2006-04-07—Hamas reassessment |
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to reassess the realities? jewishsightseeing.com, April 7, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM—Is Hamas starting to whisper
"uncle?"
Its situation is not enviable. The cash box is
empty, according to its own financial officials. The bloated
rolls of Palestine Authority functionaries have not been paid
in more than a month, even while armed gangs attack
headquarters and demand being hired as security personnel
as the price of peace. American, Canadian, and European
governments have turned off the taps that had supplied much of
the Authority's money. Israel is not transferring the taxes
collected for goods to be shipped to Palestine that arrive at
Israeli ports. There is not much being shipped to Palestine in
any case, insofar as the border crossings have been closed
more often than open. Foreign money is promised to
non-governmental social service organizations not controlled
by Hamas. Sooner or later Hamas will control those
organizations, but that will not provide the regime with
enough money to pay its employees and spend something on
social services.
A number of Arab governments have made generous
offers of financial help, but as usual, the actual deliveries
are much smaller than the promises. Israeli retaliations
for the attacks by homemade rockets are now targeting other
things than empty fields. Buildings have been destroyed, and
some Gazeans have been hurt and left their homes. Israeli
attacks are in response to a rate of about 50 rockets fired in
the direction of Israel so far this week. A number of them
have actually made it out of Gaza and a couple have caused
damage within Israel. Sooner or later, when a rocket actually
kills an Israeli, the retaliation is likely to escalate
further.
So far the whispers of uncle from Hamas are
hard to decipher. They are highly qualified. One whisper has
indicated that Israel has to make clear what it is willing to
give the Palestinians and then the Palestinian government will
debate the issue; another says that the Hamas government will
consider a cease fire; another says that direct negotiations
with Israel are not possible, but Hamas will talk with third
parties about what it is willing to do; hints of recognizing
the reality of Israel's existence have brought quick denials
by Hamas officials that any of its people had said what the
media are quoting.
The details are not important. The whispers are
too faint and vague. Hamas is a long way from a serious
confrontation with Israel's existence. It may be stuck
permanently in the fundamentalism which pervades contemporary
Islam.
In all of this, the non-Hamas president of the
Palestine National Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, has become
something of a media darling. He is portrayed as the good guy,
the non-terrorist in contrast to the evil Hamas. There is a
piece of legislation in the US House of Representatives that
offers money to him for electoral expenses, while the same
bill would deny any American government money to the
government headed by a Hamas prime minister.
Abbas' reputation is hard to figure. He long
ago lost whatever potency he may have had. The corruption of
the government he headed was a major cause of the Hamas
success in the recent election. Does the US House of
Representatives want to support his re-election? It would be
more efficient to send US funds directly to Swiss bank
accounts. Abbas' utter failure to use the security forces he
controlled to stop the rockets qualified him for a role in
comic opera rather than serious politics.
It is unfortunate for Israel and the
Palestinians that Palestinians continue to enjoy a special
place in the world's concern. North American and European
governments, as well as the United Nations highlight the need
to provide them with humanitarian aid, and repeat the mantra
of having to create a viable Palestinian state. Israel has to
explain the barrier it has built against violence, which much
of the world sees only as causing suffering for Palestinians.
Arguably the Blacks of southern Sudan, as well as large
numbers of Somalis and Congolese are in a worse condition than
the Palestinians. There are hopes associated with the recent
election of a technocrat as president of Liberia and the
arrest of Charles Taylor, but much of West Africa is still a
long way below the quality of life in the West Bank and even
Gaza.
We should not envy the status of the
Palestinians as the darlings of world concern. If any people
have suffered from excessive care, it is them. More than 50
years of being aided as refugees have produced a caricature of
dependence. Someone else has to solve their problems. Israel
has to respond to their needs before they will stop the
violence. The great powers of the world must pressure Israel
to do the right thing. The new Hamas government is doing
little beyond refreshing the slogans we have been hearing for
decades.
Concepts of social service have changed in much
of the world. It is less popular to continue caring for the
needy via welfare than designing programs that will encourage
them to help themselves. It is not an easy thing to do. It is
likely to hurt in the short run, and welfare agencies are
skilled in opposing reform and their own down-sizing.
It is time to apply concepts similar to welfare
reform to the Palestinians. As in the field of welfare, the
social service agencies are among the strongest opponents of
change. They live on the aid funds that they collect and
distribute, and which provide their employees with salaries
and pensions. Currently the principal UN agency that aids the
Palestinians (UNRWA: United Nations Relief and Works Agency)
is calling for increased funding. Yet there can be no progress
until the Palestinians recognize the reality of Israel's
existence, and figure out how best to help themselves live
alongside Israel rather than dream of replacing Israel. Sadly,
the election of Hamas, and the early days of its government,
indicate that a realistic concern for independence, rather
than dependence, is not a part of the Palestinian world view.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
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