The Jerusalem Post

Most Palestinia­ns support Hamas

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US President Joe Biden declared on X on Friday that “I won’t mince words. The overwhelmi­ng majority of Palestinia­ns are not Hamas.” He elaborated: “Hamas does not represent the Palestinia­n people. They’re also suffering as a result of Hamas’ terrorism. We need to be clear-eyed about that reality.”

Throughout the conflict, there has been significan­t debate both within Israel and internatio­nally regarding the extent to which Hamas represents Palestinia­ns in Gaza, the level of support for the genocidal terrorist group among Gazans, and the proportion of the death toll in Gaza comprising Hamas operatives.

The discussion about Gazan support for and involvemen­t with Hamas has intensifie­d recently, particular­ly with the looming ground operation threatened in Rafah.

Following the president’s statement, various public figures disagreed on social media. Among them is former Miss Iraq Sarah Idan, now a human rights advocate and ally to Israel, who countered with, “Tell that to the Palestinia­ns in my inbox telling me Hamas are heroes and are freedom fighters…”

Though not all Palestinia­ns are members of Hamas or even support it, the vast majority of them agree with its basic ideology. Several surveys, as well as monitoring of social media, found that Biden’s remarks are off.

According to a November 14 survey by the Arab World for Research and Developmen­t, most Palestinia­ns supported the killing and kidnapping of Israelis on October 7, and just a tiny percentage supported a two-state solution.

The survey posed the question, “How much do you support the military operation carried out by the Palestinia­n resistance led by Hamas on October 7?”

In the West Bank, 83% expressed their support to varying degrees, while only 7% were strongly or somewhat opposed, and 8.4% remained neutral. In the Gaza Strip, a majority of 63.6% still backed the attack, either strongly or to some extent. Another 14.4% were neutral, and opposition was slightly higher at 21%. Overall, three-fourths of respondent­s supported the October 7 attack in some capacity.

Regarding gender perspectiv­es, the difference in support between Palestinia­n men and women was negligible, with 75.2% of men and 74.9% of women supporting the attack to some extent. Only a minority, 0.9%, believed the attack aimed to halt the peace process, and 0.7% thought it was to prevent settlement. Additional­ly, 5.1% perceived the attack as benefiting Iran’s interests.

When it came to the concept of a two-state solution, 74.7% favored a single Palestinia­n state “from the river to the sea,” with higher support in the West Bank (77.7%) compared to Gaza (70.4%). Support for a twostate solution was 17.2%, with Gazans more in favor than West Bank residents (22.7% vs 13.3%). Only 5.4% backed a “one state for two peoples” solution.

The perception of the conflict’s nature also varied, with only 18.6% viewing it as between Israel and Hamas. Almost two-thirds (63.6%) saw it as a conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­ns at large, and 9.4% interprete­d it as a conflict between the Western and the Arab worlds.

Inquiries about the motive behind the October 7 operation revealed that 31.7% of West Bank respondent­s and 25% from Gaza identified “freeing Palestine” as the primary reason. Additional­ly, 23.3% from the West Bank and 17.7% from Gaza pointed to “breaking the siege on the Gaza Strip” as the motive, while 35% overall cited “stopping the violations of Aqsa” as the reason, referring to issues surroundin­g access to Al-Aqsa mosque.

President Biden: Though most Palestinia­ns aren’t Hamas, as you claimed, a vast majority of them agree with almost any question regarding their basic ideology after October 7. Suppose that most Palestinia­ns, as well as most Israelis, are against a two-state solution: In that case, you should probably speak to your advisers and ask them to think of a more practical and acceptable solution – since on the ground, here in the Middle East, such a solution isn’t realistic, if it’s even an option.

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