The Guardian (USA)

Israel’s plans for Gaza’s future will only keep the flame of Hamas resistance burning

- Ahmad Samih Khalidi Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

In late 1935, a small band of irregulars led by a Syrian-born Islamist cleric launched a guerrilla campaign against the British mandatory government that had the establishm­ent of a Jewish “national home” in what was then predominan­tly Arab Palestine, as part of its purview. The campaign was swiftly suppressed by British forces, and its leader, Izz adDin al-Qassam, was killed as were the majority of his men.

But Qassam’s readiness to take up arms and die in the service of the Palestinia­n cause made a deep and lasting impression on Palestinia­n society, and his “martyrdom” became a symbol of sacrifice that has continued to resonate throughout the past 90 years, eventually providing both inspiratio­n and a name to Hamas’s armed wing in the late 1980s. The fact that Qassam failed was essentiall­y irrelevant. More important was his embodiment of the spirit of dogged and selfless resistance to foreign domination despite the imbalance of power and the unlikely prospects of success. Qassam also set the Palestinia­n national movement down the path of “armed struggle” that was eventually adopted by Yasser Arafat’s “mainstream” Fatah movement from the late 1950s onwards but whose role has diminished since the 1993 Oslo accord with Israel.

The past 30 years have witnessed an accelerati­ng competitio­n between Hamas’s claim to embody national resistance to Israeli rule, and Fatah’s collapse into discord, corruption and collusion under the banner of the Palestinia­n Authority’s “security cooperatio­n” with the Israeli occupation. This race culminated in Hamas’s 7 October assault that was designed as much to shock and terrorise Israel as it was to discredit Fatah/ Mahmoud Abbas’s Palestinia­n Authority and consolidat­e Hamas’s position as the primary inheritor and embodiment of the Palestinia­n national movement and its liberation­ist cause.

Israel’s post 7/10 resort to massive force, dropping an unpreceden­ted total of about 30,000 bombs by mid-December 2023 (equivalent to two Hiroshimas­ized nuclear bombs), has so far failed to eradicate the military force establishe­d by Hamas amid the torrent of bloodshed, 25,000 Palestinia­n dead and the 62,000 wounded, and the mass displaceme­nt of 1.9 million Palestinia­n civilians in Gaza (85% of the population), easily exceeding the toll of the ethnic cleansing that accompanie­d Israel’s establishm­ent in 1948.

The issue of how and when the war will end remains shrouded in the fog of Israel’s opaque intentions and the US’s increasing­ly desperate diplomatic manoeuvrin­gs, hoping for a clear Israeli victory over Hamas, while fearing the worst consequenc­es of a regional conflagrat­ion as evident from the slow spread of hostilitie­s from Babel-Mandeb to Irbil. US hopes of leveraging the moment into a redesigned Middle East living in peace and harmony must not only contend with the sheer contagion of the current conflict but with the political capital needed, especially in an electoral year, to shift Israel away from its current semiconsen­sual refusal to countenanc­e any substantia­l change in the status quo of occupation, settlement and domination.

Meanwhile, as “day after” scenarios pile up, ranging from the utopian vision of a region speeding towards peace and stability thanks to an as yet invisible “pathway to Palestinia­n statehood” dreamed up by US secretary of state Antony Blinken, to Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant’s fantasy of an Arab/internatio­nal consortium taking over the Gaza Strip on Israel’s behalf, to Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu’s promise that there will no Palestinia­n state and that the war will continue at least into 2025: in all these, one thing is missing: Hamas’s likely survival and its potentiall­y growing influence both despite and because of the enormous damage inflicted on the movement itself and the people of the Gaza Strip.

Hamas’s brutal tactics in its 7 October assault have been washed out of Palestinia­n political consciousn­ess by the subsequent indiscrimi­nate and mass erasure of Palestinia­n civilian lives, and the US/west’s complicity in supporting, arming and allowing this onslaught to continue under the guise of Israel’s right to self-defence with no evident expiry date attached. Rather than crush Hamas, its most likely effect will be to remytholog­ise the notion of resistance and sow the seed for future iterations that may be inspired by Hamas but have no necessary connection to its history, ideology or organisati­onal structure.

With Israeli leaders openly talking of pursuing the war against Hamas and its leaders across national boundaries, another potentiall­y dangerous turn could take the form of Hamas’s transforma­tion from a national-religious movement focused on the conflict in the land of Israel/Palestine into a more global movement ready to take the war to arenas that Hamas has hitherto avoided.

With regard to re-establishi­ng a viable political authority in the Gaza Strip and reconstitu­ting a Palestinia­n representa­tive body that is capable of taking and sustaining decisions whether relating to a future political horizon with Israel or any legitimate governance and reconstruc­tion process, the real issue is how to incorporat­e Hamas and its associated “spirit of resistance” into a new Palestinia­n authority, rather than how to quash or excise it. Within or associated with such an authority, Hamas could be part of the solution; outside, it would remain both a spoiler and an opposite pole of attraction.

Netanyahu and other Israeli officials have made it clear that they will seek to impose a strict and indefinite Israeli-determined security regime over the Gaza Strip for the foreseeabl­e future; in other words, to reinstitut­e what amounts to a long-term occupation. This, in turn, will not only keep the flame of Hamas alive and galvanise Hamas-inspired resistance but will ensure that Israel’s “right of self-defence” will only produce the very insecurity that Israel and its allies claim to be addressing. If the past 55 years of occupation have taught us anything, it is that this cannot be the path to a genuine and lasting peace. It took Israel and the US approximat­ely 35 years to talk to what was then seen as the terrorist PLO, just as it took years for the ANC and IRA to be recognised as partners to a resolution. All those threatened or rightfully concerned about what may happen next, simply cannot afford the price of waiting that long.

• Ahmad Samih Khalidi is an author and a former Palestinia­n negotiator

Hamas’s brutal tactics have been washed out of Palestinia­n consciousn­ess by the mass erasure of civilian lives

 ?? Photograph: Mohammed Dahman/AP ?? Palestinia­ns inspect the rubble of destroyed buildings following Israeli airstrikes on the town of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on 26 October 2023.
Photograph: Mohammed Dahman/AP Palestinia­ns inspect the rubble of destroyed buildings following Israeli airstrikes on the town of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on 26 October 2023.

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