizens in the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip.


Three patients died inside Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, due to the siege and the Israeli forces preventing the arrival of medicines to the complex in Gaza.


10 citizens were killed as a result of the Israeli bombing of a house for the Al-Quqa family, northwest of Gaza City.


A number of citizens were killed and injured in a bombing by Israeli aircraft, northeast of the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip.


Local sources said that Israeli aircraft bombed a house over the heads of its residents in the town of Al-Nasr, northeast of the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, killing eight citizens and wounding others.


The same sources added that among the dead were 3 children and 3 women, and that there were injured people, one of whom was in critical condition.


In the same context, Israeli aircraft bombed a house on Al-Tarzi Street in Deir Al-Balah.


The Israeli forces continue to storm the Al-Shifa Medical Complex in Gaza City, deploying dozens of tanks and vehicles in its vicinity, and their planes also carried out violent bombardment of residential buildings in that area.


The death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen since October 7, to about 32,000 and 74,188 injured, the majority of whom are women and children, in addition to thousands of victims who are still under the rubble.

The aggression against the Gaza Strip, which entered its 168th day, pushed more than 85% of Gaza’s citizens into internal displacement amid a stifling siege of most food supplies, clean water and medicines, while 60% of the Strip’s infrastructure was damaged or destroyed, according to a United Nations report.


Israel faces charges of genocide before the International Court of Justice, which in January issued interim rulings ordering it to stop acts of genocide and take the necessary measures to ensure the provision of humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza.

PALESTINE

Thu 21 Mar 2024 10:47 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli Minister: We will go to Rafah even if the whole world stands against us

Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer said that the Israeli occupation army will eventually invade the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip, and defeat the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) "even if the entire world becomes against Israel, including the United States."


Dermer said in an American audio program (podcast) broadcast over the Internet: “We will enter and finish this mission, and anyone who does not understand this does not understand that the existential nerve of the Jews has been pressed” in the Al-Aqsa flood battle on the seventh of last October.


The far-right minister added: "This will happen even if Israel has to fight alone. Even if the whole world turns against Israel, including the United States, we will fight until we win the battle."


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shows his determination to carry out a military operation in Rafah, claiming that achieving the goal of eliminating Hamas will not be achieved without this.


“We are very confident that we can do this in an effective way not only from a military perspective, but also from a humanitarian aspect,” Dermer said. “They have less confidence in our ability to do this,” he added.


Dermer, a former Israeli ambassador to the United States, a member of the war cabinet and one of Netanyahu's close associates, is scheduled to travel with National Security Advisor Tzachi Hanegbi to Washington next week to hear the Biden administration's concerns that such an invasion would lead to the fall of more... Civilian casualties at a time when famine and disease are spreading in Gaza.


Dermer said leaving the Islamists out would invite open attacks against Israel from across the region, “which is why the determination to push them out is so strong, even if it leads to a potential breach of relations with the United States.”


Dermer said that there are 4 Hamas brigades intact in Rafah, supported by militants who have withdrawn from other parts of Gaza, which represents 25% of the group’s strength before the war.


Emphasizing that they will not leave a quarter of Hamas fighters there, “We are going to Rafah because we have to.”


Several countries warned Israel of the consequences of invading Rafah, due to its catastrophic repercussions on the city, which represents the last refuge for the Palestinians after the scale of bombing, destruction and killing caused by the Israeli occupation in the Gaza Strip. As a result, it faces accusations of committing genocide before the International Court of Justice.


Rafah Governorate currently houses more than 1,400,000 Palestinians, including 1,300,000 who were displaced from other governorates under the weight of violent bombardment with the intention of forcing them to evacuate their areas, starting in the north of the Gaza Strip in particular.



OPINIONS

Thu 21 Mar 2024 10:02 pm - Jerusalem Time

What is the real Hamas?

The Guardian

The Guardian

Opinion Writer

How Israeli, Palestinian and US political actors understand Hamas is not merely a theoretical question – it will determine what kind of agreement can be reached to end the current war, and what the future of Gaza will look like

by Joshua Leifer

In late October 2023, the veteran Israeli peace activist Gershon Baskin published an open letter denouncing a man he had long called a friend – Ghazi Hamad, a senior Hamas official. Baskin, an architect of the deal that freed the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit from Hamas captivity in 2011, is one of the only Israeli citizens who has maintained consistent contact with leaders of the Palestinian Islamist movement. Hamad, a former journalist with a degree in veterinary medicine, was also involved in the Shalit negotiations and served as deputy foreign minister in the 2012 Hamas government. Prior to the 7 October attacks, for more than a decade and a half, Hamad and Baskin had exchanged frequent phone calls and text messages. These mainly concerned negotiations around prisoner swap deals, and sometimes the possibility of a long-term truce between Israel and Hamas. The pair developed a warm working relationship based on mutual trust.

After 7 October and the start of Israel’s ground invasion of the Gaza Strip, that relationship started to unravel. Hamad insisted that the attacks were entirely justified, and denied that Hamas fighters had carried out atrocities during their incursion into Israel. On 24 October, in an interview for a Lebanese TV channel, Hamad vowed that Hamas would commit the same acts “again and again”. He said that “Al-Aqsa Flood”, Hamas’s name for its armed offensive, “is just the first time, and there will be a second, a third, a fourth”. Once considered a thoughtful observer of Palestinian politics, Hamad now declared that “nobody should blame us for what we do – on 7 October, on 10 October, on October 1,000,000. Everything we do is justified.”

To Baskin, this did not sound like the man he had come to know. The proclamations by Hamad, “thought to be one of the most moderate people in Hamas”, Baskin noted, landed like a betrayal. Baskin had long argued that it was possible to broker an agreement with Hamas for a “hudna”, or a fixed-term armistice, in exchange for opening the land, air, and sea blockade of the Gaza Strip, which Israel has enforced, with Egypt’s support, since Hamas came to power in 2007. Baskin had believed that Hamad could help move Hamas toward acceding to a two-state solution. In the months before 7 October, Baskin had been trying to organise a meeting with him in Europe to discuss the prospect of a long-term truce.

But after 7 October, Baskin, too, shifted his position. “Hamas has forfeited its right to exist as a government of any territory and especially the territory next to Israel,” he wrote in an article for the Times of Israel on 28 October. “Hamas now fully deserves the determination of Israel to eliminate them as the political and military body that controls Gaza.” More recently, Baskin has proposed exiling Hamas leaders such as Yahya Sinwar from Gaza as part of a potential ceasefire deal. He has also proposed that Hamas be barred from contesting future Palestinian elections unless they renounce violence. It is not that Baskin has given up on peace – he remains a fixture in international media coverage as a lonely, even desperate Israeli voice calling for an end to the war. It is that he no longer believes Hamas can be part of the equation. Since October, many Israelis, even or perhaps especially on the centre left, have gone on a similar journey.

In late December, I sat with Baskin in the basement of his home, in a quiet, leafy neighbourhood of Jerusalem. Born in New York, Baskin is a stocky, energetic man in his late 60s. He answered the door wearing the silver dog tag engraved with the words “Bring them Home”, which has become an emblem of the movement calling for the return of the more than 100 Israeli hostages still held by Hamas.

One question looms over the story of Baskin’s exchange with Hamad: did Hamas change, or did Baskin simply misunderstand the group all along? Baskin believes it was the former. “Most of the years previous to 7 October, there was a willingness to explore pragmatic, long-term ceasefires,” he told me. “In retrospect it became clear – there were signs, but none of us read them – that from two years before 7 October, Hamas had made a decision that there was a no-go on a long-term modus vivendi [with Israel] and that they were beginning to make their plans for an eventual attack.”

Baskin recalled his final exchange with Hamad in late October. “During the early days of the war, when I heard that his house was bombed, and I didn’t know he wasn’t in Gaza, I said to him: ‘Ghazi, if they’re going after you, there is no one in Hamas who is safe.’” (Ahead of the war, Hamad had departed for Beirut.) “He responded to me: ‘We have lots of surprises, and we will kill lots of Israelis.’”

That was when Baskin posted his open letter to Hamad on social media. “I’m sorry to say that you were someone who I actually trusted and thought that we could help bring a better future to our peoples. But you and your friends have brought the Palestinian cause back 75 years,” he wrote. “I think you have lost your mind and you have lost your moral code.” And with that, Baskin severed their ties.

Five months into Israel’s brutal war in Gaza, more than 30,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed. The Israeli ground invasion has displaced 2 million Palestinians within the Gaza Strip, many of them now forced into makeshift tents in and around the southern city of Rafah. In northern Gaza, vast swaths of which have been flattened by relentless Israeli airstrikes and artillery shelling, international experts warn that “famine is imminent”. Gazan children have already begun to die from lack of food.

As the war continues, how Israeli, Palestinian and American political actors understand Hamas is not merely a theoretical question; it is as much a material factor on the ground as bullets and tanks. It is one of the factors shaping military strategy, and will determine what kind of agreement can be reached to bring the current war to an end, and what the future of Gaza will look like.

The disintegration of Baskin and Hamad’s relationship thus reflects a larger and older debate about Hamas, one that has only become more urgent. At its core is a question about the essence of the organisation: whether it is primarily a nationalist group with an Islamist character, which could be a constructive player in a meaningful peace process, or whether it is a more radical, fundamentalist group, whose hostility to Israel is so unwavering that it can only play the role of violent opposition.

One camp in this debate, chiefly composed of western counterterrorism experts and US and Israeli security analysts, has long seen the group as defined by its violent hostility to Israel’s existence. According to this view, there was nothing surprising about 7 October. Instead, in the words of Matthew Levitt, a former Bush administration official and the author of a 2007 book on Hamas, it “demonstrated in the most visceral and brutal way that Hamas ultimately prioritised destroying Israel and creating an Islamist Palestinian state in its place”. Analysts of this school tend to point to Hamas’s vast tunnel infrastructure as evidence that the group protects its own fighters while leaving Gazan civilians above the surface to fend for themselves, without any system of bomb shelters.

An opposing, more heterogeneous camp, comprised of academics and thinktankers, many of them Palestinian, sees Hamas as a multifarious, complex political actor, divided between radical and moderating tendencies. Hamas, they argue, is the product of the reality under which Palestinians live – brutal occupation and blockade – and therefore potentially responsive to changes in those conditions. The problem, according to this view, is that even when Hamas leaders have appeared to be open to moderation, Israeli policy has made it impossible for the group to pursue this line without losing its credibility among Palestinians as the last-standing bastion of meaningful opposition to Israel and its occupation.

When we spoke in January, the Palestinian scholar Tareq Baconi said that “the major misconception” at the core of the dominant discourse about Hamas is the idea that “if Hamas as a security threat was undermined, Israel will have no issue with the Palestinians”. But if “Hamas were to disappear tomorrow,” he said, the Israeli blockade on Gaza and military rule in the West Bank would remain. “There’s this tendency to suggest that this is a war between Israel and Hamas rather than a war between Israel and Palestinians, which places Hamas outside of Palestinians,” he added. “It’s an inability to address the political drivers animating Palestinians.”

Khaled Elgindy, who is a former adviser to the Palestinian Authority (PA) leadership on negotiations with Israel and now a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute thinktank, argues that any postwar arrangement that excludes Hamas will be doomed to repeat the mistakes that led to the current war. “It’s exactly this notion of: ‘We’re going to make peace with this group of Palestinians while we make war with that group of Palestinians,’” which had served as the rationale for Israel’s economic suffocation and periodic bombardment of the Gaza Strip, he told me. “That’s nonsensical in terms of conflict resolution.”

“Hamas is a fact of political life in Gaza and in the Palestinian scene in general. And if anything, it is much more relevant today than it’s ever been,” Elgindy said. In an article for Foreign Affairs published late last year, he expanded on his view that Hamas must form part of a postwar settlement. The goal, wrote Elgindy, should be to incorporate Hamas and other hardline militant factions into the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), the umbrella group dominated by the secular-nationalist party Fatah, which is recognised as the sole official representative of the Palestinian people on the world stage.

Elgindy believes that Palestinian politics could contain Hamas’s rejectionism alongside the Palestinian Authority’s cooperation with Israel, just as Israeli politics includes parties that support and those that oppose engagement with the Palestinian Authority. In the short term, he acknowledged, that might make “achieving a two-state solution harder, because they’re going to have a veto the same way any opposition does”. But in the long run, Elgindy continued, integrating Hamas into the PLO might begin to heal the persistent split in the Palestinian national movement, which has provided Israel with a convenient excuse for refusing to participate in any negotiations. If Hamas were to agree to abide by the agreements signed between Israel and the PLO, not only would this increase the chances that a peace agreement might last, it would also curtail Hamas’s ability “to act as a free agent and be the spoiler it can be”, Elgindy said.

At present, though, it seems highly unlikely Hamas leaders, in Gaza or abroad, would be willing to agree to a programme of the kind that Elgindy and others in what’s known as “the Middle East policy space” have sketched out. In early March, representatives from Hamas, Fatah and other Palestinian political factions reportedly met in Moscow for unity talks. Since the 2007 Hamas-Fatah war, there have been more than a dozen similar reconciliation attempts sponsored by a range of Arab and Muslim-led governments. None have translated into any durable arrangement.

But if Palestinian unity with Hamas may prove elusive, it is equally difficult to imagine a future without the militant group. “I think people believe this basic line, that if we destroy or at least marginalise Hamas, that will make peace more likely,” Elgindy said. In practice, he continued, this position rationalises Israel’s devastating continued assault on Gaza. This view is wrong, he said – not just strategically but morally.

Hamas was formed in 1987 by members of the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood against the backdrop of the first intifada, the popular Palestinian uprising ignited when an Israeli truck killed four Palestinian workers in Gaza’s Jabalia refugee camp. The group’s name, which means “zeal”, is an acronym for Harakat al-Muqawamah al-Islamiyyah, or the Islamic Resistance Movement. Historically, Palestinian Islamists had inclined toward political quietism, believing that Palestinian society had to be Islamicised if the fight against Israel were to be successful. Yet as demonstrations mounted, the struggle appeared to them as one they should lead.

Hamas’s founding leaders were, for the most part, refugees who had been born in what is now Israel and forced to flee to the Gaza Strip during what Palestinians call the Nakba, the displacement of roughly 700,000 Palestinians during the 1948 war. Sheikh Ahmad Yassin, the group’s spiritual leader, was born in 1936 in the village of Al-Jura, near the city of Ashkelon, in the south of present-day Israel. Diminutive and softly spoken, Yassin, who dressed in a white shroud and used a wheelchair owing to a childhood accident, seemed to his followers to embody the suffering of his people. In 2004, Israel assassinated Yassin, as it would many of Hamas’s leaders, when Israeli helicopters fired on his entourage as he left a mosque after prayers at dawn.

The organisation’s 1988 founding charter is a mixture of Qur’anic quotations, disquisitions on Islamic doctrine, nationalist declarations and conspiratorial antisemitism. The document defined the land of Palestine as a waqf, or Islamic trust, “consecrated for future Muslim generations until judgment day”, of which no inch could be given up. It accused Zionists of instigating the French and Bolshevik revolutions and labelled groups like “the Freemasons, the Rotary and Lions clubs” as “destructive intelligence-gathering organisations” that facilitated the “nazism of the Jews”. It subsumed the Palestinian national struggle under the banner of religious war. It was, in other words, an unlikely charter for a movement that, within a decade, would bid to represent the Palestinian cause, which had for the better part of the previous half-century been led by avowedly secular groups.

Whether the Islamic radicalism of the founding charter represents the operative ideology of the organisation has been debated almost since the group’s creation. Some scholars of Islamist politics see Hamas’s religious rhetoric as mainly a framework in service of its nationalist goals, which are its central concern. According to Azzam Tamimi, author of the book Hamas: A History from Within, the movement’s leaders realised that, as it grew, it needed a more accessible way of defining itself to the broader world. A document titled This Is What We Struggle For, written in the mid-90s in response to a request by a European diplomat for clarity on the group’s objectives, defined Hamas in rather different terms to those in the founding charter. Hamas was “a Palestinian national liberation movement that struggles for the liberation of the Palestinian occupied lands and for the recognition of Palestinian legitimate rights”. In a sense, the question of how to understand Hamas grows out of the gap between these two rhetorical modes: between uncompromising jihad and the language of anticolonial resistance, between fundamentalist ideology and political pragmatism.

 “There is no single ‘Hamas,’” Tareq Baconi writes in his book, Hamas Contained: The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance. “It is an exercise in futility, as well as fundamentally inaccurate and reductionist to try to suggest that the movement is some form of monolithic actor,” Baconi continues. There are, within the organisation, hardliners and pragmatists, religious conservatives and comparative moderates, those who prioritise the armed struggle against Israel, and those, at least until recently, who sought gains through political means. Hamas has “always sought to play between the violent and the diplomatic tracks, to shift from one track to the other, whenever it saw its best interests as either”, says Hugh Lovatt, a Middle East expert and senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Yet if Hamas’s leadership was not always unified on matters of vision, the persistence of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza gave the group unity of purpose. In 1993, when the PLO, led by Yasser Arafat, recognised the state of Israel and renounced violence with the signing of the first Oslo accord, it was Hamas that claimed the mantle of armed resistance and commitment to liberating all of historic Palestine. The agreement between Israel and the PLO was a disappointment to many Palestinians, and not just supporters of Hamas. In a prescient 1993 essay, the Palestinian intellectual Edward Said called the Oslo Accords “an instrument of Palestinian surrender, a Palestinian Versailles”. Arafat had agreed to give up armed struggle against Israel and discounted the Palestinians’ “unilateral and internationally acknowledged claim to the West Bank and Gaza”, Said wrote, while “Israel has conceded nothing”.

Throughout the 1990s, Hamas, adamantly opposed to Oslo, intensified its fight against Israel. In its early years, its attacks had mainly taken the form of small arms fire, low-intensity roadside bombs and low-tech attempts to kidnap Israeli soldiers. That changed on 6 April 1994, when a Palestinian man, dispatched by one of the leaders of Hamas’s armed wing, blew himself up at a bus stop in the northern Israeli city of Afula, killing eight Israelis. It was expressly an act of vengeance in response to the massacre of 29 worshippers at the Ibrahimi mosque, carried out two months earlier by an Israeli extremist hoping to derail peace talks between the Israeli government and the PLO. The suicide bombing was also an expression of Hamas’s emerging military strategy. Hamas leaders saw civilian deaths as Israel’s weak spot, believing they would erode Israelis’ sense of personal security and, ultimately, reduce Israeli resolve.

The collapse of the Camp David talks in 2000, and the eruption of the second intifada, marked the transformation of Hamas into something more than just a spoiler. It emerged as a genuine challenger to the PLO and the institutions of the recently formed Palestinian Authority. The more Israel pursued settlement construction, and the more it entrenched the apparatus of military occupation, building checkpoints and walls, the more Fatah and the PA appeared to have capitulated, and the more Hamas’s uncompromising position gained in appeal. As the group mounted more suicide attacks through the 2000s, it also diversified its arsenal. In 2001, Hamas fired its first rockets from the Gaza Strip.

For Hamas’s leaders, this strategy of violence appeared to be vindicated in August 2005, as Israel began to withdraw its military and more than 8,000 settlers from the Gaza Strip. (By contrast, for Ariel Sharon, the Israeli prime minister at the time, the disengagement was a tactical move intended to sabotage future peace negotiations.) “Today you are leaving Gaza humiliated,” proclaimed Mohammed Deif, Ayyash’s successor and commander of the Qassam Brigades, in a videotaped message after the disengagement. “Hamas will not disarm and will continue the struggle against Israel until it is erased from the map.”

One perhaps surprising outcome of the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza was that while it seemed, to many in Hamas, to reflect the success of armed struggle, it was at this moment that the group appeared to shift its focus toward more conventional politics. Previously, Hamas had largely boycotted the electoral process, on the grounds that participation would have amounted to a recognition of the Oslo accords. Now, buoyed up by the Israeli withdrawal, Hamas contested the January 2006 legislative elections, running on an anti-corruption and law-and-order platform. To the shock of many in the PA, Israel and the Bush administration, Hamas won an outright majority. “I’ve asked why nobody saw it coming,” the US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice said at the time. The group that had long rejected the institutions created by the Oslo framework now had a popular mandate to lead them.

In contesting the elections, Hamas appeared to be deprioritising violence in favour of political engagement. “There are certain fundamental principles that they will not relinquish, but ultimately, they are not rigid in their approach,” said Tahani Mustafa, Palestine analyst at the International Crisis Group. “That doesn’t mean they’re going to give up the fight to liberate Palestine,” Mustafa added. “It’s just recognising what they want, and what reality will allow, and then trying to figure a middle ground between them.” Ahead of the legislative election, Hamas, led at the time by Khaled Meshaal, had signed on to the 2005 Cairo declaration, which affirmed the PLO as “the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people” and called for the establishment of the Palestinian state.

 “Hamas had de facto acquiesced between 2005 and 2007 to a political programme that [might], if leveraged correctly, have led to the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel and the dismantling of the occupation,” Baconi wrote in an essay for Foreign Policy last November. But whether a Hamas-run Palestinian Authority would have used its popular mandate to pursue a Palestinian state alongside Israel, or if it would have harnessed the PA to pursue an intensified armed conflict, as Israeli leaders feared, we will never know. “Hamas’s gamble” – its shift to participation within the PA framework and endorsement of a Palestinian state on ’67 lines – “paid off,” Baconi writes in Hamas Contained, “in the sense that its bluff was never called.”

In response to Hamas’s 2006 electoral victory, Fatah members refused to join the Hamas-led government. Israel tightened its enclosure of the Gaza Strip. The US and European Union soon cut off aid. By the autumn of 2006, groups of Fatah and Hamas gunmen were carrying out assassinations, kidnappings and torturing each other’s loyalists, even as unity talks between Abbas and Meshaal continued. On 14 June 2007, after five days of fierce gun battles in Gaza, Hamas expelled the PA from the territory – and suddenly Hamas found itself in an entirely new role. It was now responsible for daily life in Gaza.

Sheikh Yassin once claimed that, during the first intifada, he had turned down an Israeli offer to take over the Gaza Strip. “It would have been crazy for us to consent to be mere stand-ins for Israeli rule,” he said. But now Hamas found itself with the task of administering a territory besieged by air, land and sea, and subject to near-routine aerial bombardment and artillery shelling by Israel.

Gradually, through the next decade and a half, Hamas consolidated its rule over the coastal enclave. To some, it seemed that Hamas had transitioned from a militant group with an ideology of armed opposition to a pseudo-state governing force. A quarter of its first elected cabinet boasted US graduate degrees. “They were never democratic or soft authoritarian, as some of the literature says,” Khalil Sayegh, a Gaza-born peace activist, told me. “They were hard authoritarian, but they were smart enough to deceive the west in how they dealt with the situation.” After expelling Fatah, Hamas moved on to limit the power of Gaza’s clans, which represented an alternative base of power. To clamp down on dissent and enforce conformity, Sayegh added, Hamas relied on tactics that ranged from public shaming to blackmail and torture.

Hamas never implemented sharia law, despite the push from some of the movement’s hardliners, but it did attempt, rather haphazardly, to legislate public morality. “Islamising measures are put forth tentatively, then retracted when citizens object,” a 2011 report by the Crisis Group found. At the same time, Hamas faced criticism from more radical Salafist groups for failing to impose strict Islamic law on the territory. In 2009, when al-Qaida-aligned Salafists declared an Islamic State in the southern Gaza Strip, Hamas forces violently crushed them during an assault on a Rafah mosque.

Hamas developed its elaborate system of tunnels to get around the harsh conditions of the blockade, as well as to shield its fighters from Israeli airstrikes. In particular, the tunnels connecting Gaza to Egypt became the besieged territory’s economic lifeline and a primary conduit for the smuggling of weapons. According to one estimate, in the mid-2010s, tunnel revenue provided the Hamas government with roughly $750m a year. Yet this was not nearly enough to prevent what the American political scientist Sara Roy has called the “de-development of Gaza”. While the first years of Hamas rule saw economic growth, between 2007 and 2022, real GDP per capita declined at a rate of 2.5% a year, as the population rose sharply. For much of the last decade and a half, UN officials have warned that Gaza was on the brink of a humanitarian crisis.

 

During these years, Hamas and Israel developed a mode of relating to each other – what Baconi calls an equilibrium of belligerency. Hamas rocket fire from Gaza became a means of negotiating with Israel. In return for pausing fire, Hamas would seek eased restrictions of the blockade or work permits for more Palestinian labourers crossing into Israel. In turn, Israel would retaliate to Hamas rockets with airstrikes and shelling – “mowing the grass”, as Israeli military strategists described it in their grisly euphemism – until it could claim it had sufficiently “deterred” Hamas from fighting until the inevitable next round.

For Israel, Hamas became useful as the functional government in Gaza, responsible for supporting the besieged Gazan population and containing the activities of other armed militant groups, much like the PA did in the West Bank. At the same time, Hamas maintained its claim to represent unbowed resistance to Israel. “There seemed to be some kind of modus vivendi between Israel and Hamas,” says Zaha Hassan, a human rights lawyer and senior legal adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team during Palestine’s bid for UN membership. (In the month leading up to 7 October, she added, “there was greater interaction and engagement between Israel and Hamas than there was between Israel and the PA.”)

To Netanyahu, this arrangement had an additional advantage. By keeping the PA-run West Bank and the Hamas-run Gaza Strip under separate administrations, Israel also kept the Palestinian national movement divided against itself, and therefore easier to manage. Over the course of a decade, Netanyahu’s governments helped prop up the Hamas administration in Gaza, facilitating the transfer of billions of dollars from Qatar to the Islamist group. “Netanyahu has always had a strong unspoken partnership with Hamas, which he has regarded as an invaluable asset in preventing the creation of a Palestinian state,” Hussein Ibish, a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute, told me via email. “His incredibly cynical divide-and-rule strategy, which he does not appear to have fully surrendered yet, led inexorably and virtually inevitably to 7 October.”

But Netanyahu was not merely cynical. He, like much of Israel’s defence establishment, appears to have genuinely believed that the burden of governance had led to a fundamental shift in the group’s strategic considerations – that Hamas, in effect, had been pacified.

It is now clearer than ever that Israel’s policy towards Hamas was built on a contradiction. On the one hand, Israel justified its punitive blockade and periodic bombardment of Gaza on the grounds that Hamas was a bloodthirsty terrorist group that sought Israel’s destruction. On the other, in Israel’s actual dealings with Hamas, it behaved as if Hamas had abandoned not just its commitment to destroying Israel but any alternative vision to occupation, and would be satisfied managing Gaza into perpetuity.

From within Hamas and among its supporters, however, the perception was very different. “2008-2009, 2012, 2014, 2021 – it’s continuous war,” Azzam Tamimi told me by phone from Istanbul, summing up this view. “Hamas has not been pacified. It’s just been fighting, and then there are breaks in the fighting.” This analysis is not so different from how much of Israel’s security establishment sees the group today. “Hamas has never stopped preparing for operations to respond to Israeli provocations,” Tamimi added. “I mean, the preparations for 7 October are not the sort of thing that happens overnight.”

Indeed, within Israeli defence circles, the cumulative failures of 7 October have been taken as proof that Netanyahu’s governments understood Hamas all wrong. A new common sense has begun to emerge. “We felt that if we bribed the organisation by providing it money or by enabling it to develop the economy, then it would become a more responsible and accountable sovereign,” said Kobi Michael, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies, a thinktank with close ties to Israel’s military, when we spoke in late December. “This is an illusion.” As Michael sees it, Israeli leaders failed to recognise that Hamas, at its core, is a “messianic” organisation that cannot be managed. “Theirs is a very religious way of thinking, which is irrational,” he said. “It was convenient for us to think that they are similar to us.”

As the war grinds on, Israeli policy analysts increasingly argue that the bellicose, maximalist rhetoric of Hamas’s leaders should be taken literally – that when they pledge to fight until Israel is destroyed, they mean it. “I read the other side’s writings in their original language, and I believe them, I simply believe them,” Michael Milshtein, an Israeli former intelligence officer, has said of Hamas’s Arabic publications and communiques. In his view, one major reason for the Israeli military’s colossal failure on 7 October was that the intelligence agencies and, even more fatefully, the country’s political leaders, forgot the nature of their enemy and failed to take notice of the manifold public threats issued by Hamas leaders that a massive armed operation against Israel was in the offing.

In the eyes of most Israelis, any semblance of peace will only be possible when Hamas no longer exists. Yet when Gershon Baskin and I spoke again in March, he told me that he and Ghazi Hamad had reconnected. The re-establishment of contact was mutual. “The first communication was about two months ago, which was an unpleasant back and forth,” he said. “The basic question is, could it be possible for us to have a constructive role [in making] a secret back channel,” Baskin added. “It’s not yet clear.”

Today, as 30 years ago, Hamas derives much of its popularity from Palestinian despair. “When oppression increases,” Sheikh Yassin told the late Guardian journalist Ian Black in 1998, “people start looking for God.” A survey conducted in December by the Palestinian pollster Khalil Shikaki found that 72% of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank believed that Hamas was correct in launching the 7 October attacks, despite the destruction Israel has unleashed. If, as many believe, Hamas will remain a force the day after the fighting stops – in what form, and with what consequences?

Proponents of incorporating Hamas back into the structures of Palestinian politics argue that the group’s leaders were once serious about pursuing the interim solution, of a Palestinian state on only part of historic Palestine, and that, under the right conditions, they might be willing to do so again. “It was real,” Hugh Lovatt said of Hamas’s openness to a two-state solution, which was expressed in the group’s 2017 revised charter. “There clearly is a political and relatively moderate wing within Hamas,” he continued. “The question is, what happens to them? Do they split from the movement? Will they be completely overwhelmed by the hardliners? Or do they find a way to steer the movement back toward the political track?”

Those who see a future role for Hamas in Palestinian politics as a necessity – a view that presupposes Hamas’s willingness to join the institutions it has hitherto scorned– argue that excluding Hamas would be undemocratic, as well as likely to guarantee future bloodshed. “Their inclusion is a prerequisite for creating a Palestinian leadership that is representative of its people,” Baconi told me when we spoke by phone, “regardless of what we think about their tactics or their ideology.”

At the same time, when I asked Baconi about the prospects of a return to the two-state paradigm after the war, he was not optimistic. “If there is a political process which would achieve a Palestinian state on ’67 borders – which I don’t think will ever exist, as in a state with real sovereignty – I do think Hamas, politically and strategically, would engage with it very effectively and would, I think, be pushed to recognise the potential of such a diplomatic process,” he replied. But against the backdrop of the total devastation of Gaza, talk of restarting the two-state process is mainly a distraction, Baconi added. “I don’t see any kind of effective political process coming out of this older discourse that takes us back to the 90s and early 00s.”

In all likelihood, the Hamas leadership’s willingness to re-engage in the political track may not be tested. “The idea of incorporating Hamas [into the PLO] is, I think, a brilliant one that is now politically impossible,” said Nathan Brown, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “You basically need the existing generation of American leaders to die off before it becomes politically feasible,” Brown said of the possibility of the US shepherding a process that saw Hamas enter the PLO. “And it’s unthinkable in Israel.”

 

 

Israeli public opinion has lurched even further right after the 7 October attacks. Benjamin Netanyahu’s popularity has tanked, but his replacement will not be a dove. And though it is true that, in the late 1980s and early 90s, the Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin agreed to talks with the PLO and Yasser Arafat, considered by most Israelis to be an unrepentant terrorist, the signing of the Oslo accords was only possible after the PLO had agreed to comply with a raft of preconditions. By contrast, no Hamas leader could ever totally renounce armed struggle or agree formally to recognise Israel.

There is a tendency to view events such as 7 October and the ongoing war through the prism of rupture. The death and destruction on such a massive scale appear to signal a shift in paradigm, the emergence of a new phase. But part of what makes Israel’s prosecution of the current war so chilling is that, after killing more than 30,000 Palestinians, and after 1,200 Israelis were killed by Hamas on 7 October, the basic political framework of Israel/Palestine may, the day after the war, remain the same as it was on 6 October.

 

PALESTINE

Thu 21 Mar 2024 9:58 pm - Jerusalem Time

HIS FATHER WAS PRIME MINISTER OF ISRAEL

ARAB AND WORLD

Thu 21 Mar 2024 9:51 pm - Jerusalem Time

He renewed his attack on Netanyahu.. Schumer: Israel may end without American support

The New York Times quoted US Senator and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer as saying that Israel's future may end unless it receives American support, expressing his fear that Israel, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, will become a global pariah, even in the United States.


The newspaper quoted Senator Chuck Schumer as saying that Netanyahu could prevent elections in Israel until 2026.


Schumer had called in a speech a few days ago for holding elections in Israel, directing criticism at Netanyahu, which angered the latter.


Netanyahu is facing increasing international pressure, especially from US President Joe Biden, who on Friday praised the “good speech” delivered by Schumer in which he called for early elections in Israel.


In two interviews with CNN and Fox News on Sunday, Netanyahu condemned this call, and believed that the statements of Schumer, the highest-ranking Jewish figure in the American legislative authority, were “completely inappropriate,” stressing, “We are not a banana republic.”


He said that members of the "international community" who call for elections "do so because they know that the elections will stop the war and paralyze the country for at least 6 months."


There is still no specific date for parliamentary elections in Israel.


Source: Al Jazeera + agencies

PALESTINE

Thu 21 Mar 2024 9:22 pm - Jerusalem Time

An Israeli delegation to Qatar on Friday amid talk of progress in negotiations with Hamas

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreed to leave a delegation headed by Mossad chief David Barnea tomorrow, Friday, to Qatar to hold a meeting with the head of the CIA, William Burns, the Qatari prime minister and foreign minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani, and the head of the US Central Intelligence Agency, William Burns. Egyptian Intelligence, Abbas Kamel, in order to work on the release of detainees, according to a statement issued by Netanyahu’s office.


This high-level meeting will be held within the framework of the negotiations taking place in Doha, with the aim of advancing efforts to recover detainees in Gaza and reaching a ceasefire agreement.


This comes at a time when the American CNN network, on Thursday, quoted an unnamed diplomatic source as saying that the talks between Israel and Hamas regarding the truce in Gaza are progressing positively, but there are still “many differences.”


The diplomat did not shed light on the differences, but he doubted that the two sides were close to reaching an agreement, at a time when US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, confirmed yesterday, Wednesday, that the two sides were close to reaching an agreement and that “the gaps were narrowing.”


According to CNN, the slow progress in the talks was further reflected after the head of the Mossad, David Barnea, left the Qatari capital, Doha, after only one day of indirect talks last Monday.


The American network said, "One of the most difficult obstacles may be Hamas's demand that after the initial exchange of hostages and prisoners, Israel will have to agree to a permanent ceasefire and the withdrawal of its army from Gaza."


Coinciding with a visit by US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken to Cairo, a meeting was held today, Thursday, in the Egyptian capital, which included the foreign ministers of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Jordan, the UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation, and the Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, to discuss developments in the situation in the Gaza Strip. 

According to the official spokesman for the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the meeting of Arab foreign ministers came to “discuss efforts to stop the Israeli war against Gaza, and the inevitability of achieving a ceasefire and full access to aid.”


The day before yesterday, Tuesday, the spokesman for the Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Majed Al-Ansari, said: “I do not think that we are at this moment where we can say that we are close to reaching an agreement, It is still too early to announce any successes.”

PALESTINE

Thu 21 Mar 2024 9:20 pm - Jerusalem Time

Hebrew newspaper: Biden administration informed Netanyahu that it will not allow the invasion of Rafah during Ramadan

The administration of US President Joe Biden sent a clear message to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, through war cabinet member Benny Gantz, who visited Washington at the beginning of this month, stating that “the administration will not allow an Israeli incursion into Rafah during the month of Ramadan,” according to a report by the military analyst in the newspaper "Haaretz", Amos Harel, today, Thursday.


He added that Netanyahu's decision to send a delegation to Washington next week, at the request of Biden, in order to present the Israeli plan to invade Rafah, reflects the real situation of US-Israeli relations in the middle of the sixth month of the war on Gaza.


Netanyahu threatens on a daily basis to invade Rafah, pledges an “absolute victory” over Hamas, and boasts of the “independence of the Israeli decision,” despite the tense relations between him and Biden.


Harel pointed out, “In actual terms, the idea that Israel will defend itself with its own forces has been in great doubt since the October 7 attack. Biden is presenting Netanyahu with challenges from all directions: by airdropping aid into Gaza, building a naval pier, and a certain slowdown in the pace of the supply of ammunition from the United States to Israel as well as through increased and more public American opposition to a military operation in Rafah.”


According to the report, Israeli preparations for an invasion of Rafah are taking place slowly, despite presenting its military plans to Netanyahu, who announced that he had approved them.


He added that the change in the Biden administration's policy towards Israel occurred at the end of last month, in the wake of the Rashid Street massacre, which claimed the lives of more than 115 Palestinian who were waiting for humanitarian aid. "Then Biden lost his patience, and since then bad news and insults against Netanyahu from the United States began on a daily basis."


He continued that the most prominent expression of this was issued in Washington through the announcement of the leader of the Democratic majority in the US Senate, Chuck Schumer, last week, in which he described Netanyahu as an obstacle to peace and called for new elections in Israel, while Biden described his statements as a “good speech.”


Harel described the recent American steps and statements as meaning that “the United States has given itself increased powers over Israel’s security, by insisting on the right of veto against the operations of the Israeli army.”


However, indications of this appeared at the beginning of the war, when Biden warned Iran and Israel against opening a front between them with the participation of Hezbollah, as well as through the participation of administration officials in the Israeli war cabinet meetings, during which detailed deliberations on military plans took place. “Since then, Israeli attachment to the United States has only increased, reaching a worrying degree,” according to Harel.


He added that the statements in the United States and the European Union against the invasion of Rafah "very narrow the scope of Israeli capabilities. It is possible that Netanyahu will try to cling to the obstacles placed by Biden in order to explain the reason for the delay in the invasion of Rafah."



ARAB AND WORLD

Thu 21 Mar 2024 8:53 pm - Jerusalem Time

Blinken: Any major military operation in Gaza will mean more “martyrs”

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken confirmed that any major military operation in the Gaza Strip would mean more “martyrs.”


Blinken said during a press conference held in Cairo on Thursday that there is consensus on priorities, the first of which is the need for an immediate and sustainable ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.


He added that the Hamas movement responded to the proposal that was drawn up and we are pushing to reach an agreement in Doha.


He pointed out that the United States presented a draft on Gaza to the Security Council and we look forward to its approval


Blinken stated that the people of Gaza are suffering from severe levels of food scarcity, and we must not allow this to continue.


The US Secretary of State stressed that the ceasefire is one of the ways that will lead to an increase in humanitarian aid to Gaza.


He pointed out that it is difficult to reach an agreement, but it is possible to achieve it.


Blinken explained that there are officials meeting in Cyprus today regarding the sea corridor and the temporary sea pier to deliver aid.


He pointed out that the sea pier cannot replace the opening of land crossings for aid to reach the Gaza Strip


Blinken also stressed that there should be no displacement of citizens in Gaza or occupation of any lands by the Israeli occupation army.


He revealed that the United States will hold talks next week with its Israeli counterparts to confirm that any military operation in Rafah would be a mistake.