Untitled Document
The Israelis birthed and nurtured their Islamist nemesis
Amid all the howls
of pain and gnashing
of teeth over the
triumph of Hamas in the Palestinian elections, one fact remains relatively
obscure, albeit highly relevant: Israel did much to launch
Hamas as an effective force in the occupied territories. If ever there was
a clear case of "blowback,"
then this is it. As Richard Sale pointed out in a piece for UPI:
"Israel and Hamas may currently be locked in deadly combat, but, according
to several current and former U.S. intelligence officials, beginning in the
late 1970s, Tel Aviv gave direct and indirect financial aid to Hamas over
a period of years. Israel 'aided Hamas directly – the Israelis wanted
to use it as a counterbalance to the PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization),'
said Tony Cordesman, Middle East analyst for the Center for Strategic [and
International] Studies. Israel's support for Hamas 'was a direct attempt to
divide and dilute support for a strong, secular PLO by using a competing religious
alternative,' said a former senior CIA official."
Middle East analyst Ray Hanania concurs:
"In addition to hoping to turn the Palestinian masses away from Arafat
and the PLO, the Likud leadership believed they could achieve a workable alliance
with Islamic, anti-Arafat forces that would also extend Israel's control over
the occupied territories."
In a conscious effort to undermine the Palestine
Liberation Organization and the leadership of Yasser
Arafat, in 1978 the government of then-Prime
Minister Menachem Begin approved
the application of Sheik
Ahmad Yassin to start a "humanitarian" organization known as the
Islamic Association, or Mujama.
The roots of this Islamist group were in the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood,
and this was the seed that eventually grew into Hamas – but not before
it was amply fertilized and nurtured with Israeli funding and political support.
Begin and his successor, Yitzhak
Shamir, launched an effort to undercut the PLO, creating the so-called Village
Leagues, composed of local councils of handpicked Palestinians who were
willing to collaborate with Israel – and, in return, were put on the Israeli
payroll. Sheik Yassin and his followers soon became a force within the Village
Leagues. This tactical alliance between Yassin and the Israelis was based on
a shared antipathy to the militantly secular
and leftist PLO: the Israelis allowed Yassin's group to publish a newspaper
and set up an extensive network of charitable organizations, which collected
funds not only from the Israelis but also from Arab states opposed to Arafat.
Ami Isseroff, writing on MideastWeb, shows
how the Israelis deliberately promoted the Islamists of the future Hamas by
helping them turn the Islamic University
of Gaza into a base from which the group recruited activists – and
the suicide bombers of tomorrow. As the only higher-education facility in the
Gaza strip, and the only such institution open to Palestinians since Anwar Sadat
closed Egyptian colleges to them, IUG contained within its grounds the seeds
of the future Palestinian
state. When a conflict arose over religious issues, however, the Israeli
authorities sided with the Islamists against the secularists of the Fatah-PLO
mainstream. As Isseroff relates, the Islamists
"Encouraged Israeli authorities to dismiss their opponents in the committee
in February of 1981, resulting in subsequent Islamisation of IUG policy and
staff (including the obligation on women to wear the hijab and thobe and separate
entrances for men and women), and enforced by violence and ostracization of
dissenters. Tacit complicity from both university and Israeli authorities
allowed Mujama to keep a weapons cache to use against secularists. By the
mid 1980s, it was the largest university in occupied territories with 4,500
students, and student elections were won handily by Mujama."
Again, the motive was to offset Arafat's influence and divide the Palestinians.
In the short term, this may have worked to some extent; in the longer term,
however, it backfired badly – as demonstrated by the results of the recent
Palestinian election.
The Hamas infrastructure
of mosques, clinics, kindergartens, and other educational institutions flourished
not only because they were lavishly funded, but also due to being efficiently
run. Sheik Yassin and the future leaders of Hamas acquired a reputation for
"clean" governance and good administrative practices, which would
greatly aid them – especially in comparison to the PLO, which was widely
perceived as corrupt. Indeed, "clean
government" – and not the necessity of armed struggle –
was the main theme of their successful election campaign.
The response of Israel and the U.S. has been shock,
horror
– and a stated
refusal to deal with any government dominated by Hamas. U.S. congressional
leaders – who unhelpfully passed
a resolution prior to the Palestinian poll that demanded Hamas be banned
from running – are now calling
the entire "peace process" into question. Yet no one acknowledges
that the victory of the Suicide Bombers Party demonstrated, in practice, an
ancient principle expressed, I believe, by no less an authority than the Bible
(Galatians 6:7):
"Be not deceived. God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that
shall he also reap."
This "blowback"
principle applies to Hamas not only insofar as Israel was involved in funding
and encouraging Mujama, but also, after the consolidation of Hamas as an armed
group, due to Israeli military
policy. The much-touted "withdrawal,"
which amounts to Israel giving up Gaza while strengthening
its hand elsewhere in the occupied territories, has been grist
for the radical Islamist mill, as has the Wall
of Separation and the attempt
to quash the vote in East Jerusalem. Israel's relentless offensive against its
perceived enemies – first Fatah, now Hamas and Islamic Jihad – has
created a backlash
and solidified support for fundamentalist extremist factions in the Palestinian
community.
Likewise, the victory of Hamas will embolden the ultra-Zionists
in Israel, who similarly mix a fanatic
theology with faith in a military "solution"
to the Palestinian "problem."
The electoral victory of Hamas was only a few hours old before Benjamin "Bibi"
Netanyahu
went on television explaining why any concessions to the Palestinians –
including the Gaza pullback – only served to embolden the most radical
elements, such as Hamas.
The stricken Ariel
Sharon lies in his hospital bed, unconscious
– while his unilateral "land for peace" plan suffers from a
very
similar condition. Sharon's newly-formed Kadima
Party is the big potential loser in all this, with Netanyahu's Likud looking
to gain bigtime. The irony is that, as defense minister, it was Sharon who
helped conceive
and oversee the Village Leagues scheme that did so much to implant and empower
Hamas. Like some Middle Eastern version of Dr.
Frankenstein, he wound up being struck down by his own monstrous creation.
There is a lesson in there, somewhere, though it isn't one the Israelis or
their American sponsors seem capable of learning just yet.
The idea that voting
is some kind of panacea that will cleanse the Middle East of a self-defeating
radicalism is an illusion that died a painful death with the election victory
of Hamas. It had earlier suffered near-fatal convulsions with the ascension
to power in Iraq of a Shi'ite fundamentalist coalition closely
tied to Iran. The bitch-goddess
of capital-D Democracy is a fickle and often perversely
cruel deity, whose worshippers
have been hit with a one-two punch as they
seek to transform an entire region according to the canons of their peculiar
dogma.
NOTES IN THE MARGIN
More on Hamas and the "blowback"
effect from Robert Dreyfuss, one
of my favorite writers, in this
podcast interview with the History
News Network's Rick Shenkman.
Maybe this is why the president
and his supporters often refer to the "war on terrorism" as if it
will go on forever.
David Frum, former presidential speechwriter and National Review's
resident neocon commissar
of political correctness, cheers
Jacques Chirac's threat
to nuke hundreds of thousands of innocent human beings. Frum's only worry is
that Chirac's nuclear sabre-rattling won't be believed. On the other hand, it
would be all too believable if the prime minister of Israel – who has
his finger hovering over the nuclear button – were to make such an explicit
threat. Which puts Iran's ambition to go nuclear – the real subject of
Frum's outburst – in perspective.
Be sure to check out the theory and practice of Republican Leninism,
and go to Jane
Hamsher – where
else? – for the
latest in Fitzology.