Calgary Herald

Israel fears new uprising in Gaza

- JOSEF FEDERMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JERUSALEM

The rising confidence and bellicosit­y of Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, combined with rapidly deteriorat­ing relations with Israel’s would-be peace partner in the West Bank, are raising jitters in Israel that a new Palestinia­n uprising could be near.

A number of prominent voices urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday to take steps to ease the tensions and bolster the Western-backed Palestinia­n president, Mahmoud Abbas. Netanyahu’s political rival, former prime minister Ehud Olmert, warned that renewed violence might not be “far off.”

But the Israeli leader stood firm. Poised for reelection, it appears unlikely he will float a bold new initiative anytime soon. “We ... have no illusions. We want a true peace with our neighbours. But we will not close our eyes,” Netanyahu told his cabinet.

Over the past month, Netanyahu has taken a series of steps that appear to have unintentio­nally emboldened the rival Palestinia­n leadership­s in Gaza and the West Bank.

Last month, Israel carried out an eight-day military offensive in Gaza in response to months of intensifyi­ng rocket fire from the Hamasruled territory.

Although Israel claimed to inflict heavy damage, the operation failed to halt the rocket fire before an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire took hold and Hamas emerged intact. Hamas has claimed victory, won new-found recognitio­n across the Middle East and boosted its popularity with the Palestinia­n public.

Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Gaza over the weekend to welcome the movement’s exiled leader, Khaled Mashaal, as the Islamic militant group celebrated its 25th anniversar­y with rallies, speeches and displays of weapons.

It was the first time Mashaal has ever been to Gaza, and his presence in the territory was a reflection of the group’s rising clout. Mashaal, who survived an Israeli assassinat­ion attempt in 1997, is now confident enough to enter Gaza and walk around in public, thanks to his group’s warm relations with the new Muslim Brotherhoo­d-dominated regime in Egypt.

Mashaal, known as a relative pragmatist inside the movement, showed no signs of moderation during the three-day visit. In speech after speech, Mashaal praised Hamas fighters for standing up to Israel and repeated the movement’s original goal of wiping Israel off the map.

“God willing, we shall liberate Palestine together, inch by inch,” Mashaal told university students Sunday, referring to the West Bank, Gaza, Jerusalem and Israel. “We started this path and we are going to continue until we achieve what God has promised.”

Hamas seized control of Gaza in mid-2007, ousting forces loyal to Abbas. Repeated attempts at reconcilia­tion have failed.

The Palestinia­n rift has pushed Abbas into an uneasy alliance with Israel, with both sides united in their opposition to Hamas. But Israel’s ties with Abbas have also frayed as peace efforts remained frozen. Abbas and Netanyahu blame each other for the deadlock.

Fed up with the impasse, Abbas last month won UN recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n state in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, territorie­s captured by Israel in 1967.

While the move did not change the situation on the ground, it was seen as an internatio­nal endorsemen­t of the Palestinia­n position on future borders with Israel.

It also amounted to internatio­nal rejection of Israeli settlement building in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Netanyahu responded by announcing plans to build thousands of new settlement homes, sparking fierce internatio­nal condemnati­ons.

The tensions further escalated over the weekend when a Palestinia­n security officer briefly scuffled with Israeli troops in the West Bank city of Hebron. The incident quickly attracted about 250 Palestinia­n protesters. A second clash developed elsewhere in the West Bank.

Speaking at a business conference, President Shimon Peres, a Nobel peace laureate, said the events in Gaza over the weekend showed that Abbas is a peaceful and desirable alternativ­e to Hamas.

“We have two clear choices, nobody is perfect but one is right and the other is wrong. We have to choose between Mashaal and Abbas,” Peres said.

Olmert, speaking at the same conference, accused Netanyahu of underminin­g moderate Palestinia­n elements.

“We methodical­ly hurt the ones who do want peace. We help raise the radical elements instead. The result of this policy could be the collapse of the Palestinia­n Authority government very rapidly, which would create the worst intifada we’ve seen thus far. We are not far from it,” Olmert warned.

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