Pressure on Qatar to expel Hamas
American pressure on Qatar to expel the Hamas leadership is mounting as the Gulf state's mediation of another ceasefire collapsed.
The Biden administration blames Hamas for the failure of ceasefire talks and the situation raises questions about where the terror group may relocate and what the implications of a move would mean for the region, ANI reported.
“Hamas knows that the Qataris do not tolerate [Yahya] Sinwar, but they would like to see [Khaled] Mashaal and [Musa] Abu Marzouk take over the organization in the future,” a Palestinian source told The Press Service of Israel.
The Qataris are currently defying the Biden administration, stressing that they have been hosting Hamas for more than a decade at Washington's request.
The Arab Spring in 2011 heightened concerns in the United States that Hamas would align itself with Iran. Thus, the US encouraged Qatar to establish communication channels with Hamas, a relationship Qatar claims persists to this day. The terror group moved to Qatar in 2012 when it was expelled from Syria for supporting Syrian rebels. Hamas also opened offices in Turkey, where the terror group is ideologically close to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the ruling AK Party.
Qatar, with its close ties to various factions, including Hamas, became a suitable intermediary.
But sanctions have already been imposed on senior Hamas officials residing in Qatar and the Biden administration no longer considers the situation tenable.
So if Hamas is forced to leave Qatar, Turkey emerges as a likely destination.