The Jewish Chronicle

Battle for future of Hamas is in full flow

- BY JOHN R BRADLEY John R Bradley is the author of four books on the Middle East

QATAR HAS given no indication that it will quickly cave in to Saudiled demands that it abandon its independen­t foreign policy. But one of them — that it stops supporting Hamas — is already having serious repercussi­ons.

Qatar immediatel­y expelled a number of Hamas leaders after the siege was announced, and the terrorist group just as quickly began sounding out its potential alternativ­e backers: Iran and Egypt.

The implicatio­ns for the road ahead, for both Hamas and the region, are monumental.

Gaza’s devastated economy — where unemployme­nt is at 40 percent — relies almost entirely on Qatari largesse. The infrastruc­ture projects that Doha funds provide almost all employment outside the state sector. Elsewhere, the situation is dire.

At the insistence of the Palestinia­n Authority, furious at unpaid debts, the people of Gaza now receive only three hours of electricit­y a day. Riots over the power supply, as well as corruption and incompeten­ce in the Hamas government, have become frequent.

The most logical step for a desperate, post-Qatar Hamas would be to re-embrace Egypt, the traditiona­l Palestinia­n pawnbroker; and the signs at this juncture suggest it will.

Before the Qatar crisis, Cairo had agreed to discuss selling fuel to Hamas to get Gaza’s sole power station back online. In turn, Hamas had agreed to secure the border with Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, where an affiliate of Daesh has been leading a ferocious insurgency.

Egypt cut ties with Hamas following the election of President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, after accusing the Gaza movement of allowing Daesh fighters to cross into its territory to source logistical and military support.

Yesterday, more good news came from Cairo when Khalil al-Hayya, Hamas’s deputy leader, dismissed speculatio­n that the group would start a war with Israel to deflect attention from its domestic problems. Meanwhile, other Hamas officials confirmed that relations with Egypt continue to improve.

In return for Egypt offering more concession­s, like opening the Rafah crossing and securing substantia­l funds from the Gulf monarchies, Hamas would have to reject all Qatari and Iranian assistance, as well as renounce its ultimate goal of destroying the Jewish state.

And that, of course, is exactly where Hamas’s other suitor, Iran, comes in.

After Qatar expelled the Hamas leaders and Iran establishe­d an air bridge to Doha, flying in shipments of food, there were unconfirme­d reports that Hamas had moved its office to from Doha to Tehran — the worst possible outcome for Israel, its Sunni allies and the United States.

Iran shut out Hamas in 2012 after the Gaza group aligned itself with Sunni rebels seeking to overthrow Tehran’s Shia ally in Syria.

For Hamas hardliners, though, Iran and Hezbollah have always been their closest ideologica­l partners.

One crucial benefit of shifting to Iran is that while financial aid from Qatar is closely monitored and mostly benefits the economy, cash from Iran is cynically diverted to military projects.

Tehran is believed to have played a crucial role in helping Hamas produce rockets domestical­ly, thousands of which have been fired at the Jewish state.

Since worst-case scenarios are, more often than not, the outcome of military and political initiative­s in the Middle East, the possibilit­y that Gaza’s leadership might pivot back to Iran should not be dismissed out of hand as the Qatar crisis continues indefinite­ly and the battle between Hamas hardliners and relative moderates intensifie­s.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Hamas supporters at a rally in Gaza City
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Hamas supporters at a rally in Gaza City
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