هل
الفوضى الفلسطينية هي الطريق
إلى السلام؟
بقلم:
توني كارون
مجلة
التايم الأمريكية - 10/1/2007
Is
Palestinian Chaos a Road to Peace?
Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2007 By TONY
KARON
As Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice prepares to visit the
Middle East
as early as next week,
U.S.
officials are predicting that an opportunity may be
opening to revive the long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian
peace process. Her spokesman, Sean McCormack, declined
to last weekend to offer specifics on why such an
opportunity may now present itself, but plainly, the
conditions for peace can't be divorced from the state of
Palestinian internal politics — and the escalating
confrontation, if not a brewing civil war, between the
Fatah movement of President Abbas and Hamas, the
democratically elected governing party.
Abbas on Sunday declared
Hamas's main
Gaza
security force illegal, while his key security strongman,
Mohammed Dahlan, vowed that for every Fatah member
killed in the internecine confrontation, his own men
would kill two Hamas men. The Islamists responded by
vowing to double the size of their security forces and
to fight any attempt to disarm them or to oust the
government. Following Fatah's mass rally on Sunday in
Hamas's
Gaza
stronghold, Hamas is planning later this week to hold
similar shows of strength on the streets of
key
West
Bank cities, traditionally Fatah's stomping ground. And
observers on the ground are expecting the two sides to
raise the stakes by escalating the wave of
assassinations of each other's leaders.
The Bush
Administration may view the current chaos as an
opportunity because
Washington
has come to see the Hamas government as a primary obstacle to peace. The
U.S. has made no secret of its desire to oust the
government elected a year ago, and to that end has
enforced financial sanctions against the Palestinian
Authority, substantially boosted armed forces loyal to
Abbas, and egged on the Palestinian President in moves
to oust the government — by calling new elections, for
example, even though none are due until 2010.
Effectively, this has made getting rid of the Hamas
government a precondition for progress in Abbas's prime
goal, which is negotiating a peace agreement with
Israel
.
And
Washington
is not the only group putting pressure on Abbas to confront Hamas: Much of
the leadership of Fatah responded to their electoral
rebuke by insisting that Abbas simply oust the Hamas
government and restore them to power. Abbas, however,
preferred negotiation, seeking a government of national
unity with Hamas in the hope of averting a civil war —
despite the skepticism of many Fatah leaders and of the
Bush Administration. But the slow, grinding poverty
brought on by the financial blockade has prompted much
of the Fatah rank-and-file — many of whom are employed
by the PA, and therefore are not being paid salaries —
to press for a more aggressive response to Hamas.
Last month, in a
gambit aimed at forcing Hamas to accept his terms for a
unity government, Abbas called for new elections. He did
not, however, name a date, and it remains unclear
whether he has the constitutional authority to demand an
early poll. So, while Hamas accused him of carrying out
Washington
's
orders and vowed to boycott and disrupt any such poll,
Fatah hawks complained that his failure to actually name
a date or put the election process in motion signaled
continued indecision. Meanwhile, on the ground, the
militants of both organizations began trading fire as
never before.
The optimism of
U.S.
officials over the political outcome of a confrontation
between Abbas and Hamas is not shared by many in the
region. Arab governments, including those that have
helped bolster Abbas, are reportedly alarmed at the
prospect of a Palestinian civil war. Even Israeli
intelligence officials are reported to have warned their
government that any attempt to hold new elections or try
to forceably replace the Hamas government is doomed to
fail — for the simple reason that Hamas is more
popular than Fatah, especially now that the U.S. is so
strongly perceived as backing Abbas.
The
U.S.
strategy appears to have missed what many
Middle East
analysts long ago concluded: that Hamas is now an intractable part of the
Palestinian body politic that represents close to half
of the population, and cannot simply be wished or blown
away. For any
U.S.
peace plans that are predicated on giving it a knockout
blow, the group's mass support — to borrow a phrase
from Al Gore — is an inconvenient truth.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1575762,00.html
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