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  "PRAGMATIC HAMAS" -- NOT VERY LIKELY

By GERALD M. STEINBERG



Twenty years ago, they told us that Arafat and PLO were becoming pragmatic, and were ready to give up terror and make peace with Israel. It turned out that these hopeful predictions were wrong, but the same people are now appearing on radio and television, to declare that the leaders of Hamas will form a pragmatic Palestinian government. The odds that they will get this one right are not very high. Their optimism is based on the theory that when members of terrorist, liberation or revolutionary groups gain political power, they are forced to deal with the realities of the governing process. According to this model, the need to provide jobs, housing, health and education, and security will also require cooperation with enemies and neighbors, including Israel. This cooperation, in turn, is supposed to foster ideological moderation, and a transition from violence to peaceful coexistence. But like many appealing diplomatic theories, this one has a poor track record in the real world, particularly in the case of radical Islamist groups, such as Hamas. In Afghanistan, when the Taliban took power after decades of warfare and terror, the extremist mullahs were expected to become pragmatic. But instead of moderation, they converted their power into a reign of terror used to impose the most extreme form of Islam on the entire population.

The Taliban leaders never bought into the concepts of responsible government. And social services health, education and economic development were not high on their list of priorities. And instead of cooperation with the West, Mullah Omar and the rest of the Taliban leadership used their control over Afghanistan to provide Osama bin Laden with a safe haven and a base for operations. The same theory has been used to predict the transformation of Hizbullah from a Iranian-linked Shi'ite terror group focused on attacking Israeli and Western targets into a political party focusing on internal Lebanese issues. But in this case as well, the hard evidence has proven stronger than the soft theory, at least in the five years since the Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon. Instead of ending its terror activities and investing more in social services, Hizbullah engaged in kidnapping Israeli soldiers, the deployment of 12,000 rockets, and in providing direct support for Palestinian terror attacks. So while Hizbullah pursues political power in Lebanon in parallel with terrorism, the declarations of leaders such as Hassan Nasrallah, rejecting all disarmament proposals, appear entirely credible. In the face of repeated failures, what accounts for the persistence of diplomacy based on wishful thinking, and the artificial dichotomy between political power and the use of terror? In part, it is what academics (realists, at least) refer to as "mirror imaging," in which Western diplomats project their own pragmatism and compromise onto leaders of terror groups from other cultures. The West has adopted an idealism that reflects its own history, including the tolerance resulting from the Enlightenment, and centuries of devastating religious and ideological warfare. But from this specific experience, the intellectual and political trend-setters have attempted to universalize the process. Europeans, in particular, place themselves at the vanguard of a universal process in which religion, ideology and nationalism have lost their power of persuasion. In the place of these dark forces of primitive human nature, Europeans see pragmatism, tolerance, reconciliation and compromise as being on the ascendant. So to gain aid, access and weapons, "revolutionary" leaders tell Westerners what they want to hear that they, too, share these goals. These factors helped push the Middle East "peace process" beginning with the secret Oslo talks and ending in disaster. Here too, wishful thinking presented an image of Yasser Arafat having made the transition from terrorist leader to pragmatic statesman seeking the best for his people. The mountain of evidence demonstrating that Arafat remained stuck in 1947 rejectionism was overlooked it was inconsistent with the messianism of instant peace.

Now, many of the same people who enthusiastically promoted Oslo are pushing for a political dialogue with Hamas, assuming that this group will take power from the corrupt and ineffectual Fatah faction. At the same time, Hamas is still planning terror attacks and continuing in its rejection of the legitimacy of Israel, regardless of borders. As in Arafat's case, Hamas leaders might reasonably conclude that they can receive recognition and control of the aid funds for the Palestinian Authority without disarming or halting their "armed struggle." If European and American statements about pragmatism and peace are more than empty rhetoric, they will have to link any further aid to the Palestinian Authority to ending terror and incitement. More broadly, the time has come for Europe and America to learn from the experience in Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq and with Hizbollah, and check their theories, based largely on wishful thinking, against the realities of the Middle East. Perhaps Hamas break the mold, and act like a European political party instead of a terrorist group, but at this stage, this is only wishful thinking. And such thin hopes are no substitute for realistic policies in response to the new realities in the Palestinian Authority, and the rise of Islamist extremism.

The writer heads the Program on Conflict Management at Bar Ilan University  and is the editor of NGO Monitor
 

 

 

 

Hamas Topples Fateh: Human Rights to Face a New Challenge

As the world reels from the shock of Hamas' victory over Fateh, human rights policy in Palestine has arrived at a pivotal juncture. For the first time in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Palestinian Authority must navigate a democratic transfer of power. Election observers from around the world were impressed by the organization of the election, which was fair and democratic and boasted a 77.69% voter turnout. Now, Fateh must relinquish control of the PLC to the victors in a more difficult test of democratic verity.  Hamas has shown positive signs in conducting a smooth transfer of power, moderating its platform and offering to partner with Fatah in the new government. However, on Thursday Fatah negotiator Saeb Erekat spoke for Fatah, announcing that Fatah would not cooperate with the new government. Also on Thursday, an exchange at the Palestinian legislative building was the first violent clash between the two parties. Hamas supporters tried to attach their party flag to the building, and when Fateh supporters tried to prevent the action, the two groups threw rocks at each other and fought in the street. On Friday, Fateh demonstrations in Gaza escalated to violence and calls for the expulsion of Abu Mazen from the country. The election results and the resulting events will have two main implications for human rights. First, Hamas' win will reveal their true commitment to change and reform. Having been elected by virtue of the Oslo agreements, if Hamas wants to accept its win it will also have to accept the precepts of Oslo, namely the recognition of Israel. As for Fateh, which has already accepted the terms of Oslo, the indignation of its loss will have to be tempered into a working cooperation with its democratically elected partner. Violence and further human rights violations by Fateh will only hasten the demise of human rights standards in Palestine. For both parties, the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group requests their commitment to not only Oslo, but to International Humanitarian Law as well. For Hamas, this means making clear their intent to enforce human rights and the rule of democracy, which handed them Wednesday's election victory. For Fatah, this means honoring the election results and partnering with Hamas in the new parliament. Human rights already suffers under the Israeli Occupation, and can no longer afford to suffer under the elected government of the Palestinian Authority.   Issued by PHRMG Public Relations Officer