Marin Independent Journal

Strain of Gaza warfare snaps critical back channel

- By Patrick Kingsley

JERUSALEM >> For 17 years, on and off, two men maintained a secret line of communicat­ion between Israel and Hamas, the armed Palestinia­n group that opposes Israel's existence.

Starting in 2006, Gershon Baskin, an Israeli peace activist based in Jerusalem, and Ghazi Hamad, a senior Hamas official in the Gaza Strip, nurtured an informal back channel between officials in Jerusalem and in Gaza, even as each side refused to engage with the other directly.

The men's relationsh­ip survived countless rounds of violence between Israel and Hamas, and helped end several of them.

Even after Oct. 7, when Hamas and its allies raided Israel, killed an estimated 1,200 people and kidnapped roughly 240 others, according to Israeli officials, Baskin and Hamad kept in contact, including discussing a deal to release some hostages. As Israeli warplanes pounded Hamas-controlled Gaza, killing more than 10,000 Palestinia­ns according to Gaza's health authoritie­s, their unlikely relationsh­ip endured. Then, somethin snapped. The impact of the Hamasled attack has shattered the idea that the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict could be perpetuall­y contained without being resolved. It has since displaced more than 1.5 million, mostly in Gaza, and brought the Middle East to the brink of a regional war.

And one of its more intimate consequenc­es has been the falling out between Baskin and Hamad.

On Oct. 24, Hamad began publicly justifying Hamas' assault and calling for additional attacks. “The existence of Israel is what causes all that pain, blood and tears. It is Israel, not us,” he said in a televised interview, adding, “Everything we do is justified.”

A week later, Baskin

watched the interview, aghast.

“I think you have lost your mind and you have lost your moral code,” he wrote in a text message to Hamad that Baskin later showed to The New York Times.

“I never want to speak to you again,” Baskin added.

Throughout their relationsh­ip, a long-term truce, if not a lasting peace, between Israel and Hamas seemed plausible; it was an idea that the two had personally discussed.

Not anymore.

On Oct. 24, Hamad, once considered a Hamas moderate, said he wanted to annihilate Israel. And Baskin, a leftist, has joined the Israeli mainstream in calling for the removal of Hamas.

“In my mind, they can no longer exist as a government next to Israel,” Baskin said in an interview.

“His stance has changed,” Hamad said in a separate interview. And, Hamad added, “He sensed how I changed.”

The two men first encountere­d each other in July 2006, during one of the first full-scale conflicts between Hamas and Israel. Hamas

had captured an Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, prompting Israel to invade the territory.

Seeking to negotiate a cease-fire but unable to call Israeli leaders directly, a Hamas spokespers­on instead phoned a well-known Israeli peace activist.

The spokespers­on was Hamad. The activist was Baskin. And Hamad immediatel­y charmed Baskin by declining to speak in Arabic or English.

“I like to speak Hebrew,” Hamad said, by Baskin's recollecti­on.

It was an early flash of common ground between two men from markedly different background­s.

Baskin was born in 1956 to a Jewish family in New York. He studied Middle Eastern politics and history at New York University before emigrating to Israel in 1978.

Hamad was born in 1964 in southern Gaza and had no meaningful contact with Israelis as a child, even after Israel captured Gaza during the Arab-Israeli war of 1967.

Hamad trained as a vet in Sudan before joining Hamas

in 1987, the year the group was founded, according to an interview with Hamad that Baskin published in his book, “The Negotiator.” In 1989, Hamad was arrested for his Hamas activism and spent five years in an Israeli prison.

As both men matured, they each developed an aptitude for mediation.

After arriving in Israel, Baskin worked as a community organizer in an Arab village. Then he began a career fostering relations between Arabs and Jews, running a research group that promoted solutions to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and sometimes acting as a formal mediator.

While in prison, Hamad got to know Israelis for the first time. He learned Hebrew and English, and became a spokespers­on for inmates in their dealings with prison authoritie­s.

After his release, Hamad wrote for and edited several Hamas-run newspapers, earning a reputation as a moderate who encouraged Palestinia­n introspect­ion and occasional­ly criticized Palestinia­n violence.

“I'm not interested in discussing the ugliness and brutality of the occupation, because it is not a secret,” Hamad wrote in an opinion article in 2006. “Instead, I prefer self-criticism and selfevalua­tion. We're used to blaming our mistakes on others.”

The lives of Hamad and Baskin became entwined with the fate of Shalit, the captured Israeli soldier.

After their first phone call in July 2006, Hamad and Baskin began to phone and text each other regularly, sometimes several times a day.

Baskin wanted to save Shalit's life. As a Hamas loyalist, Hamad wanted to exchange Shalit for hundreds of Palestinia­ns jailed by Israel.

Although Hamad never said so publicly, Baskin also believed that Hamad privately hoped to help Shalit, a 19-year-old conscript. More generally, Baskin believed that Hamad secretly sought a peace deal with Israel.

“I am quite sure that if Ghazi were a much more senior leader in Hamas, he would move toward eventually recognizin­g Israel and peace,” Baskin wrote in his book in 2013.

Whether or not Baskin correctly understood Hamad's motivation­s, the two men quickly establishe­d an unlikely rapport, one that was strengthen­ed through years of intense contact but tested by the frequent violence between their two peoples.

“Gershon, u r good friend,” Hamad said during another round of violence, in a text that Baskin printed in his book. “But I'm very sad and upset & sometimes feeling have no words to say.”

Years passed. Hamas took full control of Gaza in 2007, ousting another Palestinia­n faction. Israel and Egypt placed the enclave under a blockade.

Finally, five years and four months after Shalit was captured, their back channel bore fruit.

Shalit was released in October 2011, in exchange for more than 1,000 Palestinia­n prisoners.

The final deal was overseen by David Meidan, a senior Israeli intelligen­ce officer. But according to Meidan, it would not have been possible without the years of conversati­ons between Baskin and Hamad.

“The key word is trust,” Meidan said in an interview. “They had trust between them. Ghazi Hamad trusted Gershon.”

Even after Oct. 7, the two men talked, discussing the fate of the hostages Hamas had abducted that day.

But something had changed, Baskin said.

Once capable of criticizin­g Hamas, Hamad now seemed in denial about the extent of the group's atrocities, Baskin said.

By Oct. 22, Hamad had begun to publicly describe the attacks as a natural response to Israeli aggression.

“What do you expect the Palestinia­ns to do?” Hamad asked in an interview with the Times that day, reeling off a list of actions taken by Israel — including its continued occupation of the West Bank — that he said justified Hamas' violence.

Asked whether he feared that his attitude might cost him his relationsh­ip with Baskin, Hamad appeared to stumble momentaril­y.

“Say again?” he said at the mention of Baskin. “What?”

Then he regained his composure — and doubled down.

Within a week, Hamad had called for Israel's annihilati­on and Baskin had ended their relationsh­ip.

 ?? SHAWN BALDWIN — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Thousands of Hamas supporters celebrate the group's victory in a Gaza election in 2006. Until last month, Gershon Baskin, an Israeli peace activist, and Ghazi Hamad, a Hamas official, maintained a secret line of communicat­ion between Israel and Gaza.
SHAWN BALDWIN — THE NEW YORK TIMES Thousands of Hamas supporters celebrate the group's victory in a Gaza election in 2006. Until last month, Gershon Baskin, an Israeli peace activist, and Ghazi Hamad, a Hamas official, maintained a secret line of communicat­ion between Israel and Gaza.
 ?? ?? Hamad
Hamad
 ?? ?? Baskin
Baskin

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