Hartford Courant

Hamas still stuck in a vicious cycle

Hundreds dead after each war with Israel, but little is changed

- By Patrick Kingsley

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — At a beachfront hotel in Gaza City this fall, hundreds of Gaza civic leaders crowded into a Hamas-sponsored conference to hear claims of an imminent Hamas victory over Israel.

“The state of Israel will be history,” the conference director, Kanaan Abed, said in a speech broadcast across the strip. “Palestinia­ns outside Palestine: Prepare your papers. You will return to Palestine after the liberation.”

The reality, however, was nearly the opposite.

Seven months after Hamas launched an 11-day war with Israel, the deadlock between Israel and the Islamist movement has returned to roughly where it was before the fighting started.

Israeli strikes in May killed at least 130 civilians and up to 100 militants, and destroyed or damaged more than 1,000 homes, shops and offices in Gaza. Rockets from Hamas and its allies killed 13 people in Israel and, accidental­ly, at least 15 Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

But otherwise, not much has changed. The 14-year Israeli-egyptian blockade of Gaza is intact. The Palestinia­n leadership remains split between Gaza and the West Bank. The prospect of peace negotiatio­ns between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, moribund since 2014, is as remote as ever.

Even Hamas’ one indisputab­le gain — a bump in popularity among Palestinia­ns, burnished by starting the war in the first place — has dissipated, its poll numbers falling to nearly the same level they were early this year.

Its mantle as the leader of the armed resistance against Israel has been tarnished by rising criticism of its governance of Gaza and concerns about corruption and rampant unemployme­nt. And although the group publicly declares that it vanquished Israel during the fighting in May, it is privately pushing for piecemeal economic concession­s from Israel and has yet to obtain a reconstruc­tion deal to mend the war damage.

“Everything here is frozen, you can say — cloudy, foggy,” Ghazi Hamad, a member of the group’s political council in Gaza, said in a recent interview. “It’s not clear in which direction we are going.”

Hamas has been here before, several times.

Its previous wars with Israel — in 2008-09, 2012 and 2014 — each ended with Hamas claiming victory atop a pile of rubble and mass casualties.

Few see a way out of this cycle.

As a militant group that refuses to recognize Israel and, according to its founding charter, is committed to its destructio­n, Hamas has few other tools beyond unleashing a barrage of rockets every few years.

Israeli officials are also prepared to maintain the deadlock. They will continue to enforce the blockade to limit Hamas’ ability to restock its arsenal and rebuild its fortificat­ions, but see a strategic benefit to keeping Hamas in power.

“We don’t want to defeat Hamas,” a senior Israeli army official said. Its main rival in Gaza — a more extreme Islamist faction — “is not better than Hamas,” the official added, speaking on the condition of anonymity in accordance with Israeli protocol.

Caught in the middle, ordinary Gazans are paying the price. The unemployme­nt rate is higher than 40%. Only 10% have direct access to clean water, according to UNICEF. Complex medical procedures are often available only in Israel, which restricts entry to Gaza patients.

Most blame Israel first and foremost. Some criticize the Palestinia­n Authority, Hamas’ rival in the West Bank, for having imposed temporary salary cuts on its employees in Gaza.

But increasing­ly, Gazans also blame Hamas for exacerbati­ng conditions through nepotism, corruption and incompeten­ce, and for diverting too much money from social programs to military infrastruc­ture.

“I want work more than rockets,” said Ali el-jeredly, a jobless 28-year-old waiting to apply for a permit to work in Israel.

Hamad believes the war forced minor concession­s from Israel, and confirmed Hamas’ status as a protector of Jerusalem. But governance remains “a big, big burden,” he said. “How can we feed people? How can we lift the siege on Gaza? These are the main topics that we are thinking about all the time inside Hamas.”

While there is no question that the blockade has severely damaged Gaza’s economy, many Gazans have come to believe Hamas’ policies have made it worse.

“The first person responsibl­e for this blockade is Israel, not anyone else,” said Hassan Dawoudi, a 26-yearold dissident detained several times by Gaza security services for his views. “But Hamas has at least something to do with it.”

Israeli officials argue that Hamas has everything to do with the blockade, which was imposed after it seized control of Gaza in 2007, having refused to recognize Israel and renounce violence.

Hamas leaders still rule out those moves. Most of Gaza’s population consists of descendant­s of refugees who fled or were forced out of Israel during the 1948 war. For many, Hamas’ vow to reclaim that land still resonates.

Hamas members have continued to carry out small-scale attacks, including the killing of an Israeli tour guide in November in Jerusalem, and have encouraged unrest in the West Bank. Militants have sent several incendiary balloons and fired bullets into Israeli territory, and killed an Israeli border guard at pointblank range.

But relatively few rockets have been fired since May, and none since September, which analysts say is a signal that the group wants to avoid another major air war.

Israel has responded by enlarging Gaza’s fishing zone, allowing Gazans to export more goods and produce, and granting 10,000 work permits, the most since Hamas took power. Thousands of Gazans lined up for hours to apply.

A monthly stipend from Qatar, worth roughly $30 million and suspended during the war, was finally reinstated in full in November.

Despite the pronouncem­ents of its leadership, there are also discussion­s among some Hamas members about the need for a marginally more pragmatic approach to Israel, according to Motasem Dallal, a political analyst in Gaza.

Dallal said some younger members of Hamas privately advocated talking to Israeli officials directly.

“I don’t see that it’s not good to talk to Israel,” said Dallal, who said he is not a Hamas member but spoke regularly with its leaders.

That is a bridge too far for Hamas’ leaders.

Mahmoud al-zahar, a co-founder of the movement, said the group simply needed to wait patiently for Israel’s downfall, just as the Taliban waited two decades for U.S. forces to leave Afghanista­n.

“Once the Taliban succeeded,” al-zahar said, “the Americans escaped.”

 ?? HOSAM SALEM/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Months after Hamas launched a brief war with Israel, the deadlock between Israel and the Islamist movement is back to about where it was before the latest fighting started. Above, Palestinia­ns in Gaza City in October.
HOSAM SALEM/THE NEW YORK TIMES Months after Hamas launched a brief war with Israel, the deadlock between Israel and the Islamist movement is back to about where it was before the latest fighting started. Above, Palestinia­ns in Gaza City in October.

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