
If Israel and its Western
allies break Hamas, they will face an even deadlier foe By Johann Hari
www.johannhari.com
These crazed young men - the 'troops' of Islamic
Jihad - are the children of the first Intifada
It took a very long time to rouse the Palestinians to
violence and produce these pathologies.
Published: 18 December 2006
I am sitting in a poky bedroom somewhere in Gaza City
- I'm not allowed to know where - and opposite me is a
huge beaming picture of Osama bin Laden, with the smoke
from a burning World Trade Centre forming a black halo
around his head. He is surrounded by a gaggle of jihadi
angels: some Chechen fighters, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and
our own Tube bomber, the Yorkshireman Mohammed Sidique
Khan. "Would you like to see our weapons?" a
masked jihadi says cheerfully, before thrusting a grenade
into my hand.
I have come to see what Israel will confront in a
generation if - as now looks certain after this weekend -
they never, ever deal with the democratically elected
Hamas government, but instead resolve to break it.
Coining one of the dullest clichés about the Middle
East, Abba Eban, one of Israel's longest-serving foreign
ministers, famously claimed that "the Palestinians
never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity".
Precisely the opposite is the case. As the Fatah
President, Abu Mazen, tried desperately this Saturday to
dislodge Hamas by calling for early elections, we need to
remember a stark truth. Every time the Israeli government
rejects a Palestinian leader because he is too hard-line,
they do not get a cuddly Gandhian moderate in his place.
They get somebody more hard-line still.
Yasser Arafat endorsed a two-state solution, but
couldn't accept a forever-and-always string of Bantustans
bisected by Israeli settler-only roads as his half of the
deal - so they rocketed and shelled the old man's
compound until he died. Many Israelis now look back on
Arafat with near-nostalgia. Today the Hamas Prime
Minister, Ismail Haniyeh, says he can never accept
Israel's existence. But he is offering a 40-year-long
hudna (ceasefire) - provided Israel withdraws to the
internationally recognised 1967 borders, as they should
anyway under international law.
Haniyeh is offering to kick all the tough issues down
the road until 2046, and build two peacefully co-existing
states, with no mutual violence. His track record of
keeping his word on ceasefires is strong: in the current
short hudna, Hamas has held its fire even as Fatah fires
a few Qassam missiles.
But the governments of America, Europe and Israel are
snubbing this deal too. They say Haniyeh has to recognise
Israel totally, and today. Until he does, his people will
be "put on a diet", in the words of one Israeli
government adviser. I have seen what this means:
hospitals shut and shuttered across the West Bank, with
women left to give birth at home like pre-modern
peasants. The yellowish hue of malnutrition on children's
faces. The empty and echoing schools.
Tony Blair has been at the forefront of this programme
to force Hamas to concede, and is in the Middle East to
promote it further. For him, the onus is on the
Palestinians living under military occupation to justify
why they should be freed - rather than on the people who
have been oppressing them on their own land for 39 years
to explain why it should continue.
The result of breaking the democratic will of the
Palestinian people will not be greater softness on their
part. No. It will create more men like Abu Ahmad (a nom
de guerre), who I sat with last week in the shadow of Bin
Laden in a corner of Gaza.
"I want to kill and kill and kill again. I want
to be a killing machine until, inshallah [God willing], I
become a martyr," he said, staring at me intensely.
He is 27 - my age - and murderous. He has just described
how he slashed the throats of four female Israeli
soldiers in an illegal settlement in 2002, and he
chuckled as he described how they cried for their
mothers. "All the Jews have to be killed," he
says. The children? The women? "I prefer to kill
soldiers, but they must all be killed in time. Soldiers
first." The Holocaust did not happen, he says,
"but it should have".
These crazed young men - the "troops" of
Islamic Jihad - are the children of the first Intifada.
They saw their parents peacefully protest, and the
Israeli troops be ordered to "break their
bones" as punishment. Abu Hamza, a sober, severe
26-year-old, explained he first joined Islamic Jihad when
he was 10 - a year after he took his first Israeli bullet
in the skull. He had been throwing stones and setting
fire to old tyres in the street when it happened, and he
became a local celebrity as the first child victim of the
violence. "I was so proud," he said. He invited
me to feel the scar on the back of his head.
"Yes," he said with a smile, "we have been
growing in popularity over the past few years. Very
much."
All over Gaza and the West Bank, the assault on Hamas
is creating groups like this to their right, deranged
little pockets that will swell if Hamas is totally
humiliated. At the moment, they are small, speaking - as
Hamas did a generation ago - for only a small fraction of
Palestinians. But for how long?
Last week I tried to trace the footsteps of a new
streak of Islamist fanaticism that has jutted suddenly
into Gaza over the past month. A group calling itself
Swords of Islam has started blowing up internet cafés -
a symbol of extra-Koranic knowledge and cosmopolitan
connection to the world. They have issued Talibanist
threats warning that women who do not wear the hijab will
be "burned", and that the internet is a
"Zionist plot" to keep people away from
"their religious duties".
In a bombed-out café named Montada Donajoun in the
Jaballiya refugee camp, I spoke to the terrified owner.
Basa Abu-Jased, 29, said, "Of course women are
frightened now. [Even as a man] I am really frightened! I
used to sit on the street and talk to women. Now I won't
do it. You don't know what's going to happen."
Almost everybody on the street was too frightened to
speculate about who these people were; one woman
suggested they were "maniacs who had returned from
fighting in Iraq", but then hurried away.
It took a very long time to rouse the Palestinians to
violence and produce these pathologies. Between 1967 and
1982 - as 200,000 Palestinians were expelled and more
than one-third of their remaining land was stolen by
fanatical settlers - just 282 Israelis were killed by
Palestinians. But Israeli policies have virtually
guaranteed a tip towards great violence and forms of
madness. Every time the Palestinians have peacefully
protested or negotiated, they have been choked further.
There is still - still - a majority in Palestine for
peaceful coexistence with Israel, with 67 per cent
supporting the Hamas proposal for a 40-year hudna. But if
their democratic will is treated with contempt by
humiliating Hamas, this historical window will close.
Every year the occupation goes on, more deranged people
like Abu Ahmad are smelted. "I love Osama bin
Laden," he said to me as we parted, slapping me on
the back. "I love killing."
j.hari@
independent.co.uk
The following day the Independent ran this (excerpt):
The man considered to be al-Qa'ida's number two has
criticised Hamas for entering the political process.
In a video messagebroadcast by the Arabic language
channel Al Jazeera, Ayman al-Zawahiri said that voting
would lead to the Palestinians' land being taken by
Israel. "Any road other than jihad will only lead to
loss," he said. "Those trying to liberate the
land of Islam through elections based on secular
constitutions or on decisions to surrender Palestine to
the Jews will not liberate a grain of sand of
Palestine."
His message referred to several recent developments,
including the stalled talks on forming a national unity
government between the ruling Islamist movement, Hamas,
and the Fatah faction of the Palestinian President,
Mahmoud Abbas.
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