ID | 124852 |
Title Proper | Is Hamas winning |
Language | ENG |
Author | Byman, Daniel |
Publication | 2013. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Israel, the United States, and the international community must recognize the ugly truth: Hamas is winning, and it may be too late to reverse this trend. The current drift in policy should be replaced by coercing and incentivizing Hamas to renounce violence. Hamas members are ''ants,'' declared Yasser Arafat, the father and long-/time leader of the Palestinian national movement, during a private speech in 1990. Its cadre, he went on, should cower in their holes lest they be crushed by Arafat's Fatah forces.1 Arafat's swagger seemed justified. Fatah had ruled the roost for decades, and after Hamas emerged in December 1987 as the first intifada erupted, the Islamist organization was on the ropes. After a few unimpressive attacks, Israel had quickly arrested over 1,000 Hamas members, including its top leadership.2 In 1989, less than three percent of Palestinians in Gaza, where Hamas would later prove strongest, supported the organization.3 Journalist Zaki Chehab claimed Hamas' military wing only had twenty machine guns as the intifada wound down.4 Fatah, it seemed, would remain the dominant force in the Palestinian National Movement. |
`In' analytical Note | Washington Quarterly Vol.36, No.3; 2013:p.63-76 |
Journal Source | Washington Quarterly Vol.36, No.3; 2013:p.63-76 |
Key Words | International Relations - IR ; Israel - US Relations ; Foreign Policy ; Civil War ; Ethnic Violence ; Renounce Violence ; United States ; Israel ; Hamas to Renounce Violence ; Hamas ; Gaza Patti ; Palestine ; Palestine National Movement ; International Relations ; Military Wings ; War ; History ; Modern Warfare ; Terrorist ; Terrorism ; Islamist Terror ; Middle East ; Western Asia ; Arab Spring |