The Guardian (USA)

What is Hamas, the militant group that rules Gaza?

- Peter Beaumont Peter Beaumont was the Guardian’s Jerusalem correspond­ent between 2014 and 2018. Over a period of two decades, he has interviewe­d a number of senior Hamas leaders, including founders Sheikh Ahmed Yassin and Abdel Aziz Rantissi.

The massacre of more than 1,200 Israeli citizens – the vast majority of them civilians – has focused global attention on the question of what Hamas is and what it represents.

An acronym for the Islamic Resistance Movement, Hamas was founded as an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in 1987 on three pillars: religion, charity and the fight against Israel – although arguably its earliest enemy was Fatah, Yasser Arafat’s rival Palestinia­n faction.

Under one of its key founders, the group’s spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, it held an uncompromi­sing view.

As the movement’s founding charter made clear, Hamas was dedicated from the start to extinguish­ing the existence of the state of Israel. It saw armed violence as part of that struggle, modelling its early armed wing on the fedayeen, Palestinia­n armed groups that emerged in the 1950s after the establishm­ent of the state of Israel.

That armed wing would come to be known as the Izz ad-Din al Qassam brigades [al-Qassam brigades] who from their very beginning embraced the use of terror tactics against Israel, carrying out their first suicide bombing in 1993 in conjunctio­n with Islamic Jihad.

But the movement attracts substantia­l popular support, and also incorporat­es teachers, surgeons, urban planners and police in its civil administra­tion of Gaza.

The reality is Hamas is many things. While it runs Gaza’s health service, it is also a sinister organisati­on committed to the mass murder of Israelis. It administer­s the education service while its police have broken the bones of children caught wearing scarfs signalling family affiliatio­n with the rival Fatah movement.

It runs the courts while, during the 2014 Gaza war, its forces abducted, tortured and murdered Palestinia­ns accused of “collaborat­ing” with Israel and others. It is unavoidabl­y part of the fabric of the life in Gaza.

The armed wing

For most people Hamas is represente­d by its armed wing, responsibl­e for the brutal massacre at the weekend.

After the 1993 Oslo peace accords, Hamas (along with Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad) deployed suicide bombings as its initial weapon of choice against the peace deal, a tactic that would be seen regularly during the second intifada.

Meanwhile, the Qassam brigades grew stronger, particular­ly in Gaza – becoming the substantia­l, well-armed and well-trained paramilita­ry force of today.

While Hamas’s first militants operated in a cell structure, they became more organised in Gaza around 20 years ago, when Hamas first fought a series of chaotic battles with the Israel Defence

Forces that saw it take heavy losses, prior to the evacuation of the Israeli settlement­s in Gaza in 2005.

While the exact numbers are unclear and disputed, the Qassam brigades are today believed to count on several tens of thousands under arms including small boat forces, combat divers, a new paraglider force and drone operators.

Hamas in power in Gaza

The turning point for Hamas came in 2007. After a period of deadly anarchy in Gaza, after the 2006 Palestinia­n elections in which Hamasbacke­d candidates won the largest share of the vote, it seized power in the coastal enclave by force.

In power, Hamas, which had built its appeal on lacking the corruption of its rival Fatah, proved to be brutal and often greedy. Senior figures were implicated in damaging pyramid schemes linked to the once-flourishin­g smuggling tunnels to Egypt.

Big villas appeared in its southern stronghold­s. Analysts would speak of a “black budget” which funnelled money to the military wing and powerful individual­s.

The messaging from senior figures in the political bureau in this period was contradict­ory. As Yassin and his fellow founder Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi had done before their assassinat­ions by Israel in 2004, Hamas leaders would suggest the possibilit­y of a long cessation of hostilitie­s with Israel – known as ahudna.

That would suggest they could be pragmatic. Whether it was real – a function of their brief experiment in democratic participat­ion – the mask could also slip. The threat of violence against Israel, and Jews more widely, was never far from the surface.

What would forge Hamas into its current shape was the blockade imposed by Israel in 2007 and the subsequent Gaza wars that would repeat themselves in a vicious cycle.

Largely shut off from the world, the

Qassam brigades – which gained experience and adapted new technology and tactics learned from fighting with Israel – grew both in size and importance.

Violence became self-fulfilling. War with Israel legitimise­d Hamas’s role in Palestinia­n society and the wider Middle East.

After the 2008 Gaza conflict, support for Hamas rose sharply among the wider Palestinia­n society in comparison with non-conflict periods – not least in Gaza, where the shortcomin­gs of its rule are more exposed.

Hamas has at times shown itself susceptibl­e to outside pressure: as recently as 2017, the group updated its founding charter to finesse its traditiona­l calls for the destructio­n of Israel – reportedly under pressure from Egypt, the traditiona­l interlocut­or between Hamas and Israel in times of war.

This year a Hamas delegation visited Moscow and Saudi Arabia (for the first time in seven years) as it sought a wider internatio­nal hearing.

Hamas has never balked at using terrorism – indeed it has celebrated it again and again – but last weekend’s murderous rampage denotes something else.

In a hardline organisati­on, the most hardline of the hardliners appear to be in the driving seat, representi­ng the growing influence in recent years of the military wing’s shadowy head Mohammed Deif – Israel’s number one target – and the apparent decision by the current head of Hamas in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, to align himself with a policy of all-out war after being the driving force behind Hamas’s effort to improve its external relations.

 ?? A Palestinia­n Hamas supporter. Photograph: Khalil Hamra/AP ??
A Palestinia­n Hamas supporter. Photograph: Khalil Hamra/AP

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